
CBSE Class 12 English exam, scheduled on 12 March 2026, is often considered manageable, yet scoring full marks requires precision and consistency. Most students cover the syllabus but lose marks due to weak sentence construction, unclear answers, or improper formats. Even if preparation feels incomplete, a one-month structured plan with daily practice can bring noticeable improvement. English is a skill-based subject, and clarity in expression improves quickly with the right approach.
Class 12 English paper follows a well-defined structure that balances comprehension, writing ability, and literature understanding. Knowing how marks are distributed helps students plan preparation without overloading any single section. Each section tests a different skill, and steady practice across all three is essential for a high score.
The English paper has three sections:
Section A: Reading Skills – 22 marks
Section B: Writing Skills – 18 marks
Section C: Literature – 40 marks
Understanding this structure is the first step toward aiming for full marks.
Reading comprehension is one of the most reliable scoring areas with regular practice. Solve one passage daily from sample papers or previous year questions. Spend 15–20 minutes focusing on understanding the passage, not rushing through it. This habit improves comprehension, vocabulary recognition, and accuracy. With consistency, students can aim to secure most of the 22 marks comfortably.
Many students lose marks in writing due to unclear or grammatically weak sentences. Begin by writing 10–15 simple sentences daily about familiar topics like your routine or recent events. This strengthens tense usage, connectors, and flow. When choosing long-answer formats, stick to fixed-format options such as job applications, reports, or formal letters, as they reduce the chance of structural errors and help maintain clarity.
Literature does not require memorising bulky reference material. Focus on class notes, chapter summaries, themes, key events, and character traits from Flamingo and Vistas. Practising previous year questions helps understand how answers are framed and evaluated. Clear, relevant points written in simple language are enough to score well.
Scoring full marks is about discipline and balance, not over-studying.
Practice daily, not everything at once:
Short, focused sessions every day are more effective than long, irregular study hours. Divide time across reading, writing, and literature to maintain consistency.
Learn vocabulary in context:
Instead of memorising word lists, learn new words while reading passages or literature chapters. This improves natural usage and comprehension.
Believe first, score later:
Confidence plays a key role in English. When students trust their preparation and write calmly, answers become clearer and more structured.