Summary of "How To CLEAR SSC CGL & CHSL in 1st Attempt! Zero to ASO 6-Month Secret Strategy Exposed 🤫 #ssc2026"
Main ideas / lessons conveyed
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Start preparation with a focus on consistency, not motivation hacks.
- SSC doesn’t require “rocket science” depth in the syllabus; success comes from consistent practice and building confidence.
- Avoid relying on motivation from videos/reels; stop watching such content once you decide to study seriously.
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Choose teachers/batches efficiently to avoid wasting time early.
- Most SSC teachers are good; the issue is which one you personally prefer.
- Use demo videos to decide, then complete that batch straight from first to last video (don’t keep switching).
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Reduce distractions (especially social media).
- The speaker recommends deleting/deactivating Instagram/Facebook, or at least limiting usage.
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Practice is the core differentiator after completing the syllabus.
- Don’t assume that finishing the batch alone is enough—practice through mocks and question-solving is essential.
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Use rough daily scheduling rather than rigid timing.
- Make a timetable that allocates time blocks to subjects/tasks so you don’t waste time deciding what to do next.
- The exact clock times can vary; the key is allocating rough slots.
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Prioritize Tier-1 “core subjects” early; treat GK/GS as a bonus.
- Focus more on Reasoning, English, Maths for Tier-1 to secure cutoff safely.
- Start current affairs/statics lightly early; increase later.
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GK/GS success depends heavily on revision.
- Even if you study everything, what matters is how much you remember, so revision cycles are crucial.
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Start giving mocks only after substantial syllabus completion.
- The speaker started mocks when ~60–70% syllabus was done to avoid demotivation and improve time management.
- Mocks build performance consistency, time handling, and percentile.
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Follow an increasing mock schedule as exams approach.
- Early: 1–2 mocks/week.
- Last 1–2 months: aim for at least one mock per day.
Method / action plan (detailed bullet points)
1) Day planning method (rough schedule approach)
- Create a rough daily schedule (not strictly fixed).
- Allocate subject blocks, for example (as described by the speaker):
- 12:00–2:15: vocabulary (part of the block)
- 1:00–2:30: reasoning practice
- 3:00–5:00: English grammar
- Later blocks (as per their personal routine):
- Sectional mocks / practice after portions of syllabus are complete
- 5:00–7:00: GK completion (batch-based)
- 7:30–9:00: maths videos
- 10:30–11:00: maths videos (batch with many number of lessons)
- 12:00–1:30: free practice/revision time
Key rules:
- You don’t need to sit at exact clock times; you can start slightly later/earlier.
- Start with less duration, then gradually increase study hours as you get stable.
2) Teacher/batch selection method
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Step-by-step:
- Watch demo videos of teachers for each subject.
- Pick the teacher/batch you like best.
- Complete the batch from the first video to the last without frequently switching.
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Don’t get distracted by controversies between teachers; keep your focus on your primary goal.
3) Syllabus completion strategy (subject-specific guidance)
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Maths
- Use a high-volume batch to finish quickly (the speaker mentioned multiple teachers/batches).
- For finishing fast:
- Do 3 videos per day when the batch has many videos/lessons.
- Use additional VOD batches if needed.
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English
- Grammar is emphasized heavily (because concepts must be used in questions).
- If grammar is weak: take a full/complete batch (YouTube/free or paid).
- If grammar is already good: revise from a standard grammar book.
- Add revision using “most repeated rules/questions” playlists/videos.
- Cover high-weight grammar topics like:
- Active/Passive
- Direct/Indirect
- Phrasal verbs
- Fixed prepositions
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Reasoning
- Two options:
- Self-learning via YouTube if time is limited.
- Batch-based learning if you have 3–4+ months.
- Two options:
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GK & GS
- Study from a structured batch and ensure you cover enough of the syllabus beyond the minimum.
- Revision is repeatedly stressed as the deciding factor.
4) Practice strategy after syllabus completion (Maths)
- Don’t rely on books alone; prioritize mocks/question sets.
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Recommended practice flow:
- After batch completion, practice using:
- PYQ-based series/mocks (chapter-wise / best questions)
- A “quick revision + practice chapter-wise” batch (speaker’s recommended approach)
- A YouTube practice channel for chapter-wise practice
- For specific topics (as mentioned):
- PNC / Probability / Statistics
- Learn concepts from a tier-2 batch video source (for concept clarity).
- Practice from a dedicated YouTube practice source (for tips and tricks)
- PNC / Probability / Statistics
- After batch completion, practice using:
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PYQ book caution:
- The speaker bought PYQ books but said they didn’t solve much because of too many unfiltered question types.
5) Sectional mocks timing (when to start)
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Start sectional mocks progressively:
- After 50–60% syllabus: start giving 1–2 marks style questions (sectional practice).
- After 70–80% syllabus: increase to 2–4 marks sectional practice.
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If a sectional timer comes:
- The speaker suggests practicing via sectional mocks anyway (aim to answer max questions within the timer window, but not necessarily all questions).
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Note:
- Sectional mocks help with time-bound performance optimization.
6) English mock practice method
- Give English sectional mocks too.
- Why:
- English mocks include mixed questions; solving mixed sets helps you recall and apply grammar concepts in exam-like conditions.
- After mocks:
- Use mocks to revisit/remember concepts (especially grammar-focused ones).
7) GK/GS & Current Affairs planning
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Early stage:
- Don’t take heavy load of current affairs.
- Priority is still Reasoning/English/Maths for Tier-1 cutoff security.
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Later (Tier-2 stage):
- Increase current affairs focus:
- Allocate about 30 minutes per day, with roughly a month’s preparation window (described as ~half an hour a month to current affairs).
- Increase current affairs focus:
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Revision:
- GK/GS revision is repeatedly described as essential; forgetting is expected without revision.
8) Mock schedule for Tier-1/overall
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When to start:
- Start after 60–70% syllabus completion.
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Mock frequency:
- Early: 1–2 mocks per week
- Final 1–2 months: aim for at least one mock per day
- Within the final phase, continue focusing on percentile (even if marks vary).
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Sectional mocks:
- Reasoning + English:
- After syllabus completion + practice, give two sectional mocks a day (or “one or two” emphasized).
- Maths:
- Start 2–4 maths mocks per week as exam approaches.
- Reasoning + English:
9) Use weekly live tests / platform variety
- Take advantage of weekly live tests on multiple platforms (examples mentioned):
- Olive Board, Testbook, The Pandits, Test ranking, etc.
- Goal:
- Expose yourself to varied difficulty levels (moderate/simple/hard) before exam day.
Speakers / sources mentioned
Speaker / narrator
- Vishal (speaker; claims he cleared SSC CGL/CHSL with PSO and CSS posts in first attempt)
Teachers / coaching creators (named)
- Gagan Sir
- Govind Sir
- Bhoote Sir
- Bhupesh Sir
- Parmar Sir
- Aman Sir
- Neetu Ma’am
- Tarun Sir
- Kamal Sir
- Piyush Sir
- Nimsha Manchal Ma’am
YouTube channels / platforms (named)
- Parmar SSC
- Maths Mania
- Mathsia (referenced alongside Maths Mania-style resources)
- Even Coaching Centre (referenced earlier as Kamal Sir being there)
- Olé Board (subtitles: “Ole Board”)
- Testbook
- The Pandits
- Test ranking
- Selection Way (mentioned as a place where Aman Sir teaches)
Content types/resources
- PYQ series / PYQ mocks (especially Gagan Sir’s PYQ series)
- QRB / FRB series (Bhupesh Sir; FRB series mentioned on Parmar SSC channel)
- Grammar PDFs / “100 Rules of Grammar” (Aman Sir / another referenced source)
- Error practice (recent direct/indirect/error questions referenced)
Category
Educational
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