Summary of "“Which Mock Test Is Best for You? | Choose the Best One for You”"
Summary
This is a non-sponsored, personal recommendation from the presenter (Pooja) about which online mock-test platforms she used and found helpful for competitive exam preparation. The core message: pick one reliable primary mock platform for regular practice and a second platform for comparison. Regular use plus timely analysis of each mock is more important than subscribing to many platforms.
Key recommendation
- Choose one main mock-test platform and use it regularly for most of your practice.
- Keep a second platform to compare scores, difficulty, and question patterns.
- Analyze every mock on the same day you take it to identify weak areas and prevent repeating mistakes.
- Focus on repeated practice of weak areas—this will raise your level over time.
Recommended platforms (mentioned in the video)
- Testbook — presenter’s primary choice (recommended for price, exam-like interface, quantity of relevant tests, and speed practice).
- Oliveboard (referred to in subtitles as “All Board”).
- Guidely.
- SmartWorm (appears in subtitles as “smart worm”; may be a similarly named platform).
- Practice Mock.
- Adda247 — mentioned as a platform the presenter did not use.
Note: platform names in the subtitles may contain errors; interpret them cautiously (see “Subtitle quality” section).
Detailed actionable guidance / methodology
- Choose a primary platform (presenter’s pick: Testbook)
- Advantages highlighted:
- Inexpensive.
- Interface mimics the real exam.
- Offers many exam-specific series to practice all related papers.
- Good for speed practice (lots of mocks and timed drills).
- Advantages highlighted:
- Keep a second platform for comparison
- Use it occasionally to monitor score fluctuations, difficulty differences, and question patterns.
- Platform-selection tips
- Consider Testbook + one of: Oliveboard, Guidely, SmartWorm, Practice Mock.
- Buy subscriptions during sales or pick cheaper plans.
- If you can’t buy, consider borrowing or sharing subscriptions temporarily to trial a platform.
- Usage balance (presenter’s personal split — not a rule)
- Testbook ≈ 90% of mock practice
- Guidely ≈ 5–7%
- Oliveboard ≈ 3%
- Did not use Adda247
- Practice types
- Expect variability in mock difficulty (easy → moderate → very tough) — this is normal and useful.
- Use “speed” or “grill”-style drills to improve calculation speed.
Most important habit: same-day analysis
- After taking a mock, analyze it the same day.
- Identify where mistakes happened and which topics/question types are weak.
- Re-practice those areas repeatedly until the error pattern changes.
Don’t over-subscribe
- Avoid signing up for many platforms simultaneously.
- Pick two (primary + comparator) and practice consistently.
Disclosure and credibility
These recommendations are personal and unpaid. The presenter mentions receiving collaboration offers but has not accepted promotions; the advice is based on her own experience.
Notes about subtitle quality
- Subtitles were auto-generated and contain errors/wording issues (e.g., “text book” likely means Testbook; “All Board” = Oliveboard; “smart worm,” “speed grill,” and some percentages/timeline phrases are unclear).
- Interpret platform names and some phrases with caution.
Speakers / sources
- Speaker: Pooja (video host / presenter).
- Platforms/sources mentioned (as referenced in the video; some names may reflect subtitle errors):
- Testbook
- Oliveboard
- Guidely
- SmartWorm (as written in subtitles)
- Practice Mock
- Speed practice feature (referred to as “Speed Grill”)
- Adda247 (not used by the presenter)
Category
Educational
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