

With just two months left for the board exams, many students wonder if starting now can still lead to a 90–95 score in Chemistry. The answer given in this session is clear: you can score a perfect 100/100 in the next 45 days if you follow the right strategy with discipline.
Ms. Tapur Umar, begins by breaking down the subject and explaining how students should utilise the remaining time with smart planning.
Chemistry is divided into two books, with a total of 10 chapters:
Physical Chemistry – 3 chapters
Inorganic Chemistry – 2 chapters
Organic Chemistry – 5 chapters
Before starting preparation, students must analyse the marks weightage of each chapter. The biggest mistake is giving equal time to all chapters without considering which ones carry more marks.
A 5-mark chapter should not get the same number of hours as a 9-mark chapter.
Instead, students should identify:
Chapters with high weightage
Chapters that can be completed quickly
Chapters from which predictable questions are asked every year
For example, Biomolecules, a 7-mark chapter, can be mastered in just 3 hours if studied smartly.
The educator emphasizes that studying everything “as it is” is not possible in the last 45 days. Students must focus on:
What types of questions are asked
Which topics repeat every year
Which reactions or numerical types are most important
Organic Chemistry, for instance, demands that students separate and revise all name reactions carefully. Physical Chemistry requires focus on key numerical topics like Gibbs energy and Electrochemistry.
Students are asked to reflect honestly:
“Can you follow everything consistently on your own for 45 days?”
Most students answer No or Maybe, and that’s the reality. The educator explains that guidance in the last 45 days acts as a catalyst, helping students avoid mistakes and save time. This is why a 45-day crash course, Nirbhay Batch, is offered for those who need structured help.
The batch includes live classes, doubt sessions, and complete guidance, ensuring nothing outside the taught material appears in the exam.
Completing the syllabus does not just mean reading all chapters. It means:
Covering every chapter quickly through
YouTube one-shot videos
Recorded batch sessions
Summary notes (only if previously prepared well)
Immediately solving questions after each topic
Students should not attempt long coaching-style 10-hour classes now. Instead, they should use crisp, 2–3 hour one-shot lectures to complete chapters efficiently.
When it comes to question practice, the educator stresses:
You do not need hundreds of reference books.
The only essential sources are:
NCERT textbook questions
CBSE Sample Papers
Last 5–10 years of Previous Year Questions (PYQs)
Chemistry repeats patterns heavily. Even when questions are twisted, they revolve around the same concepts.
Sticking to these three sources for the next 45 days is more than enough to score full marks.
Students often skip revision, believing that finishing the syllabus is enough. But frequent revision is the real game-changer.
Revision should work like this:
After finishing Chapter 1, move to Chapter 2
After reading Chapter 2, quickly review Chapter 1
After reaching Chapter 9, check whether you remember Chapter 3 concepts
This helps identify what concepts are disappearing from memory so they can be strengthened in time.
Short notes, self-tests, and quick numerical checks help track actual understanding.
The educator stresses that 97–98 out of 100 students fail because they lack consistency, not because they lack ability.
Even the best strategy fails without consistency.
If students follow the plan daily for 45 days, without taking long breaks or losing focus, they can easily score 100/100.
Students who can:
study every topic,
solve NCERT + PYQ + sample papers,
revise frequently, and
stay consistent for 45 days
don’t need any external help.
But those who answered No or Maybe may require structured guidance like the Nirbhay or Nirbhay Pro batches, depending on whether they are preparing only for boards or for CUET as well.
The educator emphasizes that joining is entirely the student’s choice, but honesty with oneself is important.
Chemistry greatly impacts the overall percentage.
If students score well here, it can compensate for a slightly lower score in another subject. That’s why scoring 95–100 in Chemistry is not just possible—it is extremely achievable with the right approach.
The educator guarantees that following this strategy with consistency will enable students to score 100 out of 100 in Chemistry.
Stay focused
Avoid distractions
Use the remaining time wisely
Revise frequently
Stick to NCERT, sample papers, and previous year questions
With discipline and smart work, scoring full marks is completely attainable.