Friday, April 30, 2010

test post














Smart planner for Boards and IIT-JEE
As students sit fur their class XII exams, Ambarish Srivastava gives last-minute guidance on how to balance Boards and IIT-JEE preparation





How to prepare with­out losing tempo?
As far as Board examinations are concerned,at this stage solving the past 10-year papers would be very help ful in order to pre­pare well in a short time.
As far as IIT-JEE is concerned,one should solve as many questions as possible from a good source (such as GMP); if time Is less then one may decide to do the odd numbered problems or if one has even lesser time one may choose to attempt the prime number problems.
One must under­stand that the most portion of trie syllabus for the Board exams is also a part of the IIT-JEE t syllabus and there­fore, If one is preparing for IIT-JEE one should be able to handle most numerical problems of Board examina­tions with relative ease.
IIT-JEE is a low scor­ing exam; In order to do well, one need not be proficient in all the topics. In fact, the cutoff may go as low as up to 40-45 per cent So If one has not studied certain topics, one might as well leave them out altogether. If you have thorough understanding of even 70 per cent of the topics, still you may be able to do fairly well In IIT-JEE.
trips to help you
Time management
Comparison of questions PCM (IIT-JEE vs Boa, ds)


Examination temperament:
What matters really Is not how much we know,' but It Is how much we are able to deliver on the day of the examination. It Is important to get the feel of solving problems In an actual examination situation and for this one must take a num­ber of mock tests.
The good, the bad, the ugly: You need not attempt all the questions on the IIT-JEE examination paper. Even before you start attempting the paper you can classify the questions into The good', The bad' and The ugly". Good questions are those which you feel you will be able to attempt with relative ease. The bad questions are those you think you might be able to answer with some difficulty and ugly ones are those which seem to be too dif­ficult to waste time on in an exami­nation situation. This will save you from time pressure. Even if you are able to attempt just 60 per cent of the questions and do them correct­ly, you will get a good rank. Many times in a hurry to attempt all the questions, students end up making a lot of silly mistakes and hence get a very low score.
Stay cool: Do not panic. In com­puter parlance, worry and brood­ing eat in- to your RAM, and hence your effectiveness iri studies will reduce. Understand that even If you are not able to make It to the IITs, it is not end of the world. If you stay cheerful, your grasping ability will double and so also your ability to perform in the actual examination.
Beware of negative marking: If
you are not sure of the answer to a question, do not attempt Know that every single mark counts.
Chemistry should not be neg­lected: Chemistry Is the most scoring paper In IIT-JEE and the 1 good thing is that In chemistry, you can score more marks In a relative­ly small amount of time because many of the questions are simply knowledge based and do not require calculations.
Time management will differ from Indi­vidual to Individual. On an average, the attention span of a JEE-asplrantls about two hours, so it is generally a good Idea to take a small break after every two hours.
Be selective In your studies. Try to opti­mise the available time. Do not try to spend a lot of time in solving the same type of problems.
Make sure that you have memorised all the standard results so that you don't end up wasting the exam time In deriv­ing the results.
For the board exam­inations, you should memorize the theo­ry part oi uie suo-'iectlve type ques­tions as per the standard test books.
While the syllabus of the Board examina­tions Is almost a sub­set of the IIT-JEE syl­labus, the nature of the questions asked In the two examinations Is different IITs focus more on conceptual and deep understand­ing of the subjects while, most of the questions asked in the Board examinations are straight forward, direct applications of the standard results. Hence If one Is preparing for IfT- JEE, the numerical ques­tions asked In the Board examinations are automatically taken care of. However, there are certain descriptive questions asked in the Boards for which the theory must be mem­orized from the stan­dard text books. There are also certain topics which are there In the Boards but not In the IIT-JEE syllabus.
As far as physics is concerned, mechanics is rel­atively easier. Modern physics and thermody­namics are also scoring topics so one must pay careful attention to them.
In chemistry, organic happens to be most scor­ing and If one understands the principles, the questions can be attempted with relative ease.
In mathematics, one should espe­cially have a good under­standing of vec­tors, calculus and the coordinate geometry.


1 focussed on Boards M| in March as I was
preparing for IIT-JEE until February. The preparato­ry leave students get before Board exams are more than enough, provided one has studied during term exams and pre-Boards. Some people consider JEE completely dlf-. ferent from the Board exams but this Is not true. Only the focus Is different Board exams are theory-based while JEE calls for a practical






approach. On top of It, If you are focussed on JEE, Board's marks shouldn't matter moch though I man­


aged to score 90 per cent
SHASHANK SINGL A
Third-year student BTech (electrical), Indian Institute of Technology (Delhi) ,





Srivastava Is a Faculty Training Coordinator, FIITJEE Urr.lted





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