Summary of "Topper’s Smart Study Challenge🔥 | Score 95% in Class 11th & 12th | Prashant Kirad"

Summary of "Topper’s Smart Study Challenge🔥 | Score 95% in Class 11th & 12th | Prashant Kirad"

This video by Prashant Kirad addresses common challenges faced by students in classes 11th and 12th across all streams (Science, Commerce, Humanities), such as overwhelming syllabus, distractions, lack of focus, and pressure from board and competitive exams like JEE and NEET. Prashant shares a five-step Smart Study Challenge methodology that helped him efficiently manage his studies and significantly improve his performance.

Main Ideas and Lessons:

The Five-Step Smart Study Challenge Methodology:

  1. How to Read: Apply the 80/20 Rule with Three Zones
    • Identify important topics using past year papers.
    • Divide syllabus into three zones:
      • Red Zone (20%): Very important topics, highest priority.
      • Blue Zone (40%): Moderately important topics.
      • Green Zone (40%): Least important topics, can be skipped if time is limited.
    • Focus primarily on Red Zone topics, then Blue Zone, if time permits.
  2. Divide Your Study Time into Three Parts
    • Break daily study hours into three sessions (e.g., 2 hours + 2 hours + 2 hours = 6 hours total).
    • If less time is available, adjust accordingly (e.g., 1 hour + 1 hour + 1 hour).
    • Use your most productive time to study difficult or disliked subjects.
    • Use less productive or sleepy times for favorite subjects or numerical problems to stay engaged.
  3. Active Recall + Feynman Technique
    • After studying a topic, spend 10 minutes closing your book and recalling everything mentally.
    • If stuck, imagine teaching the topic to someone else within those 10 minutes.
    • This technique drastically reduces the need for lengthy revisions later, saving 3-4 hours.
  4. Smart Notes Making
    • Avoid making lengthy, detailed notes that waste time.
    • Instead, write concise, keyword-based notes in your own language that only you can understand.
    • Limit notes to 2-3 pages per lecture or topic.
    • Use these notes for quick and effective revision.
    • For coaching students, detailed notes may still be necessary.
  5. Revision Hack
    • Avoid revising entire notes at the last minute.
    • Use question banks to revise by solving questions randomly.
    • Identify weak topics based on unsolved questions and revise only those specific topics.
    • This targeted revision is more efficient and effective.
    • Prashant also recommends his own Question Bank (link provided in the video description).

Additional Advice:

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This summary encapsulates the core concepts and actionable steps from the video to help students manage their study time efficiently and score high in their board and competitive exams.

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