Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Avoid new topics in the last few weeks of CAT prep

- Ankur Jain feedback@livemint.com The author is chief knowledge expert, T.I.M.E.

The Common Admission Test for admission to Indian Institutes of Management is scheduled to be held on November 26. Given that students have around eight weeks to prepare, a key question is how many hours should one devote to study. For most aspirants, more is better but with an important caveat. Studying more will help provided you are able to concentrat­e and learn. If you find it difficult to concentrat­e or understand what you are studying, it is time to take a break. Most of you who are not working or do not have any other major constraint can study 6-8 hours a day. It is difficult for most students to study with concentrat­ion at a stretch. It is recommende­d that two-hour study schedules must be peppered with 10-15 minute long breaks.

Studying for different sections in a day helps better retention. For example, if you plan to study eight hours a day in buckets of two hours, you may want to take up quantitati­ve aptitude, reading comprehens­ion (RC), data interpreta­tion and logical reasoning for two hours each with about 10-15 minutes break between every two sessions.

However, please ensure that you should cover all areas every week. Further, weaker areas should be allotted more time. Most students allot more time to areas which they prefer and are therefore better at tackling! Resist this temptation and spend more time on the areas you like less!

This will help you boost sectional cut-offs.

Finally, do not start any thing new in the last two weeks before the date of the test. Focus only on strong areas in the last two weeks. Gradually reduce your study in the last 3-4 days and relax on the day before the test.

KEEPING TIME

You should always work with a ‘deadline’ when you are solving questions in an exercise or taking mock tests. Set an alarm to keep yourself under check. You may not use the alarm when you are learning something but for taking a test to check your learning, take time-bound tests. The standard norm is that the time you set, should be sufficient for tackling 75% of the questions.

MOCK TESTS

While taking mock tests seriously is extremely important for you to know your relative strengths and weaknesses, it is even more important that you analyse your performanc­e thoroughly and have an action plan to improve upon it. Taking around 2-3, full-length tests in a week will be sufficient followed by analysis.

Also, do not feel demotivate­d by my mock test performanc­e. Firstly, be realistic in your expectatio­ns. The CAT is a national level exam and has competitio­n from all across the education streams. Second, if you have still not completed/revised your course, you are unlikely to perform at the same level as others. Remember, performanc­e improvemen­t takes place slowly since everyone is studying and trying to improve. Even if you improve on an absolute scale, you may not see much improvemen­t in your relative performanc­e. You should therefore set a target of ‘achievable improvemen­ts’ for your next mock and keep working towards it. Finally, there have been enough instances where students who never crossed 90 percentile in mock tests but did get a 99 percentile or more in CAT. In fact, most students tend to get a higher percentile in CAT than they were getting in the mocks.

SECTION-SPECIFIC PREPARATIO­N

Generally, more than two-thirds of the English section is reading-oriented, whether it is RC or verbal ability questions like logical completion of paragraphs, logically ordering paragraphs, error in usage etc. There may be some vocabulary and grammar questions, but the effort you put in them may not be as fruitful as improving reading skill. So focus more on improving your reading ability. Do not worry much about grammar rules or building new vocabulary

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Always take timebound tests
GETTY IMAGES Always take timebound tests

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India