Depends on you, and your level of preparation by now. Whatever may it be, you can do much much more as 2 months are good enough for CBSE.
1. For Physics, focus on NCERTs and past year papers. Derivations are crucial low hanging fruits. Churn them out from scratch, as if you’re explaining it to someone else. Don’t miss a step. Read, understand, and write till you can derive the equations/theorems from scratch.
2. For Chemistry, Focus only and only on NCERTs. For chapters like surface chemistry, p-block, polymers, everyday life and stuff like that, you really need to know the chapter to its utmost details. There must not be a single line which you miss out while studying. Yet, some parts would require knowing which is not in NCERTs, like in the chapter of Solid State, structures of ionic compounds is not given in detail (rock salt, zinc blende); yet, CBSE has asked it many times. So, past year papers are of great help to practice. Also making notes for chemistry is extremely helpful, and I cannot stress this more. I scored 100/100 in Chemistry, and I hope this adds some credibility to my answer.
3. For Maths, you need to know beyond the NCERTs to score well. R.D Sharma is more than sufficient. But, just don’t entangle yourself into the huge collection of problems in R.D Sharma. You need to respect the fact that you’ve woken up quite late. There’s absolutely no time to master each and every concept. Focus on practicing the solved examples. That would do. Also, don't forget the past year papers.
Gaurav Seth 4 years, 9 months ago
Depends on you, and your level of preparation by now. Whatever may it be, you can do much much more as 2 months are good enough for CBSE.
1. For Physics, focus on NCERTs and past year papers. Derivations are crucial low hanging fruits. Churn them out from scratch, as if you’re explaining it to someone else. Don’t miss a step. Read, understand, and write till you can derive the equations/theorems from scratch.
2. For Chemistry, Focus only and only on NCERTs. For chapters like surface chemistry, p-block, polymers, everyday life and stuff like that, you really need to know the chapter to its utmost details. There must not be a single line which you miss out while studying. Yet, some parts would require knowing which is not in NCERTs, like in the chapter of Solid State, structures of ionic compounds is not given in detail (rock salt, zinc blende); yet, CBSE has asked it many times. So, past year papers are of great help to practice. Also making notes for chemistry is extremely helpful, and I cannot stress this more. I scored 100/100 in Chemistry, and I hope this adds some credibility to my answer.
3. For Maths, you need to know beyond the NCERTs to score well. R.D Sharma is more than sufficient. But, just don’t entangle yourself into the huge collection of problems in R.D Sharma. You need to respect the fact that you’ve woken up quite late. There’s absolutely no time to master each and every concept. Focus on practicing the solved examples. That would do. Also, don't forget the past year papers.
5Thank You