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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

Answer every question honestly — the more accurate your inputs, the more useful your score.

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How This Tool Works

Each question is weighted based on how strongly it predicts real exam performance. Syllabus coverage, practice test scores, and mistake review carry the most weight — because research consistently shows these are the biggest drivers of results. Sleep and planning are included too, because they genuinely matter.

The score out of 100 shows where you stand. The action list tells you exactly what to do with the time you have left.

What the Scores Mean

80–100: Strong shape. Maintain consistency, don't cram.
60–79: Good base but gaps remain. Prioritise weak areas now.
40–59: Moderate risk. Increase practice test volume immediately.
20–39: High risk. Change your approach — more active study, less passive reading.
0–19: Critical. Focus only on highest-weight topics and start testing yourself today.

Study Tips

Frequently Asked Questions

70 or above means you're in a reasonable position. Above 80 is strong. But the number matters less than what it reveals — look at which questions scored lowest and fix those first.

Yes — every 3–4 days during exam prep. It's a quick way to track whether your preparation is genuinely improving and to catch any areas slipping behind before it's too late.

Don't panic. Focus ruthlessly on high-weight topics, do as many practice questions as you can, and protect your sleep. Cramming 10 chapters you'll forget is worse than deeply reviewing 3 important ones.

Yes. The 8 questions are broad enough to apply to any exam type — school, university finals, or competitive entrance tests. The scoring logic stays the same regardless of what you're preparing for.

Because it genuinely affects exam performance. Memory consolidation happens during sleep. Students who sleep 7–8 hours consistently outperform sleep-deprived ones — especially on reasoning and recall tasks under pressure.

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