Exam season usually fails for one of three reasons: students start late, revise randomly, or practice without feedback. A “good” plan is not about studying more hours. It is about studying the right topics in the right order, with weekly testing and fast corrections.
A tutor helps because they add the missing system:
Diagnosis: what is actually weak (not what feels weak)
Structure: a realistic weekly timetable
Feedback: fixing mistakes before they become habits
Strategy: timing, question selection, and exam patterns
Below is a company-standard study plan you can follow and measure.
Before you open a book, define:
Target score: “I want 85% in Math”
Time left: “4 weeks”
Weekly hours available: “10 hours/week”
Subjects priority: rank from 1 to 3 based on weakness and weightage
A tutor will make this more realistic by aligning goals to syllabus load and past paper patterns.
This structure works for most school and competitive exams.
Baseline test to find gaps
Create a chapter priority list (high impact first)
Set a weekly timetable with fixed time blocks
Concept revision + guided practice
Start an error log (mistake type + why it happened)
Daily practice in smaller sets, not long marathons
Timed section tests
Past papers
Speed drills and question selection strategy
Revision cycles
Mixed mocks
Lighten load, focus on weak spots, avoid burnout
A tutor keeps you honest in every phase and prevents “fake studying” (reading without testing).
A simple high-performance daily structure:
10 min: quick revision (formulas or key notes)
45–60 min: focused practice set (topic-based)
15 min: review mistakes + update error log
Once every 2–3 days: timed mini-test
Tutor impact:
Picks the right questions
Explains the mistake pattern
Upgrades your approach, not just your answers
Every week should include:
1 full mock or 2 sectional mocks
Score tracking (accuracy + speed)
1 review session focusing only on errors
If scores are not moving by week 2–3, the plan needs adjustment. A tutor helps you change the plan early.
With REH, you can:
Find tutors by subject, class, board, location, and online/offline mode
Compare tutor profiles (fees, languages, availability, experience)
Chat before confirming
Track classes in one place
If you tell me the exam type (board or exam name) and timeline (weeks left), I can rewrite this as a fully targeted plan (topics, weekly hours, mock cadence) for that exam.