NET Guide
A Cleaner NET Preparation Strategy For Engineering Students
A NET preparation guide built around topic sequencing, mixed practice, and regular mock-style sessions for engineering aspirants.
Prepare in layers, not chaos
NET preparation becomes weak when students mix every topic at once. You need a sequence: fundamentals first, then chapter-wise practice, then full mixed papers.
This is especially important for Mathematics and Physics, where weak foundations create repeated MCQ mistakes later.
Use mixed practice only after topic control
Full mixed tests are useful, but only after you have enough control over individual topics. Otherwise, scores remain noisy and you do not know what to fix.
Topic-wise practice gives diagnosis. Mixed practice gives performance. You need both, in the right order.
Mock tests should expose weak zones
A mock test is not just a score. It is a diagnostic tool. It should tell you where your time is leaking, where you panic, and which areas still collapse under pressure.
Review every mock test by chapter or section instead of just celebrating or worrying about the total result.
Consistency beats last-minute intensity
Students often try to compensate with long study bursts near the exam. A more reliable approach is to keep daily solving active throughout the preparation window.
Even short but structured daily practice can outperform irregular marathon sessions.