Track your preparation level, identify weak chapters, measure your exam readiness, and receive personalized recommendations to improve your performance.
Click your exam below to rate your chapters and get an instant readiness report. Takes under 5 minutes — no login needed.
Pick your exam above. Each one loads its own syllabus-aligned chapter list for Class 10, Class 12 and more.
Move the confidence slider for every chapter to show your completion percentage. Takes under 5 minutes.
Instantly see your readiness score, subject-wise breakdown, weak topics and what to study next.
Here is what your personalized report looks like before you even begin.
Your overall Readiness Score across all subjects.
Focus on your weak chapters first and attempt practice tests to convert them into strengths — that's where you'll gain the most marks.
Start My AssessmentAfter your assessment you get an overall score plus a clear breakdown for every subject, with suggested actions.
You're on track — push your weak subjects above 60% to be fully board-ready.
Every weak chapter comes with its current readiness and one-tap links to the exact Learnzy resources that fix it.
Improve by: revising identity notes, then solving 25 MCQs and one worksheet.
Improve by: learning nomenclature, then practising reactions with MCQs.
Improve by: mastering ray diagrams and numericals from the formula sheet.
A personalized learning journey that turns your weakest chapter into a confident one.
Read chapter notes & solved examples.
Check understanding with instant answers.
Practise mixed questions offline.
Simulate real exam conditions.
Re-run the tracker to see growth.
Built from your readiness score, weak topics and exam type — pick the timeline that matches your exam date.
Your tracker keeps your progress and improvement metrics in one simple view.
An exam progress tracker is a free study tool that turns a vague feeling of "I think I'm prepared" into a clear, measurable readiness score. Instead of guessing how ready you are, you rate your confidence for each chapter, and the tracker instantly calculates where you stand across every subject. It is the simplest way to answer the four questions every student asks before an exam: How prepared am I? Which chapters are weak? What should I study next? And how can I improve my score?
Students should track progress because the human brain is a poor judge of its own readiness. We naturally spend more time on chapters we already enjoy and quietly avoid the ones that feel hard — the exact chapters that cost the most marks. By making your preparation visible on a chart, a progress tracker removes that bias. You see, in black and white, that Trigonometry is at 35% while Real Numbers is at 90%, and your study time naturally shifts to where it actually matters.
The biggest benefit of identifying weak topics early is that weak chapters are where marks hide. A chapter at 40% readiness has far more room to grow than one already at 85%. Moving three weak chapters from 40% to 70% will lift your overall score far more than polishing strong chapters that are already near the ceiling. A tracker ranks these opportunities for you, so every hour of revision is spent on the highest-return topic.
Finally, progress tracking improves exam performance because it creates a feedback loop. You assess, you study the recommended topics, you practise, and then you reassess. Watching your readiness score climb week after week is genuinely motivating, and that motivation keeps you consistent. Consistency — not last-minute cramming — is what produces strong board results, and a tracker is the engine that keeps the loop running.
Identifying weak chapters before an exam is a skill, and it rests on four habits: honest self-assessment, regular practice testing, structured revision planning and ongoing performance monitoring. Master these and you will never again walk into an exam unsure of where you stand.
Self-assessment is the starting point. Go chapter by chapter and rate how confidently you could solve a full question on each one — not whether you have "read" it, but whether you could score under exam pressure. Be ruthlessly honest; an inflated rating only hides a problem you will meet again on the answer sheet. A confidence slider from 1 to 5, like the one in this tracker, makes this quick and consistent.
Practice testing is the reality check on your self-assessment. Solve a short set of MCQs or a worksheet for each chapter you think you know. The chapters where your accuracy drops, or where you hesitate, are your true weak areas — often different from the ones you expected. Timed practice also reveals chapters you understand but cannot finish quickly enough, which matters just as much in a real exam.
Revision planning then converts that information into action. Once your weak chapters are ranked, build a schedule that gives them more time and revisits them more often. Spaced revision — returning to a weak chapter after one day, then three days, then a week — locks concepts into long-term memory far better than a single long session.
Performance monitoring closes the loop. Re-assess every week and compare your scores. If a weak chapter is climbing, your plan is working; if it is stuck, change your approach — switch from re-reading to active problem-solving, or seek a different explanation. Monitoring keeps your preparation honest right up to exam day.
Improving board exam preparation comes down to studying strategically rather than simply studying more. Five proven moves — prioritising weak topics, using worksheets, solving MCQs, taking mock tests and reviewing mistakes — together raise scores faster than any amount of unfocused effort.
Start by prioritising your weak topics. Use your readiness report to list chapters below 50% and tackle them first, while energy and time are abundant. Strong chapters need maintenance, not repetition; weak chapters need real work. This single shift in order — weak before strong — is the highest-impact change most students can make.
Use worksheets to build depth. Reading notes creates recognition, but worksheets force recall and application, which is what exams test. Printable, chapter-wise worksheets let you practise a weak chapter until the steps feel automatic, and the answer keys let you check yourself without waiting for a teacher.
Solve MCQs to build speed and coverage. Multiple-choice questions are the fastest way to expose gaps across a whole chapter in a few minutes. Because boards increasingly include objective and competency-based questions, regular MCQ practice doubles as exam-pattern preparation. Aim for steady daily sets rather than occasional marathons.
Take mock tests to rehearse the real thing. A full-length, timed paper trains time management, builds stamina and reduces exam-day anxiety. Treat each mock as the real exam: no notes, strict timing, proper sitting. The score matters less than the experience of performing under pressure.
Finally, review every mistake. The marks you lose in practice are a free map of exactly what to fix. After each test, sort errors into "concept not understood", "silly mistake" and "ran out of time", and address each differently. Reviewing mistakes — then reassessing with your tracker — is the habit that compounds into a strong board result.
Jump straight into the free Learnzy tools and study material that fix your weak chapters.