Top 5 Mistakes Students Make in JEE Mains (And How to Avoid Them)

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Let us be honest with you — most students who don't clear JEE Mains aren't failing because they're not smart enough. They're failing because of things that had nothing to do with intelligence. Things like poor habits, wrong assumptions, and decisions made out of panic rather than planning.

We've seen this pattern repeat itself, especially among students from cities like Bhopal where competition is intense and the pressure from family adds another layer on top of everything. The ones who crack it aren't necessarily the ones who studied the most. They're the ones who avoided these five mistakes.

1. Studying Hard on the Wrong Things

Here's something nobody tells you early enough — not all chapters are worth the same effort. Students spend weeks on topics that show up for maybe 1 mark, while skipping chapters that NTA loves to repeat session after session.

Go pull up the last 5 years of JEE Mains papers. Literally sit with them for an hour. You'll quickly notice that certain topics — Limits, Electrochemistry, Ray Optics, p-Block elements — come back almost every time. That's where your energy should go first. Work smart before you work hard.

2. Underestimating NCERT (This One Hurts)

Ask any student who dropped a year and cleared JEE Mains in their second attempt. Almost all of them will say the same thing — they finally read NCERT properly.

For Chemistry especially, NCERT isn't just a starting point. It IS the syllabus. Questions in Inorganic Chemistry are pulled straight from those lines. Yet students skip it to jump into DC Pandey or VK Jaiswal, building a fancy top floor with no foundation underneath. Read NCERT like you're reading it for the last time before the exam. Because eventually, you will be.

3. Solving Problems vs. Actually Practising

There's a difference between sitting with a chapter and doing 30 questions at your own pace... and sitting in exam-like conditions for 3 hours straight with a timer running.

The first one feels productive. The second one is what actually prepares you. The reason most coaching centres for JEE Mains in Bhopalrun weekly full-length mocks isn't just routine — it's because the exam environment itself is something your brain needs to get used to. Stress affects recall. Time pressure changes how you think. You can't figure that out from your bedroom with your phone next to you.

4. Freezing on Hard Questions and Losing the Paper

This happens to incredibly well-prepared students. They hit a tough question in Physics, spend 6-7 minutes on it, and suddenly the last 40 minutes of the paper feel like a blur.

The rule is simple but hard to follow in the moment — if a question isn't moving in 90 seconds, mark it and leave. Come back later. Easy marks left unattempted because you chased a hard one is one of the most painful outcomes in this exam. Build this discipline in your mocks, not on the actual day.

5. The Last Month Becomes a Health Disaster

Right before the exam, something breaks down for a lot of students. Sleep goes from 7 hours to 4. Food becomes whatever is fast. Exercise disappears. And then on exam day, they sit down and find their mind is foggy and slow.

Your brain is not separate from your body. Sleep is when memory gets stored. Without it, all that last-minute studying goes nowhere. Protect your sleep the same way you protect your study hours. Twenty minutes of walking outside does more for your focus than another hour of forced revision when you're already exhausted.

None of this is groundbreaking advice. But the students who actually follow it — especially that last one — are the ones who come out on the other side with a score they're proud of. The exam is hard. Don't make it harder by getting in your own way.

Also Read: Best NEET Coaching Institute in Bhopal