Board exams are the first major academic milestone in a Delhi student's life. With DU cutoffs touching 99% and competition fiercer than ever, a well-structured study plan isn't optional — it's essential.
This comprehensive study plan has been crafted by Tutors Parliament's senior educators based on the CBSE 2026 syllabus and exam pattern. It accounts for Delhi students' typical schedules including school hours, coaching, and commute time.
Phase 1: Foundation Building (June–September)
These four months are for building a rock-solid conceptual foundation. Most Delhi schools complete 40-50% of the syllabus during this period.
- Focus on understanding concepts, not memorizing — ask 'why' for everything
- Complete NCERT thoroughly for each chapter as it's taught in school
- Maintain subject-wise notebooks with formulas, key points, and diagrams
- Start a doubt diary — note every concept you don't fully understand
- Dedicate weekends to clearing accumulated doubts with your tutor
Phase 2: Syllabus Completion + Practice (October–December)
By December, your entire syllabus should be complete. This is the crucial phase where Delhi students often fall behind due to school pre-board pressure.
- Complete remaining syllabus by November end — no exceptions
- Start solving chapter-wise previous year questions
- Take one full-length practice test per week from November
- Identify your weakest 5 topics and dedicate extra time to them
- Begin answer writing practice — focus on presentation and structure
Phase 3: Revision + Mock Tests (January–February)
This is where the real magic happens. Delhi's winter break (usually 2-3 weeks) is the golden revision period. Use every minute wisely.
- Complete at least 3 full revisions of NCERT
- Solve 10+ previous year papers under timed conditions
- Focus on high-weightage chapters and frequently asked questions
- Practice diagrams, graphs, and maps daily
- Take school pre-boards seriously — they're your best rehearsal
Daily Time Management for Delhi Students
Here's a realistic daily schedule accounting for a typical Delhi student's commitments: School 8 AM–2 PM, commute and lunch 2–3:30 PM, coaching or self-study 4–6 PM, break and dinner 6–7:30 PM, focused revision 8–10 PM. This gives you 4 productive study hours daily — which is more than enough if used with the right techniques.
On weekends, aim for 6-8 hours of study split into morning and evening sessions with adequate breaks.
Get Your Personalized Study Plan
Every student's needs are different. At Tutors Parliament, we create customized study plans based on your current preparation level, target score, and available study hours. Book a free consultation with our student support expert to get your personalized guidance.
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