To study in IITs is dream of most of the future
engineers. Always remember that JEE exam
requires a high level of perfection in all respects –
particularly in memory, logic, speed, and
quantitaive analysis. Such perfection requires
constant practice.
Note that most of the students who get top ranks
in JEE are ordinary students, so don’t
underestimate yourself and start preparation. May
be you have not scored well in X board exam or
you are not doing well in your coaching classes,
don’t worry just start your preparation keeping
JEE in your mind.
Books:
Maths – Any good book will do, just as long as it
has thousands of problems (I’m serious). But
here are some of the books I know and have
used:
NCERT, Tata McGraw Hill, G. N. Berman, A. I.
Prilepko, Hall & Knight, S. L. Loney.
Physics – Just three – NCERT, H.C. Verma and I.
E. Irodov. If you want really challenging problems,
try the Krotov.
Physical Chemistry – NCERT, P. Bahadur, N.
Avasthi and V. K. Jaiswal
Organic Chemistry – This one has a huge list, but
here are some good ones:
NCERT, Paula Bruice, Peter Sykes, I.L. Finar,
Morrison and Boyd, M. S. Chouhan, etc.
Inorganic Chemistry – NCERT, J. D. Lee, N.
Avasthi and V. K. Jaiswal, Vogel’s Qualitative
Analysis.
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