how to prepare clat without coaching
how to prepare clat without coaching
How to prepare for CLAT 2020 without coaching? | Expert Speak | Amit Poddar
CLAT 2020 exam preparation is one of the challenges for the students preparing for the board exams and other entrances post 12th standard. Undeniably, it is important to score a good percentile in CLAT entrance exam to seek admission in law colleges. Therefore, our expert shares his insights about how to prepare for CLAT 2020 without coaching.
In this article, find out practical tips to prepare for CLAT exam, section-wise preparation strategy, and which books to refer while preparing for CLAT 2020 at home.
Common Law Entrance Test (CLAT) is an all India based law entrance exam. Undeniably, it is difficult for the students appearing for the first time to target NLUs because no less than 50000-55000 aspirants appear for the CLAT entrance exam every year. Therefore, the key is to focus on the preparation and for that one need not necessarily take the help of coaching center to excel in the CLAT exam.
As they say "self-study is the best study", therefore the no. of hours you dedicate at home for the preparation of CLAT exam matters more than the fact whether you have joined a coaching center or not. In this article, you will find out practical tips to clear CLAT exam without joining coaching center.
Difference between Percentage and Percentile
It is important to relate your CLAT exam preparation with the preparation of the competitors.
It is because unlike your class 12th where 'percentage' benchmarks the performance of the candidate, in the entrance exams, it is 'percentile' which is calculated by comparing your performance viz-a-viz performance of the other candidate. In other words, CLAT exam is not about the percentage of marks scored, but about the percentile scored.
To elaborate, let us take this example.
A candidate scored 90% above in 12th standard, he/she is considered good for applying to all the colleges of various universities pan India.
Whereas if in terms of percentile, the same candidate sits for CLAT exam and has scored less than 70 percent marks, yet he/ she might stands out to be the topper. This is because the rest of the students who appeared for the exam have scored less than 70 per cent overall marks in the exam.
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