Hi, Im TestprepKart.
Your Partner In Exam Preparation
Preparing for the Joint Entrance Examination is a long drawn process that requires proper planning, consistent efforts and right guidance. The complete JEE Timeline For NRI Students 2027 includes everything from developing a good foundation in Class 8 to admission in IITs, NITs, IIITs, SPAs and other top engineering colleges in India through JoSAA or DASA Counselling.
Lakhs of students appear for JEE Main and JEE Advanced every year but only those students who follow a proper preparation timeline are able to complete the syllabus on time, revise well and perform with confidence in the examination.
For NRI students studying in the USA, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Singapore, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and other countries it is even more difficult to prepare for JEE. Students coming from abroad have different school curriculum, international academic calendar, difference of time-zones and limited access to offline coaching and hence need a different strategy of preparation than the students from India.
Foundation, NCERT, school basics and logical thinking
JEE syllabus, PYQs, mock tests and revision
JEE Main, Advanced, JoSAA, DASA and reporting
Many students prepare hard but still fail to achieve their desired rank because they don’t have a structured roadmap.
| Without a Timeline, Students Often | A Structured JEE Timeline Helps Students |
| Start preparation too late. | Complete the syllabus before the examination. |
| Skip important chapters. | Balance school and JEE preparation. |
| Ignore revision. | Revise every chapter multiple times. |
| Delay solving Previous Year Questions. | Improve speed and accuracy. |
| Take mock tests only in the last month. | Stay motivated throughout the preparation journey. |
| Miss counselling deadlines. | Track progress every month. |
| Lose admission opportunities because of incomplete documentation. | Complete admission formalities on time. |
For NRI students, this becomes even more important because school schedules abroad often differ from the Indian academic calendar.
| This Roadmap Is Specially Designed For | Details |
| NRI students studying in the USA | Students following American Curriculum, AP, IB or other school systems. |
| NRI students studying in the UAE | Students in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah and other Emirates. |
| NRI students studying in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait and Bahrain | Students preparing from Gulf countries and planning engineering admission in India. |
| Students in Singapore, Canada, Australia, United Kingdom and other countries | Students following international academic calendars. |
| Students following American Curriculum, IB Diploma Programme, AP, IGCSE, A-Level or CBSE | Students who need to align school study with JEE syllabus. |
| Students in Class 8–12 | Students planning foundation, two-year or one-year preparation. |
| Dropper students | Students preparing full-time for JEE. |
| Parents planning engineering admissions in India | Parents tracking preparation, documents and counselling. |
Get a structured JEE Main, JEE Advanced, JoSAA and DASA preparation roadmap based on your country, curriculum, current class and target engineering colleges in India.
| Stage | Timeline | Main Goal |
| Class 8 | Foundation Building | Develop Mathematics and Science fundamentals |
| Class 9 | JEE Foundation | Improve logical thinking and analytical skills |
| Class 10 | Strong Foundation | Master NCERT and prepare for advanced concepts |
| Class 11 | Core JEE Preparation | Complete approximately 60% of the syllabus |
| Class 12 | Advanced Preparation | Finish remaining syllabus and revise Class 11 |
| January 2027 | JEE Main Session 1 | First attempt |
| April 2027 | JEE Main Session 2 | Improve score if required |
| May 2027 | JEE Advanced | Admission to IITs |
| June 2027 | JoSAA & DASA Registration | Register and complete choice filling |
| June–July 2027 | Counselling | Seat allotment and document verification |
| July–August 2027 | College Reporting | Join IIT, NIT, IIIT or other allotted institute |
One of the most commonly asked questions by the students and parents is: “When is the right time to start preparation for JEE?It is contingent upon the class you are currently in.
| Current Class | Recommended Preparation Level |
| Class 8 | Build Foundation |
| Class 9 | Start JEE Basics |
| Class 10 | Strong Foundation |
| Class 11 | Full Two-Year Preparation |
| Class 12 | One-Year Intensive Preparation |
| Drop Year | Full-Time JEE Preparation |
Generally, students starting in Class 11 have enough time to grasp concepts, practice, revise multiple times and prepare for JEE Main & JEE Advanced. But even students starting in Class 12 or during a drop year can do well with a disciplined study plan.
This free JEE E-Book can be used by students from the USA, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Singapore, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and other countries preparing for JEE to plan syllabus completion, PYQs, mock tests, revision and engineering admission routes in India.
Class 8 is the ideal time to build a strong academic foundation. Students should not worry about advanced JEE questions at this stage. Instead, the focus should be on strengthening basic Mathematics and Science concepts.
| Area | Focus |
| Mathematics | Fractions and Decimals, Basic Algebra, Geometry, Mensuration, Integers, Mental Mathematics |
| Science | Scientific Observation, Basic Physics, Introduction to Chemistry, Everyday Applications of Science |
| Monthly Goals | Complete school assignments on time, improve calculation speed, read NCERT textbooks thoroughly, develop logical thinking and build regular study habits. |
| End-of-Year Target | By the end of Class 8, students should be confident in solving school-level Mathematics and Science problems without assistance. |
Class 9 is a good stage to begin JEE foundation preparation without putting excessive pressure on the student.
| Subject / Area | Focus |
| Physics | Motion, Force, Work and Energy, Gravitation (Basic Concepts) |
| Chemistry | Matter, Atoms, Molecules, Chemical Changes |
| Mathematics | Algebra, Linear Equations, Coordinate Geometry, Polynomials, Statistics |
| Monthly Goals | Complete all school chapters, solve additional practice questions, develop problem-solving skills, improve calculation speed and build consistency. |
| End-of-Year Target | Students should develop confidence in conceptual thinking and become comfortable solving application-based Mathematics problems. |
Class 10 bridges school education with advanced preparation for JEE. Students are required to focus on board exams and also develop a good conceptual base of Class 11.
| Subject / Area | Focus |
| Physics | Light, Electricity, Magnetic Effects of Electric Current, Human Eye, Optical Instruments |
| Chemistry | Chemical Reactions, Acids, Bases and Salts, Metals and Non-metals, Carbon Compounds |
| Mathematics | Real Numbers, Polynomials, Pair of Linear Equations, Quadratic Equations, Trigonometry, Coordinate Geometry, Probability, Statistics |
| Monthly Goals | Master NCERT textbooks, build strong Algebra and Trigonometry skills, solve Higher Order Thinking Skills questions and improve speed and accuracy. |
| End-of-Year Checklist | Complete NCERT thoroughly, be confident in Algebra and Trigonometry, develop strong calculation skills, build consistent study habits and be mentally prepared for two years of focused JEE preparation. |
Class 11 and Class 12 are the most important years of a student’s JEE journey. In these two years, 90% of the concepts that are asked in JEE Main and JEE Advanced are covered. Students who prepare consistently during this time tend to perform much better than students who prepare at the last minute.
For NRI students in USA, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Singapore, Canada, UK, Australia and other countries, it is important to have a well-planned timeline to balance between school academics and JEE preparation.
Most students view Class 11 as the foundation year for JEE preparation. Students should complete almost 60% of the JEE syllabus with a good conceptual understanding of Physics, Chemistry and Mathematics. The students should not only focus on finishing the chapters but also work on practice questions, revise regularly and develop analytical thinking.
| Timeline | Physics | Chemistry | Mathematics | Monthly Goal |
| April–June (Building the Foundation) | Units & Dimensions, Motion in One Dimension, Motion in Two Dimensions, Vectors | Mole Concept, Atomic Structure, Periodic Table | Sets, Relations, Functions, Basic Trigonometry | Understand concepts instead of memorizing formulas, solve basic JEE-level questions and prepare handwritten notes. |
| July–September (Strengthening Concepts) | Newton’s Laws of Motion, Friction, Circular Motion, Work, Energy & Power | Chemical Bonding, States of Matter, Thermodynamics | Complex Numbers, Quadratic Equations, Sequence & Series | Complete coaching modules, solve chapter-wise Previous Year Questions and revise formulas every weekend. |
| October–December (Advanced Problem Solving) | Centre of Mass, Rotational Motion, Gravitation | Equilibrium, Redox Reactions, Organic Chemistry Basics | Straight Lines, Circles, Permutation & Combination | Start solving mixed-topic questions, take chapter-wise mock tests and maintain an error notebook. |
| January–March (Revision & Testing) | Oscillations, Waves | Hydrocarbons, Environmental Chemistry | Binomial Theorem, Probability Basics | Complete the Class 11 syllabus, revise every chapter, take cumulative tests and identify weak areas before Class 12. |
| End of Class 11 Checklist | Status |
| Completed nearly 60% of the JEE syllabus. | ✅ |
| Solved chapter-wise exercises. | ✅ |
| Attempted Previous Year Questions for completed topics. | ✅ |
| Revised important formulas multiple times. | ✅ |
| Created short notes for revision. | ✅ |
| Maintained an error notebook. | ✅ |
Class 12 is the final year of preparation for JEE Main and JEE Advanced. Concentrate on finishing the remaining syllabus, regular revision of class 11 concepts, solving previous year questions, and increasing the frequency of mock tests.
| Timeline | Physics | Chemistry | Mathematics | Monthly Goal |
| April–June | Electrostatics, Current Electricity | Solid State, Solutions, Electrochemistry | Continuity, Differentiability, Application of Derivatives | Finish all school assignments on time and avoid creating backlogs. |
| July–September | Magnetism, Electromagnetic Induction, Alternating Current | Chemical Kinetics, Surface Chemistry, Coordination Compounds | Integration, Differential Equations, Area Under Curves | Begin solving Previous Year Questions after every chapter and take one mock test every two weeks. |
| October–November | Ray Optics, Wave Optics, Modern Physics | Organic Chemistry, Biomolecules, Polymers | Vectors, Three-Dimensional Geometry, Probability | Finish the complete JEE syllabus before December. |
| December | Full syllabus revision, formula revision, Previous Year Questions, mock tests | Full syllabus revision, formula revision, Previous Year Questions, mock tests | Full syllabus revision, formula revision, Previous Year Questions, mock tests | Avoid starting new reference books. |
| January 2027 | Appear for JEE Main Session 1, analyse performance, identify weak topics and continue preparing for Session 2 and JEE Advanced. | Appear for JEE Main Session 1, analyse performance, identify weak topics and continue preparing for Session 2 and JEE Advanced. | Appear for JEE Main Session 1, analyse performance, identify weak topics and continue preparing for Session 2 and JEE Advanced. | Use Session 1 performance for improvement planning. |
| February–March 2027 | Improving weak chapters, solving mock tests, speed and accuracy, full syllabus revision | Improving weak chapters, solving mock tests, speed and accuracy, full syllabus revision | Improving weak chapters, solving mock tests, speed and accuracy, full syllabus revision | Prepare for JEE Main Session 2 and JEE Advanced. |
| April 2027 | Appear for JEE Main Session 2 to improve score | Appear for JEE Main Session 2 to improve score | Appear for JEE Main Session 2 to improve score | The better score is generally used for ranking. |
| May 2027 | Solve JEE Advanced Previous Year Questions, attempt advanced mock tests and revise important concepts. | Solve JEE Advanced Previous Year Questions, attempt advanced mock tests and revise important concepts. | Solve JEE Advanced Previous Year Questions, attempt advanced mock tests and revise important concepts. | Students qualifying for JEE Advanced should focus only on advanced-level preparation. |
Most NRI students begin their serious preparations from Class 12 or after school. Even a structured one year plan can help students achieve excellent results.
| Phase | Focus |
| Phase 1 (Months 1–4) | Building concepts, completing basic chapters, solving NCERT and coaching modules. |
| Phase 2 (Months 5–8) | Completing the syllabus, solving Previous Year Questions and improving speed. |
| Phase 3 (Months 9–12) | Revision, mock tests, formula revision and error analysis. Students should avoid switching study materials during this stage. |
Dropper students have the advantage of dedicating their full attention to JEE preparation.
| Timeline | Goals |
| First Four Months | Complete the full syllabus, build strong concepts and solve coaching material. |
| Next Three Months | Focus on Previous Year Questions, chapter tests and weak topics. |
| Final Five Months | Focus entirely on mock tests, full syllabus revision, formula revision and improving speed and accuracy. |
A balanced study routine is more effective than studying for very long hours without planning. Students can adjust this schedule according to their school timings and time zone.
| Time | Activity |
| 6:00 AM – 7:00 AM | Formula Revision |
| School Hours | School Studies |
| 5:00 PM – 6:30 PM | Physics |
| 6:30 PM – 7:00 PM | Break |
| 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM | Mathematics |
| 8:30 PM – 9:00 PM | Dinner |
| 9:00 PM – 10:00 PM | Chemistry |
| 10:00 PM – 10:30 PM | Previous Year Questions / Revision |
| Day | Focus Area |
| Monday | Physics + Mathematics |
| Tuesday | Chemistry + Mathematics |
| Wednesday | Physics Practice |
| Thursday | Chemistry Revision |
| Friday | Mathematics Practice |
| Saturday | Chapter Test |
| Sunday | Mock Test + Error Analysis |
At the end of every month, ask yourself:
| Checklist | Status |
| Completed Planned Chapters | ☐ |
| Revised All Topics | ☐ |
| Solved Previous Year Questions | ☐ |
| Attempted Mock Tests | ☐ |
| Updated Formula Notebook | ☐ |
| Updated Error Notebook | ☐ |
| Improved Weak Chapters | ☐ |
Students who consistently track their progress are more likely to complete the syllabus on time and avoid last-minute stress.
Get a structured JEE Main, JEE Advanced, JoSAA and DASA preparation roadmap based on your country, curriculum, current class and target engineering colleges in India.
Preparing for JEE is only the first step. After appearing for JEE Main and JEE Advanced, students must complete several admission processes, including JoSAA Counselling, DASA Counselling for eligible NRI students, document verification, seat allotment, and institute reporting.
Many students achieve a good rank but miss admission opportunities because they are unaware of counselling schedules or important deadlines. The timeline below explains the complete admission journey from the release of the JEE Main brochure to joining an engineering college.
Note: The dates below are expected for the 2027 admission cycle based on previous years. Students should always verify the latest schedule through the official examination and counselling authorities.
| Month | Expected Date* | Event | What NRI Students Should Do |
| October–November 2026 | Expected | JEE Main 2027 Information Brochure | Download and read the brochure carefully. Check eligibility, exam pattern, syllabus, registration process, reservation rules, and important dates. |
| November–December 2026 | Expected | JEE Main Session 1 Registration | Complete online registration, upload documents, pay the application fee, and download the confirmation page. |
| January 2027 | Expected | JEE Main Session 1 Admit Card | Download the admit card, verify details, and plan travel if the examination centre is outside your city or country. |
| January 2027 | Expected | JEE Main Session 1 Examination | Appear for Session 1. The score is important for NITs, IIITs, GFTIs, and DASA admissions. |
| February 2027 | Expected | JEE Main Session 1 Result | Download the scorecard, analyse weak areas, and begin preparing for Session 2 if required. |
| February 2027 | Expected | Session 2 Registration Begins | Register for Session 2 if you want to improve your score. |
| March 2027 | Expected | Session 2 City Intimation Slip | Check the allotted examination city and finalise travel arrangements if needed. |
| April 2027 | Expected | JEE Main Session 2 Examination | Attempt Session 2. Usually, the better score is considered for ranking. |
| April 2027 | Expected | Final JEE Main Result | Download the final scorecard and All India Rank. Start shortlisting colleges and branches. |
| April–May 2027 | Expected | JEE Advanced Registration | Eligible students should register and complete the application process. |
| May 2027 | Expected | JEE Advanced Examination | Appear for JEE Advanced if you are targeting admission to IITs. |
| June 2027 | Expected | JEE Advanced Result | Download the scorecard and check your rank before counselling begins. |
| June 2027 | Expected | JoSAA Registration | Register on the JoSAA portal and verify your information. |
| June 2027 | Expected | JoSAA Choice Filling | Research IITs, NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs. Fill and lock college and branch preferences carefully. |
| June–July 2027 | Expected | JoSAA Seat Allotment Rounds | Check seat allotment, accept the seat, pay the seat acceptance fee, and complete document verification. |
| June 2027 | Expected | DASA UG Registration | Eligible NRI, OCI, PIO, and Foreign National students should register through the DASA portal. |
| June–July 2027 | Expected | DASA Choice Filling | Review the participating institutes, seat matrix, previous year cutoffs, and submit your choices. |
| July 2027 | Expected | DASA Seat Allotment | Accept the allotted seat, pay the required fee, and upload the necessary documents. |
| July–August 2027 | Expected | Institute Reporting | Report to the allotted IIT, NIT, IIIT, GFTI, or DASA institute and complete admission formalities. |
| August 2027 | Expected | Academic Session Begins | Attend orientation and begin your engineering program. |
*Dates are tentative and may change. Always refer to the official authorities for the latest schedule.
Download JEE PYQsJEE Main CutoffAdvanced Opening & Closing Ranks
Students should prepare these documents well before registration and counselling.
| Stage | Documents Required |
| JEE Main Registration | Passport-size photograph, signature, Class 10 certificate, valid ID proof, email ID, mobile number |
| JEE Advanced Registration | JEE Main application details, identity proof, required academic documents |
| JoSAA Counselling | JEE scorecards, Class 10 & 12 certificates, identity proof, category certificate (if applicable) |
| DASA Counselling | Passport, JEE Main scorecard, Class 12 marksheet, passport-size photographs, eligibility documents |
| Institute Reporting | Admission letter, fee payment receipt, original academic documents, passport (for NRI students, where applicable) |
Parents play a crucial role throughout the admission process.
| Timeline | Parent’s Responsibility |
| Before Registration | Verify eligibility, keep documents ready, and monitor important announcements. |
| During JEE Main Registration | Review application details carefully before submission. |
| Before JEE Main | Arrange travel and accommodation if the exam centre is outside the country or city. |
| After Results | Compare colleges, branches, fees, and admission options. |
| During Counselling | Help students prioritise choices based on rank, interests, and career goals. |
| After Seat Allotment | Complete fee payment, document verification, and institute reporting on time. |
NRI students preparing for JEE from the USA, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Singapore, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and other countries can use this free JEE E-Book to plan syllabus completion, PYQs, mock tests, revision and engineering admission routes in India.
The final phase of JEE preparation should focus on revision, examination practice, mistake analysis, and maintaining a healthy routine. Students should avoid collecting new books or changing their preparation strategy close to the examination.
The official JEE Main 2027, JEE Advanced 2027, JoSAA 2027, and DASA 2027 schedules have not yet been released. Therefore, all 2027 dates mentioned in this blog should be labelled expected until the official brochures and schedules are published. The latest confirmed official resources currently available are for the 2026 cycle.
The final three months should be divided into clear preparation phases.
| Preparation Period | Main Focus | Student Action |
| Days 90–61 | Complete first revision | Revise every chapter, solve chapter-wise PYQs and update short notes |
| Days 60–31 | Full-syllabus practice | Attempt mock tests, improve weak chapters and practise time management |
| Days 30–15 | Intensive revision | Revise formulas, reactions, error notebook and important questions |
| Days 14–8 | Exam simulation | Attempt timed full-length papers and improve question selection |
| Final 7 Days | Light revision | Revise short notes, rest properly and avoid new topics |
During this phase, students should revise every completed chapter at least once.
| Subject | Focus |
| Physics | Important formulas, standard derivations, graph-based questions, frequently used problem-solving methods and Previous Year Questions |
| Chemistry | Physical Chemistry formulas, Organic Chemistry reaction mechanisms, named reactions, Inorganic Chemistry from NCERT, important exceptions and trends |
| Mathematics | Calculus, Algebra, Coordinate Geometry, Vectors and 3D Geometry, Probability and formula-based revision |
| Weekly Target | Revise three to five chapters, solve chapter-wise PYQs, attempt one cumulative test, update the error notebook and review weak concepts. |
At this stage, students should start combining topics rather than studying every chapter separately. The goal is to improve question selection, accuracy, speed, time management, concentration and exam endurance.
| Day | Activity |
| Monday | Physics revision and PYQs |
| Tuesday | Chemistry revision and NCERT |
| Wednesday | Mathematics practice |
| Thursday | Mixed-subject test |
| Friday | Weak-chapter improvement |
| Saturday | Full-length mock test |
| Sunday | Mock-test analysis and revision |
Students should spend enough time analysing the test instead of only checking the final score.
After every mock test, classify mistakes into the following categories:
| Mistake Type | Meaning | Corrective Action |
| Conceptual Mistake | The concept was not understood clearly | Revise theory and solve basic questions |
| Formula Mistake | The wrong formula was applied | Update the formula notebook |
| Calculation Mistake | Arithmetic or algebra error | Practise timed calculations |
| Question-Reading Mistake | Important information was overlooked | Read questions more carefully |
| Time-Management Mistake | Too much time was spent on one question | Improve question selection |
| Guessing Mistake | An uncertain answer was attempted | Reduce unnecessary risk |
| Revision Mistake | The concept was forgotten | Increase revision frequency |
The final month should focus on revision and examination practice.
| Week | Main Focus |
| Week 1 | Physics revision and full-length test |
| Week 2 | Chemistry revision and full-length test |
| Week 3 | Mathematics revision and mixed-topic tests |
| Week 4 | Formula revision, mock tests and error analysis |
Students should revise Mechanics, Electrostatics, Current Electricity, Magnetism, Optics, Thermodynamics, Modern Physics, Oscillations and Waves.
Chemistry should be revised section by section. NRI students following AP, IB, IGCSE, American Curriculum, or A-Level should give special attention to topics that may not have been covered fully in their school curriculum.
| Section | Revise |
| Physical Chemistry | Formulas, units, standard numerical methods and important graphs |
| Organic Chemistry | Reaction mechanisms, named reactions, reagents and conversion-based questions |
| Inorganic Chemistry | NCERT theory, periodic trends, Coordination Compounds, important exceptions, reactions and properties |
Focus on Calculus, Algebra, Coordinate Geometry, Vectors, Three-Dimensional Geometry, Probability and Trigonometry. Students should practise mixed-topic questions under timed conditions. The aim is not only to solve difficult questions but also to identify the questions that can be completed quickly and accurately.
During the final week of the month, attempt full-length mock tests, revise the error notebook, revise formulas and short notes, solve selected Previous Year Questions, avoid starting new reference books, and maintain a regular sleep schedule. Students should not attempt a full mock test every day if it causes exhaustion. Quality analysis is more important than the number of tests attempted.
| Day | Preparation Task |
| Day 7 | Revise important Physics formulas and weak chapters |
| Day 6 | Revise Physical and Inorganic Chemistry |
| Day 5 | Revise Organic Chemistry reactions |
| Day 4 | Revise Mathematics formulas and selected questions |
| Day 3 | Attempt one final mock test |
| Day 2 | Review the error notebook and short notes |
| Day 1 | Light revision, document check and proper rest |
Do not stay awake late attempting difficult questions. A rested mind is more useful than one additional night of study.
| Check | Status |
| Admit card | ☐ |
| Valid identity proof | ☐ |
| Permitted stationery | ☐ |
| Examination-centre address | ☐ |
| Reporting time | ☐ |
| Official candidate instructions | ☐ |
| Stage | Approach |
| Stage 1: Easy Questions | Attempt the questions you can solve confidently. |
| Stage 2: Moderate Questions | Return to questions that require more calculation or thought. |
| Stage 3: Difficult Questions | Attempt only when sufficient time remains. |
Avoid spending too much time on a single question.
| Stage | Student Checklist |
| Before JEE Main Registration | Check eligibility and prepare documents |
| JEE Main Session 1 | Appear for the first attempt and analyse performance |
| JEE Main Session 2 | Improve the score if required |
| Final JEE Main Result | Download scorecard and All India Rank |
| JEE Advanced | Register and appear if eligible |
| JoSAA Registration | Complete registration and choice filling |
| DASA Registration | Register if eligible under the current DASA rules |
| Seat Allotment | Accept the seat and pay the required fee |
| Document Verification | Upload and verify all required documents |
| Institute Reporting | Complete final admission formalities |
| Academic Session | Attend orientation and begin the programme |
For 2027, students should verify every deadline after the official schedules are released. Current official pages confirm that JEE Main, JEE Advanced, JoSAA, and DASA each publish separate information bulletins or schedules.
| Mistake | What Students Should Do Instead |
| 1. Depending Only on the School Curriculum | AP, IB, IGCSE, A-Level, and American Curriculum may overlap with JEE, but they may not cover every JEE topic at the required depth. Students should compare their school syllabus with the official JEE syllabus. |
| 2. Starting Too Many Books | Using multiple books without completing any one of them creates confusion. A better approach is NCERT, coaching material, Previous Year Questions, and one reference book where necessary. |
| 3. Ignoring Class 11 Topics | Many students focus only on Class 12 during the final year and forget Class 11 concepts. Set aside weekly time for Class 11 revision. |
| 4. Taking Mock Tests Without Analysis | A mock test has limited value unless the student understands why the answer was wrong, which concept was weak, whether time was wasted, and how the mistake can be avoided. |
| 5. Waiting Until the Last Month for PYQs | Students should begin chapter-wise PYQs after completing each chapter. |
| 6. Ignoring Admission Deadlines | JEE preparation does not end with the examination. Students should track JEE Main results, JEE Advanced registration, JoSAA registration, DASA registration, choice filling, seat acceptance, document verification and institute reporting. |
| 7. Using Unverified 2027 Dates | Do not publish or follow exact 2027 dates until they appear in the official brochures or schedules. |
Parents should avoid comparing their child with other students, expecting unrealistic daily study hours, changing coaching programmes repeatedly, pressuring the student after every mock-test score, ignoring sleep and health, making college choices without considering the student’s interest, waiting until counselling begins to research colleges and branches, and assuming all NRI, OCI, PIO, or foreign-national candidates follow identical admission rules.
Parents should help with planning, documentation, deadlines, and emotional support.
Get a structured JEE Main, JEE Advanced, JoSAA and DASA preparation roadmap based on your country, curriculum, current class and target engineering colleges in India.
NRI students can begin foundation building in Class 8, 9 or 10. Focused JEE preparation usually begins in Class 11 with a two-year plan, but Class 12 and dropper students can also prepare with an intensive strategy.
Yes. Class 11 covers a major part of Physics, Chemistry and Mathematics concepts used in JEE Main and JEE Advanced. Ignoring Class 11 topics can create difficulty in Class 12 and during revision.
Yes, but students should compare their school syllabus with the JEE syllabus and give extra time to topics that are not covered at the required depth in their school curriculum.
No. The 2027 dates should be treated as expected until the official information brochures and schedules are released by the relevant authorities.
Students should start chapter-wise Previous Year Questions after completing each chapter. Full-length papers should be attempted after syllabus completion.
Students should use mock tests to improve speed, accuracy, question selection and exam temperament. Every mock test should be followed by detailed error analysis.
Parents should help students compare colleges, branches, fees, eligibility rules, documents and deadlines without forcing choices that do not match the student’s interest.
Revision, formula review, error notebook analysis, selected PYQs, mock test analysis and proper sleep are more important than starting new books.
Copyright © 2024 CounselKart Educational Services Pvt. Ltd.. All Rights Reserved
Post a Comment