Revision only works when it is predictable, repeatable, and slightly uncomfortable—not when you cram random chapters on a whim.
Most NEET aspirants know what to study: NCERT, exemplar, previous years, and mock tests. The gap is almost always how those pieces fit into a week. Without a structure, you default to revising what feels urgent or easy, and physics—especially mechanics and modern physics—needs depth, not just familiarity.
Start with three non-negotiables each week
Block fixed slots for (1) theory recall from NCERT, (2) numerical practice from a trusted bank or PYQs, and (3) one timed mixed test. Even six to eight focused hours across these three beats twelve scattered hours of passive reading.
- Theory recall: close the book and write formulas and assumptions from memory before reopening.
- Numericals: mix easy speed drills with a few multi-step problems each session.
- Timed test: same duration as exam sections you struggle with, not only full papers.
Align revision to mistakes, not mood
After every test, tag errors as conceptual, careless, or time pressure. Your next week’s revision list should come from that log—not from which chapter you like revisiting. This is how weak areas shrink without you feeling “stuck” on one topic forever.
Protect one full rest half-day
Burnout does not show up as laziness; it shows up as rising silly errors and slower recall. A planned break is part of the plan, not a deviation from it.