Amity University Noida-B.Tech Admissions 2026
Among top 100 Universities Globally in the Times Higher Education (THE) Interdisciplinary Science Rankings 2026
For most students starting out with JEE 2027, the first instinct is to look for a ready-made plan. A timetable, something structured, something that has already worked for someone else. It feels like a good place to begin. In reality, though, preparation for an exam like JEE Main and JEE Advanced rarely works in that borrowed way for too long.
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Students who do well are not always the ones with the most detailed plans. More often, they are the ones whose plans actually match where they are at that point in time. Someone still working through basics cannot move at the same pace as someone who is already comfortable with the fundamentals. This is where many early mistakes happen. The plan looks right, but it doesn’t quite fit.
Over time, most students realise that a study plan is not something fixed. It keeps changing, sometimes slightly, sometimes a lot. It responds to gaps, to backlogs, to improvement. That shift, from following a plan to adjusting one, makes a bigger difference than it seems.
A useful way to think about preparation is to break it into a few moving parts. Not too many, just enough to keep things from becoming random. In most cases, preparation settles around three things: the level of study, the phase of preparation, and what a regular day actually looks like.
Students often track progress by how many chapters are done. It sounds logical, but it can be misleading. A chapter done once is rarely done well. It is more helpful to think in layers.
The first layer is usually about NCERT and basic understanding. It takes time, often more than expected, and that can feel uncomfortable. The second layer brings in standard books and previous years’ questions, where concepts start getting tested in different ways. After that, preparation naturally moves into more difficult problems, where things are less familiar and require more thought. Eventually, mock tests take over, and the focus shifts to how all of this comes together in an exam setting.
Students don’t always move neatly from one layer to the next. They go back and forth, and that’s normal. What matters more is that they don’t stay in the same comfort zone for too long.
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Preparation changes as time passes, even if students don’t always notice it immediately. In the beginning, most of the effort goes into learning — understanding concepts, making notes, trying to keep up. Later, the focus shifts. Gaps begin to show, some topics need revisiting, and backlogs start to matter more than expected.
Closer to the exam, the role of testing increases. Writing tests is one part, but going back and figuring out what went wrong is where the real work happens. Not everyone enjoys that part, but it is difficult to skip.
For students managing board exams alongside JEE, things get a bit more complicated. Writing answers, presentations, and board-specific expectations need space as well. Balancing both does not always come naturally. It usually takes a few adjustments before things settle.
At this stage, revision also starts looking different. There isn’t enough time to go back to everything in detail. Students tend to lean on shorter, more focused material — JEE Main formulas, key concepts, and patterns they’ve seen before. It is not perfect, but it helps keep things moving without losing touch completely.
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A common pattern is trying to cover more and more content. It feels productive, but it doesn’t always help. Concepts of Physics, Chemistry and Maths understood once are not always easy to apply later, especially when the question changes slightly.
Going back to the same material, again and again, tends to work better. It builds familiarity. It reduces hesitation. Practice plays a big role here as well. Solving questions, making mistakes, and then sitting with those mistakes for a bit — that is where improvement usually comes from.
A study plan, however good it looks, depends on whether it can be followed consistently. Very intense schedules often don’t last. A simpler routine, even if it feels less ambitious, tends to hold better over time.
JEE preparation is not quick. Results don’t show up immediately, and that can get frustrating. Most students go through phases where things don’t seem to improve despite effort.
Over time, it becomes clearer that doing more is not always the answer. Doing the same things, but with more consistency and slightly better understanding, usually matters more.
In the final stretch, when time is tighter and accuracy starts to matter more, the kind of revision students rely on also changes. Concise material, formula-based recall, and structured problem-solving approaches become more useful. This is also the thinking behind newer preparation series like Disha Publication’s Shortcuts Series, which are designed to help students move from understanding to faster execution when it matters most.
Avinash Agarwal is the director of Disha Publication and a well-known figure in India’s education ecosystem, with over two decades of experience in academic publishing and student engagement. He holds an MBA in marketing from the Management Development Institute and a B.Tech in computer science. He has contributed significantly to developing learning resources that support students preparing for school and competitive exams like JEE, NEET, and UPSC. Through more than 100 workshops and seminars, he has directly interacted with thousands of students, focusing on study skills, discipline, and effective learning strategies. Apart from his professional work, he is a national-level basketball player and enjoys travelling.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
There isn’t a fixed number that works for everyone. On school or coaching days, 4–5 focused hours usually work if used well. On lighter days, students often stretch it to 8 hours or more, but consistency matters more than pushing too hard for a few days and then dropping off.
It is, but only up to a point. Using too many sources at the same time usually creates confusion. Most students eventually realise that sticking to a limited set of resources and revisiting them works better than constantly adding new material.
Not right at the beginning, but not too late either. Once basic concepts are in place, even a few tests help. Closer to the exam, they become more important, especially for understanding time management and avoiding mistakes.
On Question asked by student community
Based on the information you provided, y our chances are good , but CSE at MBM University is not guaranteed .
Here's why:
MBM University is the most sought-after government engineering college in Rajasthan through REAP, and CSE is its most competitive branch.
A 94.4 percentile is within the range
Hello Student,
Can you please specify your exact or percentile for us to help you out with the answer?
Hello Dear Student,
With an 86.72 percentile, you have a moderate to borderline chance of securing Information Technology (IT) but may face a tough time landing Computer Science Engineering (CSE) at Rajasthan Technical University, Kota.
You can check, find and access more information here:
Hope it helps!
Hello Dear Student,
With 85 percentile in JEE Main , 89 percentile in MHT CET , and OBC category (along with Madhya Pradesh domicile ), you have a good chance of securing admission to several mid-tier engineering colleges offering specializations such as Cyber Security , Ethical Hacking , and Cloud
Hello Dear Student,
The B.Tech fees at AISSMS College of Engineering are the same whether you are admitted through JEE Main or MHT CET under the standard Centralized Admission Process (CAP).
If you take admission
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