30-Day CAT Study Plan: Smart Revision Tips for the Final Month
The last month of preparation is not about learning something new for the first time; rather, it is about making the best use of skills and strengths you have.
There are just 30 days until your CAT exam—and preparation happens to be about more than studying at this point. Preparation is about strategy, self-awareness, and the ability to think flexibly. The last month of preparation is not about learning something new for the first time; rather, it is about making the best use of skills and strengths you have had for a long time, isolating long-standing weaknesses, and refining ways of thinking that can assist you in performance under duress. The first step is to practice honest reflective practice. Try not to simply record your scores: Look for patterns around errors, think about why you took so long to solve questions, and be aware of mental plateaus in each section.
 One should categorize topics and concepts into three categories:
Things you know so well you could teach them
Things you know but need to polish
And things you have difficulty with and need to put in place compensatory strategies.
To address stressors, flavorful practice does not mean that you devote equal time to the three categories, but you spend your time in a way with the highest gains. Intentionally planning out the next 30 days of your prep is also extremely important.
The first 10 days should be focused on diving into and consolidating concepts, not rote learning. Review through Quantitative Ability, Verbal Ability & Reading Comprehension, and Data Interpretation & Logical Reasoning, thinking conceptually - consider the concept - what’s really going on, develop a sense of some of the patterns, and develop mental rules for easy problem solving.
For the next 10 days, one should focus on deliberate practice with mock exams and a great deal of sectional drills. Mocks offer assessment information; they also reflect your cognitive and emotional state of readiness to test. When reviewing mistakes, don’t just mechanically go through each wrong answer; analyze your thinking about each one so that you can adjust your thinking going forward.
The final ten days should incorporate quick revision, cognitive stamina, and simulated testing conditions so you can teach your brain and reflexes to arrive at answers consistently and accurately under timed conditions.
The revision methods should be quick and actionable. Keep a distilled set of notes, like formulas, strategies, grammar rules, heuristics for problem-solving, etc., that will enable you to quickly refresh your thinking. Use flashcards for high-yield topics and question types that you can recall patterns with, instead of simply practicing pumps of memory.
Work with an audible clock for 105 minutes that also simulates cognitive fatigue similar to what you would obtain on test day. Mocks should have a purpose of diagnosis. Mocks are not meant to simply score. Mocks will give you information about pacing, your decision-making, or risk-taking in your understanding of reasoning for the information being presented through the test materials. Taking eight of ten full-length mocks in your last month and additionally thinking deeply and consistently about your purpose for taking the test, then you can begin to take your perceptive ability to answer questions and make it a stable, reliable ability to answer questions.
Mental and physical resilience are important elements. Stress muddies mistakes, fatigue muddles judgment, panic muddles speed.
To support your focus and bounce, consciously add scheduled breaks, meditation, and gentle movement, whenever appropriate, throughout the timeframe. Distance and duration do not lend themselves to cramming in the last month; rather, they allow you to work on your focus, clarity, and resilience. You need to prioritize accuracy and the quality of responses over quantity; a higher number of responses is preferred to a lower number of responses, which puts your judgment at risk. Customize sections and pacing to maintain priority throughout.
Ultimately, the last 30 days are less about what you know about the material and more about how you will be approaching the material. Thoughtful preparation is key if you have a didactic approach to studying, incorporating constructive implementation, reflection upon, and mental readiness. Each mock assignment, each revision, and each focus opportunity is a chance to refine your knowledge base and develop your instincts and skills for the exam process. Entering the exam with the clarity and perspective discussed above converts pressure into performance, failure or mistakes into learning, and preparation into confidence. Ultimately, the success in CAT, during the final month, as well as during the exam, is less about hours spent studying and more about insight, preparation, strategy, and poise as you move through each experience leading to your goal.
(This article is written by Dr. Subash Kumar Verma, Dean, School of Business Management, Noida International University)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 