Are you staring at your UGC NET exam date—January 5, 2026—feeling that familiar knot in your stomach?
With just 3 days left, you might be wondering if it’s even worth preparing anymore. Let me tell you something from my 15 years of teaching experience: some of my most successful students cracked the NET in their final week of preparation.
The secret? They didn’t try to read everything. They focused on what matters.
The Reality Check: What You’re Actually Facing
Before we dive into strategy, let’s understand the logistics of the battlefield:
Exam Date: January 5, 2026
Shift: Shift 1 (9:00 AM – 12:00 PM)
Duration: 3 hours (180 minutes) – no breaks
Total Questions: 150 MCQs
Total Marks: 300
Paper Breakdown: * Paper 1: 50 Questions (100 marks)
Paper 2: 100 Questions (200 marks)
Pro Tip: There is NO NEGATIVE MARKING. Attempt every single question. Even an educated guess can be the difference between a “Qualified” and a “Not Qualified” result.
The 55% Rule: Where to Focus Your Energy
Here is what most coaching centres won’t tell you: British Literature + Literary Theory = 55% of Paper 2. Stop trying to cover everything. In the next 72 hours, prioritise your time like this:
1. High-Weightage Topics (70% of your time)
Literary Theory & Criticism (~25-30%): * Postcolonialism: Said, Bhabha, Spivak.
Feminism: de Beauvoir, Showalter, Butler.
Marxism: Base-superstructure, Hegemony.
Structuralism/Post-structuralism: Saussure, Derrida.
British Literature (~25-30%): * Shakespeare (Plays & Sonnets), the Romantics (Wordsworth, Keats), Victorians (Dickens, Hardy), and the Modernists (Woolf, Eliot).
Indian Writing in English (~15%): * Narayan, Rao, Rushdie, Roy, and poets like Kamala Das.
2. Medium-Weightage Topics (20% of your time)
American Literature: Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Toni Morrison; Transcendentalism.
Language & Linguistics: Phonetics, morphology, and the history of English in India.
3. Low-Weightage (Skim only)
World Literature in English and Cultural Studies (unless linked to major theory).
Paper 1: The Equaliser You Can’t Ignore
Many students make the fatal mistake of neglecting Paper 1. It is 100 “easy” marks if you are strategic. Focus on:
Teaching & Research Aptitude
Logical Reasoning (Patterns often repeat)
Reading Comprehension (High scoring)
The 72-Hour Battle Plan
| Day | Focus Area | Night Activity |
| Day 1 | Theory Blitz: Revise major theorists & British Lit texts. | 1 Full Mock Test + Review mistakes. |
| Day 2 | Deep Dive: Indian, American & World Literature. | Paper 1 practice (50 questions). |
| Day 3 | Consolidation: Quick revision of high-weightage topics. | Sleep! (7-8 hours minimum). |
5 Mistakes to Avoid Right Now
Starting New Topics: Reinforce what you already know.
Skipping Sleep: Your brain needs sleep to consolidate memory.
Over-caffeinating: It spikes anxiety and leads to crashes.
Ignoring Paper 1: It accounts for 33% of your total score.
Panic-Reading: Quality over quantity wins the race.
Quick Revision: Theory Cheat Sheet
| Theorist | Key Concept | Quick Memory Jogger |
| Edward Said | Orientalism | East vs. West binary |
| Homi Bhabha | Hybridity | The “Third Space” |
| Gayatri Spivak | Subaltern | Can the marginalised speak? |
| Elaine Showalter | Gynocriticism | Women’s writing tradition |
| Jacques Derrida | Deconstruction | No fixed meaning/aporia |
| Michel Foucault | Power/Knowledge | Discourse shapes reality |
Final Words: You’ve Got This!
In my 15 years of teaching, I’ve seen students who prepared for months fail because of panic, while others cleared it in a week because of strategy.
The exam tests your understanding, not just your memory. Trust your preparation, stay calm, and approach each question thoughtfully. On January 5th, you can be among the successful candidates.
All the best for your exam!
Dr Vishwanath Bite has been teaching English Literature for 15 years.
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