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Exam Readiness Index

Answer 8 honest questions about your exam preparation. Get a score from 0 to 100 — and a clear list of what you need to fix before exam day.

⏱ Takes about 2 minutes — be honest for accurate results

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About Your Exam

8 Readiness Questions

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How This Tool Works

Each question is scored based on how much it actually contributes to exam performance. Syllabus coverage, practice test scores, and mistake review are weighted most heavily — because research shows these are the biggest predictors of exam results.

The total score out of 100 tells you where you stand right now. More importantly, the suggestions tell you what to fix in the time you have left.

What the Scores Mean

80–100: You're in strong shape. Focus on maintaining, not cramming.
60–79: Good preparation but gaps remain. Prioritise weak areas.
40–59: Moderate risk. Increase intensity — especially practice tests.
20–39: High risk. You need to change your approach urgently.
0–19: Critical stage. Focus on highest-weight topics first and start testing yourself now.

Study Tips

Frequently Asked Questions

A score of 70 or above suggests you're in a reasonably strong position. Above 80 is good. The most important thing isn't the number — it's understanding which specific areas are pulling your score down and fixing those.

Yes. Use it every few days as your exam approaches. It's a useful way to track real improvement and catch any areas you're falling behind on before it's too late.

Don't panic — focus. With limited time, prioritise high-weight topics, do as many practice questions as you can, and ensure you're sleeping. Cramming 10 chapters you'll forget is worse than deeply reviewing 3 key areas.

Yes. The questions are general enough to apply to any type of exam — school, university, or competitive entrance exams like JEE, UPSC, IELTS, etc.

Because sleep is genuinely important for exam performance. Memory consolidation happens during sleep. A student who sleeps 7–8 hours consistently will outperform a sleep-deprived student who studied more hours — especially on reasoning and recall tasks.

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