BHUBANESWAR: Sarthak Behera secured an All-India Rank (AIR) of 29 within the JEE (Main) exam, the results of which were declared on April 30. The teenager, the son of a police officer, prepared for the top engineering entrance exam at a private coaching centre here. The boy who faithful 5 hours each day to his research has handiest four phrases of advice for others who wish to crack the exam: focal point on study room instructing.
Sarthak mentioned scholars should take note of study room lectures and ask questions every time they face issue in working out a particular subject. "Sometimes, students remain absent from classes and skip important lectures. Later, they don't follow up and this becomes a problem during exams. They should go to the teacher and clear their doubts as fast as possible," he mentioned.
He positioned emphasis on making notes for all subjects reasonably than using a number of books for each subject sooner than the assessments. "We have to set a deadline to finish chapters and revise the subjects to gain confidence during exams," he added.
Sarthak mentioned he responded tricky questions first sooner than making an attempt the easier ones. "It becomes difficult to answer tough questions at the end of the exams. If you don't know the answer to a question, leave it. Don't waste time," he mentioned.
Another scholar, Pragyan Chakrabarti of the town, who secured an All-India Rank of 63, mentioned he relied on self-study, but even so tuitions and particular coaching categories. "A student should finish his homework on time and understand the subjects well. There are no short-cuts to achieving a good rank. Proper planning and focused study will bring good results," he added.
Pragyan, a Plus II scholar of a city-based personal faculty, prepared for the exam for the last two years. His next target is to crack the JEE (Advanced). "I will complete my BTech in computer science from an IIT of my choice. Then I will go for an MBA or MTech programme," he added.
As many as 44,488 candidates from the state had registered for the JEE (Main) this year. Some of them had gave the impression for the exam within the offline mode whilst others took it online on April 15 and 16.
Sarthak mentioned scholars should take note of study room lectures and ask questions every time they face issue in working out a particular subject. "Sometimes, students remain absent from classes and skip important lectures. Later, they don't follow up and this becomes a problem during exams. They should go to the teacher and clear their doubts as fast as possible," he mentioned.
He positioned emphasis on making notes for all subjects reasonably than using a number of books for each subject sooner than the assessments. "We have to set a deadline to finish chapters and revise the subjects to gain confidence during exams," he added.
Sarthak mentioned he responded tricky questions first sooner than making an attempt the easier ones. "It becomes difficult to answer tough questions at the end of the exams. If you don't know the answer to a question, leave it. Don't waste time," he mentioned.
Another scholar, Pragyan Chakrabarti of the town, who secured an All-India Rank of 63, mentioned he relied on self-study, but even so tuitions and particular coaching categories. "A student should finish his homework on time and understand the subjects well. There are no short-cuts to achieving a good rank. Proper planning and focused study will bring good results," he added.
Pragyan, a Plus II scholar of a city-based personal faculty, prepared for the exam for the last two years. His next target is to crack the JEE (Advanced). "I will complete my BTech in computer science from an IIT of my choice. Then I will go for an MBA or MTech programme," he added.
As many as 44,488 candidates from the state had registered for the JEE (Main) this year. Some of them had gave the impression for the exam within the offline mode whilst others took it online on April 15 and 16.
To ace test, JEE rank holder vouches for classroom teaching
Reviewed by Kailash
on
May 05, 2018
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