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The Ultimate AI-Powered Study Guide for JEE & NEET 2026

How top students are using Coachingle to prepare for India's toughest exams — including videos, mind maps, and adaptive quizzes.

Coachingle TeamMarch 10, 202610 min read

JEE and NEET aspirants have 18 months of syllabus, 6 hours of daily coaching, and 2-3 hours of independent revision. The scarce resource is revision time. This guide covers how to spend it.

The 60-30-10 method

  • 60% revision of concepts you already learned. This is where most aspirants under-invest.
  • 30% practice on exam-pattern MCQs.
  • 10% new topics from ongoing coaching.

How Coachingle fits each block

  • Revision (60%): Type a chapter name into QuickCram. Watch the 2-minute video during the bus ride. Skim the cheatsheet before bed. Listen to the audio summary while walking.
  • Practice (30%): Open the JEE or NEET vertical (jee.coachingle.com / neet.coachingle.com). Use Mock Test for full-length sections, PYQ Bank for past papers, Speed Drill for time-pressured practice.
  • New topics (10%): Generate a cheatsheet the evening of the lecture. Flashcard the definitions immediately.

Physics, Chemistry, Biology — subject-specific notes

JEE Physics

Mind maps work unusually well for Physics because topics interconnect (mechanics → work-energy → rotational). Generate a chapter mind map after each class and connect it to previous chapters.

NEET Biology

The volume is the challenge — 38 chapters, most factual. Flashcards are the single highest-leverage tool. Target 30 cards/day throughout the year.

Chemistry (both)

Physical Chemistry: cheatsheets + speed drills. Organic: comic strips work surprisingly well for reaction mechanisms. Inorganic: just memorize — flashcards all the way.

Mock test cadence

Start weekly sectional mocks 6 months before the exam. Move to full-length mocks 3 months out. One full mock per week is enough — more leads to burnout and false confidence.

Good luck.