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Stuck in ICAD: Should a Class 11 JEE Aspirant Quit Coaching?

Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |11161 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 13, 2024

Nayagam is a certified career counsellor and the founder of EduJob360.
He started his career as an HR professional and has over 10 years of experience in tutoring and mentoring students from Classes 8 to 12, helping them choose the right stream, course and college/university.
He also counsels students on how to prepare for entrance exams for getting admission into reputed universities /colleges for their graduate/postgraduate courses.
He has guided both fresh graduates and experienced professionals on how to write a resume, how to prepare for job interviews and how to negotiate their salary when joining a new job.
Nayagam has published an eBook, Professional Resume Writing Without Googling.
He has a postgraduate degree in human resources from Bhartiya Vidya Bhavan, Delhi, a postgraduate diploma in labour law from Madras University, a postgraduate diploma in school counselling from Symbiosis, Pune, and a certification in child psychology from Counsel India.
He has also completed his master’s degree in career counselling from ICCC-Mindler and Counsel, India.
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Disha Question by Disha on Jul 13, 2024Hindi
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Career

Sir I am in class 11 I had enrolled in jee coaching at ICAD but I am unable to understand their teaching and it has been very complicated there also the lectures are very long I watched few videos lectures on YouTube and I understand well enough on it shall I quit my coaching and how

Ans: Disha, I request you to provide me the following details to enable me to answer:

1) Your Percentage of Marks in 10th Standard
2) Your School Name?
3) Subjection Combination in 11th?
4) You Had Joined Daily / Weekend Classes with ICAD?
5) You understand well from YouTube Videos. What steps you take while / after watching the YouTube Videos?
6) You have the plan to appear only in JEE or other Entrance Exams also along with JEE? If yes, What all?

Your answer to my about doubts will enable me to clearly answer to you. All the Best for Your Bright Future.

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Asked on - Jul 14, 2024 | Answered on Jul 17, 2024
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I got 78% in class 10th I took PCM subjects along with English and electronics as additional. One month ago I joined daily offline classes but I am not able to grasp it very well what it has been taught furthermore I am giving jee and cet both
Ans: Disha, join Online Classes of AhaGuru. It has live / recorded sessions with out doubt clearing sessions also. Please check with it.
Career

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |11161 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 04, 2025

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Sir/ma'am. I am currently in class 12th and enrolled in a jee coaching. I joined coaching in class 11th but everything went wrong. I didn't studied seriously and took classes very lightly. Days passed months passed and I created a huge backlog. Like the problem is I don't know how to study how other students manage time. If I study one subject I drag it the whole day and solve handful of questions.JEE study is very intense and I can't. I missed a precious year and my coaching is very good. Fault is in me. I wasted whole year and now in 12th I have no conceptual clarity and basics are weak. Also half 12th is over but still I am not on track. I regret always and cry all the time. I have big dreams but not the courage to act on it. I have packed my coaching modules because I can't understand anything. And started studying NCERT of 11th and 12th together. I am really tensed about my future. My father has also invested a huge amount in coaching but I wasted all. I am the worst child. For now I am thinking that I should focus on boards only. And then thinking of taking a drop to patiently study coaching modules and then reapply for JEE. But I doubt myself wasting one more year. I don't know. Please guide
Ans: Vaishnavi, To catch up and confidently crack JEE within 6–8 months while strengthening fundamentals, follow these Around 80 practical steps under four pillars—Planning & Time Management, Concept Building & Practice, Revision & Self-Assessment, and Well-being & Motivation. Additionally, explore five backup engineering exams and ten NIRF-ranked private universities accepting JEE or school scores. 1. Draft a master timetable allocating 6 days/week with one rest day. 2. Break six months into two phases: Months 1–4 (learning and practice) and Months 5–6 (revision and mocks). 3. Assign daily 2-hour morning session (your peak focus time) for weakest subject. 4. Reserve 3 hours post-school for subject-wise study (Physics, Chemistry, Math). 5. Allocate 1 hour evening for NCERT revisions. 6. Use the Pomodoro Technique: 50-minute study, 10-minute break. 7. Plan weekly targets: chapters to complete, question sets to practice. 8. Schedule one full-length mock every Sunday under exam conditions. 9. Maintain a task journal logging daily achievements and delays. 10. Use a digital calendar with alarms to stick to slots. 11. Batch similar topics (e.g., Organic Chemistry reactions) together. 12. Avoid multitasking—focus on one topic per session. 13. Limit social media to 15 minutes/day post-study. 14. Track time spent on each topic to optimize future slots. 15. Swap high-intensity topics with lighter ones based on energy levels. 16. Begin each subject with NCERT fundamentals. 17. For Physics, start with Mechanics; for Chem, with Physical; for Math, with Algebra. 18. Create one-page summary sheets of formulas and principles. 19. Watch concept videos (e.g., Khan Academy) to reinforce basics. 20. After theory, solve 20 textbook examples per chapter. 21. Practice 50 topic-wise questions from past-year JEE modules. 22. Use one reliable source per subject (e.g., H.C. Verma for Physics). 23. Maintain a “Doubt Log” and clear all queries within 24 hours. 24. Form short-notes of common mistakes for each topic. 25. Solve previous-year JEE Main papers topic-wise (10 questions/day). 26. For each topic, achieve 90% accuracy before moving on. 27. Develop problem-solving shortcuts (e.g., Vedic Math for arithmetic). 28. Join an online doubt-clearing forum for quick resolution. 29. Attend all coaching classes; record lectures you miss. 30. Revisit backlog modules immediately after school. 31. For iterative learning, alternate subjects daily to avoid monotony. 32. Use mind maps to link interrelated topics (e.g., Electrostatics & Gauss’s Law). 33. Assign end-of-chapter tests after each module. 34. Use timed quizzes to improve speed (30 minutes for 15 questions). 35. Maintain error logs by subject and category. 36. Redo each test after one week to ensure retention. 37. For Chemistry, balance theory (15 minutes) with numericals (45 minutes). 38. For Math, solve 20 higher-difficulty problems/week. 39. Practice at least five numerical-value questions daily. 40. Use one concept-specific book (e.g., P. Bahadur for Maths) for depth. 41. Integrate 10 advanced problems weekly to build confidence. 42. Reserve weekends for solving full syllabus question banks. 43. Study in peer groups twice a week for mutual learning. 44. Teach one concept weekly to a peer; teaching reinforces mastery. 45. Solve sectional mock tests (Physics-only, Chemistry-only, Math-only) biweekly. 46. Attempt at least one JEE Advanced mock every month. 47. Use online analytics to track weak chapters across mocks. 48. Allocate final two months exclusively to full-syllabus mocks and rapid revision. 49. Create a 30-day revision calendar covering all topics thrice. 50. Use flashcards for quick recall of formulas and reactions. 51. Daily 30-minute “rapid revision” of previous day’s topics. 52. Weekly “big revision” sessions focusing on error-prone areas. 53. Maintain a consolidated formula handbook for last-minute review. 54. Take one topic-wise mock test weekly and review within 24 hours. 55. Record performance metrics: accuracy, time per question, rank percentile. 56. Adapt study slots based on performance trends. 57. For each mock, categorize errors: conceptual, calculation, or silly. 58. Review mocks with a mentor or coach for targeted feedback. 59. Avoid cramming; focus on understanding before memorizing. 60. Use NCERT back-of-chapter problems for quick revision. 61. Practice 10 random previous-year questions daily in “revision mode.” 62. Utilize weekends for group discussions on tricky concepts. 63. Deploy spaced repetition for toughest 20% of topics. 64. Record voice-note summaries of each week’s learnings for audio revision. 65. In final month, strictly allocate 30% time to revision, 70% to mocks. 66. Sleep 7–8 hours nightly; consolidate learning during REM. 67. Include 20 minutes of light exercise or yoga daily. 68. Follow a balanced diet; avoid excess caffeine or junk food. 69. Practice deep-breathing or 5-minute meditation pre-study. 70. Set micro-goals (e.g., “Today I’ll master Gauss’s Law”) for daily wins. 71. Reward completion of weekly targets with small treats. 72. Maintain a positivity journal noting progress and breakthroughs. 73. Avoid comparison with peers; focus on self-improvement metrics. 74. Read one motivational article or watch a success story weekly. 75. Connect with seniors who cleared JEE for guidance. 76. If overwhelmed, take a 2-hour break for a hobby. 77. Use stress-management apps for quick relaxation. 78. Keep family informed of your schedule for moral support. 79. Limit mobile use: block social apps during study hours. 80. Visualize success: spend 5 minutes daily imagining your JEE success. 81. Prepare an ergonomic study space with good lighting and minimal noise. 82. Update your study plan monthly based on real-time progress. To maximize your JEE readiness in 6–8 months, establish disciplined routines, reinforce fundamentals with NCERT, and escalate practice through mocks with targeted revisions. Other Entrance Exams | Colleges You can Appear/Apply for as Back-ups:

SRMJEEE, COMEDK UGET, VITEEE, NEST, VIT Vellore, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham Coimbatore, Thapar University Patiala, Siksha ‘O’ Anusandhan Bhubaneswar, SRM University Chennai, Amity University Noida, SASTRA University Thanjavur, Kalasalingam Academy of Research & Education, Chandigarh University, KIIT University Bhubaneswar. All the BEST for the Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Asked by Anonymous - Apr 26, 2026Hindi
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My wife posts everything on social media. Earlier she used to post about food and travel and our kids. Now if we have a fight or argument, she turns it into a funny reel or feminism post and everyone on her feed starts commenting. I am not on social media but when we meet socially, our common friends have started making fun of me like I am the villain. She calls herself an influencer and says it is helping her reach a wider audience. I told her she shouldn't post without my permission and it is leading to big arguments. I feel it is unfair. What should I do? Please help me sir
Ans: Dear Anonymous,
I understand where you are coming from; it's not just the post. It's about your private life being turned into public content and mockery. Your reaction is valid and yes, it is unfair. I understand her interest in building an online presence, but it has to be separated from your right to privacy. Start with a calm conversation about this; express, verbally, how her posts make you feel. Instead of saying, "You can't post about is," try saying, "When our problems become content, it hurts the relationship and me." Or, you can say, "I am so happy that you are making content, but not when it involves our problems." It's the best way to frame the expression without sounding accusatory. Be clear about your boundaries: no posts about private matters, and consent is key. Give her real-word examples, like how your friends mock you. Try to keep the conversation as less accusatory as possible, to avoid a bigger conflict. Start with communicating your feelings.

Best Wishes

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