Why do students fail in NEET exam, despite capable of clearing the paper?

Do you know, approximately 30% of students who fail in the NEET exam may have cleared the same paper another day? Yes, they were capable of clearing the NEET exam, but they didn’t. They failed not because they were not able to solve the paper but they failed. Question is, why do students fail in NEET exam, despite capable of clearing the paper?

Instant answer is, many students fail in NEET exam because they didn’t attempt the paper seriously and made some small mistakes. Very few students keep the tab on their small mistakes or the silly mistakes as we call them. These small mistakes cost them a year and the resources they invested in the preparation for the NEET exam. A silly carelessness drove them out of the race for a medical or dental seat in a reputed college or the university. We should know what these mistakes are and how to avoid them.

Not reading the question properly

Sometimes students are in a haste. They don’t read the question properly. They fail to read, what the examiner is actually asking. Sometimes they had a question pre-set in their mind and they don’t even feel that the examiner may have changed the language of the question. In a hurry, they fill the wrong choice for the answer. The result is, they get minus one number instead of getting the full four marks denoted for the question. Hence, the four marks that may have put the student into the merit actually costs him five marks, i.e. four for the correct answer and minus one for the wrong one.

Mistakes while doing the calculations

No one knows what overconfidence can do to the aspirant, but most of the time it results in a loss. Without properly reading the question or without crosschecking the digits, sometimes students make silly addition or subtraction mistakes. These small errors lead to negative marks, instead of getting some extra marks on the score sheet. Assume, you scored 588 and attempted one such answer where you made such a silly mistake?

Time Management while attempting the paper

It is a big issue. Sometimes we devote some extra time to a typical question. At the same time, we would have attempted four or five answers. The result is, we couldn’t complete the paper in time and thus fail. So, always keep a tab on time and keep the complex problems for the last 15 minutes of the paper. First, resolve all the easy questions and score as much as you can.

Filling the OMR Answer Sheet

Two mistakes students commit while filling the OMR sheet are, they fill the bubble in haste or they the bubble incorrectly. Though the OMR reader reads the half-filled bubble also, there is a chance that it may misread it or completely ignore it. Also, filling a wrong choice in haste is a blunder. So, crosscheck the answer and fill the right bubble, and that too properly. Avoid filling the bubbles at the last of the exam. Sometimes you may have solved the entire paper but you fail to fill the complete answer sheet because time is over. As the result, the sheet is snatched and the paper remains incomplete.

Confidence in self

Keep your emotion in control. Never lose patience and confidence in yourself. Maybe you don’t know the answer to the first five or ten questions, but maybe you may solve enough questions to get the cut-off list clear.

So, avoid these silly mistakes and crack the NEET easily. For more such articles, visit our blog here. To know more about NEET Exam and its preparation, click here.

Is 400 score enough in NEET to get a Government Medical College?

Score 400 plus in NEET

NEET aspirants often quiz about the minimum score they need to get into the government medical colleges. Though 400 plus is considered a good score in the NEET examination, sometimes it may not be enough to get into a good medical college.

Students often think that scoring 400 in the NEET examination may be enough to make a way into a government medical college. Considering the previous year’s results, it may work but the cut-off is always going to be higher. With the number of aspirants rising every year, competition may also increase. It may not be surprising if the cut-off for government medical colleges may get beyond 500 marks.

Preparing for the NEET exam usually requires devotion of 12-15 hours a day. It may vary from student to student. Also, it varies because not all are equal in mental state. It also depends on the foundation, i.e. where the aspirant has studied and how well he was during his school days. There are many students who aspire for full 720 marks. In such circumstances, the barrier of 400 may be breached by more students in the coming years.

“Sometimes it may work and sometimes it may not”, says Noor Nawaz Khan, the founder-director of premium coaching institute, The Hind Guru Academy. “400 is a good score, but the seats in the government medical colleges are limited. Suppose there are 5000 seats and 6000 students score 450 then 400 will not help the aspirant”, he adds.

  • So, what to do, if an aspirant wants to score more than 450 or 500 in order to secure a seat in government-run medical colleges? Here are a few points that may work for an aspirant:
  • Know your own strengths and then start the preparation
  • Learn about the exam pattern and the marks distribution
  • Go through the complete syllabus and segregate it into easy to tackle and hard to manage parts
  • Create an effective study plan and follow it strictly
  • Get quality books, preferably published by NCERT
  • Attempt the test series in quality coaching institutions like The Hind Guru Academy
  • Solve the previous year question papers and assess your problematic parts
  • Revise important topics thoroughly
  • Don’t waste extra time on topics that are well beyond your grasp
  • Get a good tutor or join a good institution for preparation. It will help you clear your doubts without wasting extra time

Also, prepare your lesson plans. Mark the high-scoring topics. Focus on the chapters that yield more marks. If you follow these rules, we are sure you may surpass the cut-off required to get admission to government medical colleges.