In the last 30 days before CLAT, dividing your time between subjects effectively is crucial to maximise your preparation. Here’s a simple plan to help you focus on each subject with clarity and efficiency:
1. Understand the CLAT Subject Weightage
CLAT has five main sections: English Language, Current Affairs (including General Knowledge), Legal Reasoning, Logical Reasoning, and Quantitative Techniques. Each section is important, so dedicating time to each is essential. However, you may need to adjust based on your strengths and weaknesses. If you are already confident in one section, spend a bit less time there and more on areas that need improvement.
2. Create a Weekly Schedule
Set up a weekly study plan. Aim to study for 6-8 hours a day, with breaks between sessions. Try to divide each day into blocks where you focus on a different subject. For example, you could do Legal Reasoning in the morning, Current Affairs around midday, Quantitative Techniques after a break, and English and Logical Reasoning in the evening. Adjust the blocks based on your energy levels for better concentration.
3. Focus on High-Impact Sections
Some sections, like Legal Reasoning and Current Affairs, can carry more weight in your overall score. Here’s how much time you should spend on each section per week:
- Legal Reasoning (20-25% of time): This section requires careful reading and understanding of principles. Spend 1-2 hours each day practising legal passages, identifying key principles, and applying them to questions.
- Current Affairs (15-20% of time): Current Affairs can be unpredictable, so it’s essential to stay updated. Spend 1-1.5 hours daily reading newspapers, summarising important news, and going over monthly current affairs compendiums. Make brief notes for quick revision.
- Logical Reasoning (20% of time): Logical Reasoning requires critical thinking and the ability to understand arguments. Spend at least 1-2 hours daily on short passages and practice identifying conclusions, assumptions, and arguments.
- English Language (20% of time): For English, practice comprehension and vocabulary. Spend 1 hour daily reading passages and identifying main ideas, inferences, and meanings of words. This section helps in Legal Reasoning too, so strong reading skills are beneficial.
- Quantitative Techniques (15% of time): Quantitative Techniques can be challenging if you’re not confident in math. Spend 1 hour daily reviewing basic concepts like percentages, ratios, and algebra. Try to solve questions quickly and accurately to build speed.
Note: This is a suggested strategy. It might work for some aspirants and might not work for some students.
4. Revise Regularly
Set aside time each week for revision. Sundays can be dedicated to reviewing everything you studied in the previous week. Go over notes, key concepts, formulas, and news summaries. Reviewing often helps solidify what you’ve learned and identifies areas where you might need extra practice.
5. Practice Mock Tests and Analyse Results
In the last 30 days, take at least 3-4 full-length mock tests per week. Allocate time for analysing your performance, noting mistakes, and finding ways to improve. This practice builds stamina for the actual exam and gives insight into time management and question prioritisation.
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6. Adjust as Needed
Be flexible with this schedule. If you feel confident in a section, you can spend less time there and focus more on challenging areas. The goal is to balance your preparation so you feel ready in all sections by exam day.
By dividing your time wisely and sticking to this plan, you’ll make the most of your final month and enter CLAT with a well-rounded preparation.
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