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One big misconeption: "JEE Is a conept oriented exam , so if you get the conepts right you can solve any problem" This is a very common misconception. IT is true that JEE is conept oriented, but you can never bypass practice. Some questions blatantly use tricks(pick up arihant maths books and you will know). So practice till you fell the problems in your blood, rather than just enjoying the beauty of the problems OR the teacher OR the material.
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I would suggest that you join a 1 year distance learning programme. I am not saying that their material will be concept building(in fact most courses do NOT start with the basics of a topic), but you will have a one year plan as well as a test series to assess your performance.What you need now is a plan. But still you need to follow the standard book. Stay positive and prepare 
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I would suggest brilliant tutorials for the reason that their AITS (test series) is closest to JEE. Also one more advice -You wont be able to clear JEE by just learning a DLP material. Most of the materials out there will have the important problems from various books. So if you want to go for a structured preparation , get hold of the standard books and use the DLP material as a practice only . This is my personal experience. Many students will pick up a DLP material and start reading from the first page, they will feel it as difficult and label themselves as "not fit for JEE" or come to the conclusion that "JEE is only for those people who can read between the lines from the DLP material" . One advantage of DLP is that they will have a plan for 1 or 2 years. But even then you have to use the books.If you want me to post more please reply below. Stay healthy and positve. 
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Never start learning a topic from any correspondence course material , no matter how famous the institute is . I would suggest the following method Always start with a good school level book For maths : start with RD sharma , then move on to KC sinha and ML khanna For physics : start with University physics by young and freedman. Solve HCV , the theory is not so good in HCV Then go for the arihant series for maths and physics. Then you may want to go for FIITJEE RSM , you will be surprised to notice that many of the problems would have been picked up from the books themselves. Remember FIITJEE didnt invent the subject. If you start with FIITJEE material you will feel that JEE is some esoteric , exam only for those who have very high IQ. Go Inch by inch (starting with the books) . Not only will you clear the exam but you will also enjoy the journey.Otherwise , studying for JEE would look like an uphill task.
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I am actually a teacher and cleared JEE 8 years ago.
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I would recommend joining a real test series unless you are from a rural area where test centre is not present.I would recommend Brilliant tutorials AITS , dont worry about it being too late go to their website and you may still be possible to write a few tests. The reason i recommend going to a centre rather than at home is that you get a feel of the atmosphere , sitting on a bench alone , filling in the details in the answer paper, watching the time etc. So i would tell you to join a test series which has a centre in your city . 
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Sumair , i think this whole thread is pointless. Ask any successfull JEE candidate and they would say that their self study , (i.e the time spent all alone on a desk ) , after guidance from the institute is what helps. There are hundreds of problems that can be solved for a particular topic. The institute wont solve all types. You have to solve after learning from the institute.
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I cleared JEE in 2007 from Bansal classes and got a low rank of AIR 6392. I was in X-6 Batch. Tamanna , you want to fantasize about kota, best of luck.I dont want to give my real name coz i am in a job right now and the organisation which i serve wont appreciate me giving my real name.
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2 or 3 lectures a day. Rest of the day for self study. IF you are a dropper , the basics wont be stressed and some topics will be skipped. If you are going for 2 year course, all topics will be covered. The problem that many students face in kota is that they rely too much on the institute. The institute wont do many simple problems. You have to go home and slog on your own. The toppers you see in the ads are the one who buy multiple books and try out many different problems on their own. The institute will give you a material which has problems of higher standard. In order to attempt those problems , you must have worked on the basic level problems on your own. Just relying on Bansal classes material for preparation will only make you think that JEE is some amazing thing with crazy problems.
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In kota if you are dedicated , all you would do is study, almost like a monk in a monastry. There are distractions like video games , net cafe , movies , fantasizing about the opposite gender. But also lot of the stuff taught in places like Bansal classes is not necessary. When a student gets low batch , depression and hate for the subject is common. The competition in kota gets on your nerves. After a review test , everyone keeps asking "Tumhare batch kaun sa hai" and this goes on. Not all is sunshine in kota. They have high success rate because lots of dedicated ones are preparing in one city. Just statistical probability.If you dont get home sick , ok with hindi, the heat (48 degrees), facing dissapointments in review tests, then kota is ok for you. Otherwise it will be a tough experience.
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We take cos
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It doesnt matter whether the paper is tough or not . It is ALWAYS relative. For eg , look at IIT-JEE 1995 physics paper . It was on the harder side ,but still hunderds qualified the exam. So right now just focus on the preparation .:)
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It is ALWAYS relative. Every year 5000 people get through based on the relative performance. Dont waste any time on thinking whether the paper is going to be tough or not .IIT_JEE 1995 physics paper was hard. But hundreds got admission based on relative performance .So join a good national level test series like Brilliant Tutorial's AITS , also finish the portions as early as possible.
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My honest advice is this : For physics just focus on HC verma only . Dont worry about other books , the remaining time is enough for doing all problems of hc verma.
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I would suggest that you go for university physics by sears and zemanasky . The theory is much better than hc verma. After that you go for the BM sharma series by cengage publishers .
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Join a good national level test series and get good percentiles. If you are getting good percentiles,the combination of books is working out . For physics i would also reccomend University physics by Sears and zemanasky. The theory is much better than HC verma. Use HCV only for problems .Cengage books are wonderful. Also try arihant organic. Lots of problems.For good base in maths get RD sharma CBSE book ,it would make doing Cengage much productive.
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Start with trigonometry. Get a good school level book like RD sharma and master it . Then you can move on to quadratic eqns ,complex numbers , sequence and series , binomial,permutation and combination,Coordinate geometry..After you do RD sharma get ML Khanna mathematics and solve the corresponding chapter.
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Join ELITE program for JEE. Go to brilliant tutorials website.
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Brilliant tutorials is not closed .The link for BMAT is given below: http://www.brilliant-tutorials.com/distance-education/iitjee/bmatpgm.html
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I would highly recommend that you join the two year AITS ( if they have that option) . I recommend BT because the questions are of all difficulty levels unlike FIITJEE , where the problems are super hard and many students get demotivated because of the problems. IF BT doesn't have a two year test series joint the two year ELITE correspondance course for JEE. They have periodical tests every year. The material is just supplementary and gives you a monthly timetable . Books are always the best way to prepeare.
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