Class 12 students — don’t miss important college entrance form deadlines while preparing for boards.
Important last dates:
✅ BITSAT – 16 March (5:00 PM)
✅ VITEEE – 31 March
✅ Pilot CET – 31 March
✅ AME CET – 31 March
✅ IPMAT (IIM Rohtak) – 6 April
✅ NEST – 6 April
✅ IAT – 13 April
✅ IGRUA – 13 April
✅ IMUCET – 24 April
Save this reel so you don’t forget these deadlines.
Better Minds
Empowering students, towards betterment.
Class 11 Science becomes difficult for this reason.
Every year many students choose the Science stream after Class 10. But once Class 11 starts, a lot of them suddenly begin to struggle with Maths and Physics.
The problem is not the Class 11 syllabus.
The real issue is weak fundamentals from Class 10.
Several concepts taught in Class 11 directly depend on a few important chapters from Class 10 Mathematics. If those chapters are not clear, students find it difficult to understand topics in Class 11 and their confidence drops quickly.
If you are planning to take Science in Class 11, make sure you revise these five Class 10 Maths chapters properly during your holidays:
✅ Pair of Linear Equations in Two Variables
✅ Quadratic Equations
✅ Introduction to Trigonometry
✅ Applications of Trigonometry
✅ Surface Areas and Volumes
These chapters build the mathematical foundation required for Class 11 Maths, Physics concepts, and future competitive exams like JEE and NEET.
Students who strengthen these basics before entering Class 11 usually adapt much faster to the new academic level.
If you want practice worksheets for these chapters, comment “PDF” and follow this page.
Follow us for practical study strategies, academic guidance, and concept clarity for Class 9–12 students preparing for CBSE, JEE, and NEET.
Don’t choose your JEE or NEET batch emotionally.
Every year students get confused between PW, Mission JEET, OG teachers, and many other batches because of strong marketing and statements like “selection yahin se hoga.” But the truth is simple — coaching can guide you, the real work is done by the student.
Watch free lectures first. See which teacher actually helps you understand the topic. Then choose the batch that builds your concepts. Don’t become a fan of any teacher or coaching.
Selection comes from consistency, practice, and discipline — not from marketing.
Most students don’t actually prepare for board exams in school.
Ask any student after coming out of a board exam:
“Where did your real preparation happen?”
In most cases, the answer is not their school.
They name a coaching institute or a YouTube channel.
That says a lot about what is happening inside the current education system.
Many schools have capable and sincere teachers. But in many places, teachers are overloaded with duties that have little to do with teaching — paperwork, management tasks, events, and administrative work.
When teachers spend less time teaching, students start looking for learning outside the classroom.
Slowly the situation becomes such that students depend almost completely on external sources for exam preparation.
Then another question naturally comes up.
If students are already learning most of their concepts outside school, why is the system still focused mainly on enforcing attendance percentages?
Shouldn’t the focus first be on making classroom learning meaningful and effective?
A strong education system should focus on:
✅ Teachers getting enough time to teach
✅ Classrooms focused on concept clarity
✅ Academic work prioritized over administrative workload
✅ School hours used for real learning
If this discussion ever reaches people responsible for shaping education policies or running academic institutions, it’s worth analysing what students are actually experiencing.
Towards responsibility.
Share your honest opinion in the comments.
Many students panic after a difficult board exam paper.
They come out of the exam hall thinking they will fail.
Parents also start worrying after hearing that the paper was tough.
But most students don’t know that board exams already have systems that protect students from losing marks unfairly.
Here are three important rules every Class 10 and Class 12 student should understand.
✅ Moderation and Lenient Checking
If a paper turns out to be difficult, the board follows a moderation policy.
Teachers are instructed to check answer sheets leniently. Small mistakes, step errors, or minor calculation slips are often ignored so that students do not lose unnecessary marks.
✅ Grace Marks for Borderline Cases
If a student is missing the passing marks by just 1–3 marks, teachers are allowed to give grace marks.
The goal is simple — a student should not fail just because of a tiny gap.
✅ Compartment Exam Opportunity
Even if someone fails in one subject, the board gives another chance through the compartment exam (usually in July).
After passing the compartment exam, the final marksheet does not show that the student had failed earlier.
This is why students should stay calm after the exam instead of assuming the worst.
Board exams are important, but they are also designed to be fair and supportive for students.
If you are preparing for CBSE Class 10 or Class 12 boards, understanding these rules can remove a lot of unnecessary stress.
Follow this page if you want practical study strategies, exam preparation tips, and guidance for CBSE board students.
Maths Revision Sheet 💯🔥
Most Class 12 students make this mistake before the Maths board exam.
When the exam date comes close, students try to revise the entire syllabus again. They open different chapters, start solving random questions, and end up feeling more confused instead of confident.
The reality is simple.
Just before the Class 12 CBSE Maths Board Exam, you cannot revise every chapter in depth. By now, most students have already solved enough questions. What actually helps at this stage is quick and structured revision.
That is why a 10-minute Maths Revision Sheet becomes extremely useful.
A good revision sheet helps you quickly scan the whole syllabus and remind your brain of the most important concepts before the exam.
✅ Key formulas from every Maths chapter
✅ Important concepts that frequently appear in CBSE papers
✅ Common question patterns asked in board exams
✅ Quick reminders that help you attempt questions faster in the exam hall
Instead of opening 10 different chapters, you revise everything from one sheet in a few minutes.
This kind of last-minute Maths revision strategy helps students stay calm and confident before entering the exam hall.
If you are appearing for the Class 12 CBSE Maths Board Exam, this quick revision can help you recall important concepts right before the paper.
Follow this account and comment PDF to get the 10-minute Maths Revision Sheet for Class 12.
One question from the Determinant chapter that you will not find in NCERT.
Many Class 12 students prepare for the Maths board exam by solving only NCERT examples and exercises. NCERT is important, but board exams often include questions that are based on NCERT concepts but not directly taken from the book.
That is where many students lose marks.
In the Determinant chapter, several questions that appeared in previous CBSE board exams were not directly present in NCERT. They were concept-based variations. If you only practice the standard textbook problems, you may struggle when the exam presents a slightly different format.
In this reel, we are discussing a board-exam level Determinant question that many students miss during preparation.
Practicing such questions helps you:
✅ Understand how board exam questions are framed
✅ Apply Determinant concepts beyond NCERT exercises
✅ Improve problem-solving approach in Class 12 Maths
✅ Prepare better for CBSE board exam question patterns
If you want PDFs of important questions from every Maths chapter, selected based on board exam relevance, follow this page and comment “PDF”.
Follow us for more practical strategies, important questions, and concept clarity for Class 9–12 students preparing for CBSE board exams.
Struggling with Integration in Class 12 Maths?
Many Class 12 students feel stuck when they reach the Integration chapter. The biggest problem is not the formulas. The real problem is not knowing which questions actually matter for the board exam.
Students often spend hours solving random questions from the book but still feel unsure before the exam.
Board exams usually follow clear patterns. Certain concepts and question types appear again and again in CBSE Class 12 Maths papers. If you focus on those specific questions, your preparation becomes much more effective.
In this video, we are sharing important Integration questions selected by our institute’s experienced Maths faculty.
These are not random questions. They are chosen based on:
✅ Previous board exam patterns
✅ Frequently asked Integration concepts
✅ Important application of Integration formulas
✅ Questions with high probability of appearing in the exam
If you are preparing for the Class 12 CBSE Maths board exam, focusing on the right questions can save a lot of time and increase your confidence before the paper.
If you want the PDF of these important Integration questions, follow this page and comment “PDF”.
Follow us for more practical strategies and important questions for Class 9–12 CBSE students preparing for board exams.
Watch Before Maths Exam 🚨
Your marks are about to be saved.
Right before the Class 12 Maths board exam, most students panic because they don’t know what to revise and what to skip. The syllabus is huge, time is short, and opening every chapter again is almost impossible.
This video explains a simple solution.
A special PDF where every Class 12 Maths chapter is compressed into quick revision format so you can revise the full syllabus in minutes before the exam. Key formulas, patterns, and concepts that students often forget under pressure are all in one place.
If you want this Class 12 Maths quick revision PDF, follow this account and comment “Maths”. I’ll send the PDF in DM.
Most students start panicking when the Class 12 Maths Board Exam comes close.
They keep thinking: “Kitna syllabus baaki hai?” “Important questions kaise pata chale?” “Boards mein kya repeat hoga?
But toppers do one thing differently.
They revise smart.
If you are preparing for CBSE Class 12 Maths Board Exam, you don’t need 10 different books right now.
You need focused revision.
That’s why we created a Most Important Questions Worksheet for Class 12 Maths — designed exactly for last-minute board preparation.
This worksheet helps you:
✅ Revise chapter-wise important questions
✅ Practice board-level, exam-oriented problems
✅ Strengthen weak topics quickly
✅ Improve speed and accuracy before the exam
✅ Focus on high-weightage concepts for CBSE Maths
If you are a Class 12 student in Dehradun preparing for CBSE Boards, this is the time to stop stressing and start revising with structure.
Don’t waste the last few days scrolling.
Use them to solve the right questions.
Comment “MATHS” and we’ll send you the PDF.
Follow us for practical strategies, board exam preparation tips, and Class 9–12 academic guidance in Dehradun.
Most students solve Maths randomly.
That’s the biggest mistake.
If you are in Class 12, you already know this—
You complete chapters, solve questions, but still feel unsure before exams.
The real problem is not effort.
It’s the way you practice.
In board exams, questions are not random.
They follow patterns. They repeat concepts.
But most students never train their brain to see those patterns.
That’s why topic-wise practice matters.
When you solve Maths chapter-wise and topic-wise:
✅ You clearly see which topics are weak
✅ You stop wasting time on what you already know
✅ You build exam-level clarity, not just theory knowledge
✅ You start recognizing question patterns faster
This is exactly how toppers prepare for CBSE board exams.
Instead of solving mixed questions blindly,
train yourself to master one topic at a time.
If you want structured PDFs like this for Class 12 Maths,
comment “MATHS” and we’ll send them to you.
Follow us if you want to improve your Maths score with the right strategy.
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Location
Category
Contact the school
Telephone
Website
Address
Better Minds, Canal Road, Miyawala
Dehra Dun
248001
Opening Hours
| Monday | 8am - 8pm |
| Tuesday | 8am - 8pm |
| Wednesday | 8am - 8pm |
| Thursday | 8am - 8pm |
| Friday | 8am - 8pm |
| Saturday | 8am - 8pm |
| Sunday | 8am - 8pm |