Prioritise Key Topics: Focus on the most important chapters or sections that carry the highest marks. Use your syllabus to identify these.
Use Active Recall: Instead of just reading, quiz yourself on the material. Test your memory by writing down what you know and filling in gaps.
Chunk Your Time: Break your study time into focused intervals, like 25-minute sessions with 5-minute breaks (Pomodoro technique). This keeps your mind fresh.
Teach What You Learn: Explain the concepts aloud as if you were teaching someone else. This reinforces your understanding.
Make Use of Visual Aids: Use mind maps, charts, and diagrams to summarize key concepts visually for quick recall.
Practice Past Papers: Attempt sample papers or previous year’s questions to familiarize yourself with the exam format and identify areas of weakness.
Use Mnemonics: Create memory aids or acronyms for lists, formulas, or sequences you need to remember quickly.
Stay Calm and Rested: Don’t overwhelm yourself. Stay hydrated, take short breaks, and get enough rest to keep your focus sharp.

Rahul Dev

Cricket Jounralist at Newsdesk

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