Hmm. It all matters on your concept. Some question which look tough are actually preety easy (if you know the basics)
- Try to be conceptully sound. Like my teacher always said, a tall strong building cannot be built unless it has a strong foundation. That foundation is your concept. So build it up, reinforce it and make it strong. Try to use Ambuja Cement (wink)
- Whenever you are facing a numerical, always think about the simplest method you can take. Often our mind tricks us imto believing that we have to use a more advanced formula to solve a particular problem. That is not always the case. So be wary of this deception. Chalk out the most easy amd most straight forward path.
- For Physics. I would say be thorough with the second year portion absolutely from head to tail. Don’t ignore modern physics. Preety easy questions are set from that portion in my experience and should not be much trouble. Don’t ignore Thermodynamics. I ignored that part and trust me it was not preety.
- For Chemistry. Be thorough with O chem and the inorganic part. If a chapter looks easy, then its bound to trouble you. And the golden rule as suggested by my father, read once write thrice. That way you can retain more.
- Quality has more weight than quantity. It does not matter if you study for four hours or for fourteen hours. What does matter is how productive the session is.
- Be thorough with NCERT. I guess this does not require an explanation.
- Last of all have faith. Sometimes you will feel like I know nothing. Don’t let that deter you. You know what you are capable of. So have that faith always. Keep the fire alive.