MBBS is one of the most challenging courses in India. The next level is more complicated. With millions of aspirants appearing for NEET-UG and NEET PG every year, the competition only seems to grow while the number of seats remains somewhat the same. In order to reach the final goal of becoming a doctor, several hurdles need to be jumped over. Through hard work, devotion, proper practise and strategic studying, medical aspirants can become medical students' next batch.

NEET PG stands for National Eligibility cum Entrance Test for Post Graduation. It is one of the most widely accepted exams for medical aspirants to get admission in Government PG colleges for MS (Master in Surgery), MD (Doctor in Medicine), and PG diploma courses.

The NEET PG 2022 is all set to be conducted on 21 May, and the tension is high. These last 10 days are crucial and can be the difference between your results' success or failure. So browse through this listicle for your final 10-day strategy to ace NEET PG 2022.

Overview of NEET PG 2022

  • The test would be conducted online, and the medium of instruction is English.
  • The test includes 300 questions that need to be completed within 3 hours and 30 minutes.
  • All questions are Multiple Choice Question types

NEET PG 2022- Tips and Tricks

Introspection time!

This is the last 10-day time period which can change the course of history for you. Introspection at this point may seem unfruitful, but it isn't. Introspect your past months of preparation and get the feel of where you stand in your goal chart that you must have created in the beginning. You feel prepared for this? That's good, and then you only need revision and practice.

But you feel unprepared and feel anxious? That’s why we are writing these tips. Take these inputs seriously so you can convert them into profitable output.

Meditate and remain calm

It is an anxious time, and we can feel it radiating off of you! But anxiety-ridden people at this point of time get easily frustrated, leading them to lose focus. Meditation is a proven way of calming down your mind. Within your chaotic mind, you may also be contemplating if you should leave everything else and prepare subjects with only significant weightage.

That will ruin all your plans of acing the test. Keep calm and go with the strategy, not with the flow.

One step at a time

One step at a time and moving step by step are better than doing everything simultaneously once you are thorough with your concepts and subjects due to the months of preparation. Your only form of revision is answering questions and solving mock papers.

Time management

Time management is not just putting in enough time and effort to study; it is strategically using your time intending to yield a high score. You don't need to put any more time in the last 10-days into learning new concepts that you have missed out on! Practice and refine your knowledge of the ideas you have covered.

Practice tests

One cannot emphasize this point enough. Practice as many mock tests as you possibly can. Not every waking second, but solve more than you could have imagined three months ago. Set the timer to 3 hours 30 minutes (which is the exam duration) and get going. This is the best way to boost confidence and help you with time management during the exam.

One book or platform

One mistake that a lot of aspirants commit is referring to numerous sources. Mixing up books and different sources or platforms can mix knowledge in your brain and turn it into mush. It can get complicated and confusing because you referred to too many places than you can count. Stick to one place or platform at a time. Stay away from information overload and avoid soaking in new information in the last days of preparation.

Regular revision

Only 10 more days before you can finally take a rest. So avoid skipping days of practice or laziness. Take breaks between your study hours, go out for a walk, clear your head by doing something you like for a while. But don't break the flow by missing out on one day worth of practice and preparation. Take mock tests regularly to check the practise. urExam gives you the platform to check your progress with 25000+ questions.

Set goal and make a new routine

You must have had a timetable before and set a goal of completing the syllabus. You might have completed this part of the preparation. But the last 10 days are all about practice and revision. So your goals have changed to practice and ace the exam. And change needs to be incurred to your routine too.

Rest and relax too

Some of you must have jam-packed everything into your 10-day routine down to the minute. But resting and enough sleep are also important. Being sleep-deprived and unhealthy is not going to do you any good. So get enough sleep and take enough breaks. Drink more than an ample amount of water.

The division between major and minor subjects

It would help if you prepared strategically. So dividing the subjects according to their difficulty level or weightage makes perfect sense.

The major subjects may include PSM, OBG, Medicine, Anatomy, Pediatrics, Pathology, Surgery, Ophthalmology, Pharmacology, Microbiology, and Physiology.

The minor subjects may include Biochemistry, EMT, Eye, Psychiatry, Radiology, FMT, Dermatology, Orthopedics, and Anesthesia.

The small but prime work to do is to divide your time according to the subjects. Even in the last 10-days, if you feel like you can and want to catch up to some concepts that you have appropriately understood but wish to revise, you can do so with this division available.

Conclusion

We wish you luck with your exam and hope this article was helpful in your last 10 days of preparation.