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How did I crack IIT JEE without coaching with AIR 14 Navin

Kabara

This is the story of Navin Kabara who managed to crack IIT JEE without coaching. He
managed to get AIR 14 and he believes that he got a rank of 14 JEE (1988) in a very
unconventional way. Over to Navin, and heres what he has to say!
I will first give a conventional answer about how I studied (or rather did not study),
and in the latter part of the answer, I will speculate on why I think I did well.
This is what I did NOT do!
No classes: I did not join any JEE coaching classes for the simple reason that I lived
in Nashik, and at that time, there were no JEE classes in Nashik. In fact, few people
had even heard of JEE or IITs. (I did join coaching classes for 11th/12th board studies,
and my performance in board exams is directly attributable to those classes. (Thank
you Gadgil and Vanzari Sir.))
No skipping college: I attended all the lectures and all the labs and my classes in my
11th/12th.
No other exams: I did not appear for any entrance exams other than my 12th std
board exams, and JEE.
No losing sleep: I used to sleep for 8 hours every day.
No sacrificing 12th std: I was not really expecting to clear JEE, so JEE studies were a
second preference, and I studied hard for 12th std (HSC, Maharashtra) exams. I did
well (2nd in Pune board merit list).
No Resnick and Halliday / Feynman / Irodov
I did have my own copies of the two volumes of Resnick and Halliday, but to this day, I
have not read more than one page. I hadnt even heard of Irodov or Feynman.
No marathon/heroic study sessions
I never studied for more than 3 hours per day (except in the last month). In the last
month, I did study about 8 to 12 hours per day.
No JEE preparation/classes in school

I hadnt even heard of IIT or JEE until my 10th std, so there was no question of doing
any IIT-related preparation in 5th/6th/7th as kids seem to be doing these days. I
started in 11th.
No practice exams
I did not appear for any mock tests.
No study buddies
As I mentioned above, I did not know anybody else in my city who was appearing for
the JEE seriously. So, I did not study with someone else.
This is what I did!
Agrawal Correspondence Course
In those days, Agrawal classes of Bombay (which no longer exists, I believe) had a
correspondence course. I signed up for that. I used to get one packet of study
material, and practice questions every month. I would go through the study material,
and then solve all the practice questions (by myself). Agrawal would also have
practice tests, and mock exams, and other such things. I never did any of those. If you
sent them your answers to their practice questions, they would send back corrected
copies. I never did any of that either.
Board exams vs JEE
For most of my 11th std. I attended all my classes, labs, and the (non-JEE) coaching
classes, and did some studies, but not a lot. I started seriously studying for JEE around
the end of 11th std. From then on, for most of 12th std, I did only JEE studies, and did
not bother with college studies (except attending all lectures and labs and coaching
classes). About 2-3 months before the 12th board exams, I stopped JEE studies
entirely, switched to studying only for the board exams. After the board exams, I had
about 1 month of studying for the JEE.
Regular Studying 3 hours per day
Starting from (roughly) the second half of 11th std, I studied 3 hours everyday.
Regularly. This included JEE studies as well as college studies. I would start studying
at 10pm, after a good dinner, and watching about an hour of TV with my family. I
would study until 1am. Sometimes I would go on till 2am if the problem set I was
working on had particularly difficult problems. In any case, I would sleep until 99:30am in the morning, and then go off to attend college (10:30 onwards), and labs
(afternoons). I did not do any studying other than during those 3 hours (except in the
last month before my board exams and the month before JEE, when I did not have to

attend college, so I would study the whole day, roughly 5-6 hours during the day, and
3-4 hours at night.)
Doing everything else
I attended college during the day. In the evenings (starting around 6/7pm) I would go
for a long walk. I had various friends and relatives who stayed 3-5km from home, and
I would walk to their house, spend an hour with them, and walk back home. In case of
friends, I would either goof off with them, or if close to college/board exams, I would
help them with problems in their studies. In case of relatives, I would play with my
cousins (who were babies at that time). After coming back home, I would watch TV
(we had just 2 channels at that time) until 10pm.
Was it a fluke?
Since I never appeared for any mock tests, I had no idea how I would do in JEE. Only 1
guy from Nashik had made it into IIT 2 years before I did, with a rank of around 200,
and he had been a state topper in the board exams. I did not believe that I was as
smart as he was, so I would have been very happy if I had gotten a rank between 1000
and 1500. But, I believed that there was a very good chance that I would not get in at
all.
So, I was flabbergasted when I got a rank of 14. Agrawal classes had invited the top100 rank-holders for a 3 day celebratory trip to Bombay, and when I met and talked to
the others, I quickly realized that I had not done any of the things that the others had
done to crack the JEE. This feeling got even more pronounced in my first few days in
IIT-Bombay. A lot of my classmates were students from Ruparel college, who used to
talk about Feynmans lectures in physics, and the difficult problems from Irodov, and
some particularly arcane paradoxes involving angular momentum, and other such
things.
GUARANTEED 300+ score in JEE
Practice questions that toppers from previous years got wrong thatGUARANTEE 300+
in JEE
PRACTICE NOW!!
In general, they had far, far more exposure than I did, and I managed to get myself a
massive inferiority complex, and would often wonder whether my JEE rank had been a
mistake or fluke of some sort.
I had an unhappy couple of months until the first mid-semester exams, when I outscored most of them and it slowly began to dawn on me that in spite of my lack of
exposure to Messrs. Resnick, Halliday, Irodov, and Feynman, my JEE rank was not a
fluke.

Also Read : Preparation tips for IIT JEE.


So, what was my secret?
I dont know. But over the course of my 4 years in IIT, I realized one thing: my basics
in Physics and Maths were extremely clear. (The same couldnt be said for Chemistry,
but that is another story.)
I now believe that my success was probably due to some of the books (related to
Maths, Physics, and general Problem-solving) that I read (just for fun) between the
ages of 5 and 15. (A list of the books is included at the end of this answer)
When I was 6, my aunt (who lived in the US) gifted two books of brain teasers (Master
Mind Brain Teasers, and Master Mind Pencil Puzzles both by Joseph and Lenore Scott)
to my sister (who was 4 years older). Many of the problems were too complicated for
me, but I would simply read the question, and then read the answer. I do think it
helped me develop very good problem solving skills (in spite of the fact that I did not
actually solve most of the problems myself). Over the next 3-4 years, I would
periodically return to those books and re-read them. (Thank you, Krishna
Rajadhyaksha)
When I was 9, my school gave me
Figuring the Joy of Numbers (by Shakuntala Devi). This got me started on a life-long
love of numbers and maths. (Thank you, Mrs. Roy.)
When I was 11, I got books on Physics and Maths by Ya. Perelman
Algebra Can Be Fun, Figures for Fun, Physics for Fun and Entertainment, Parts 1 and 2.
(I cant find a link to these exact books on Amazon, but I believe this and this are
newer editions of the same books). These books I continued to read on-and-off for the
next 3-4 years.
Important point to note
these books are not text books, and were not supposed to be study books, and were
not prescribed by any teacher or class. All of them are fun books that I read just out
of interest. In fact, my parents would (mildly) complain that I never studied. But it is
because of these books that I have very strong fundamentals in Physics and
Mathematics (based on intuition, and not just rules and formulas), and good problem
solving skills.
I do believe that these books helped build the foundation on which I was able to crack
the JEE with much less effort than it takes most other people.
Random tidbits:

The only reason I had even heard of IIT and JEE was that I had a classmate in
school who had moved to Nashik from Bombay, and he had a brother who was
an IITian. He told me that I should appear for the JEE. (Thank you Suyog
Moogi). He himself did not appear for the JEE (in spite of the fact that he
would get roughly the same marks as I did in school).

As you can see from the So, what was my secret section above, I did not have
a strong foundation in Chemistry. This ensured that I hated studying for
Chemistry for JEE, and I continued to hate it after I joined IIT. At the end of my
1st year, on the day of my Chemistry test, I literally burned my Chemistry
textbooks because I knew that I would not have to study Chemistry again in my
life. A note to those who are going to use this as an excuse to stop studying
Chemistry: The fact that I hated Chemistry meant that I had to spend more
time studying it, not less. In fact, that is the reason I hated it.

After all the 12th std exams were over, I promised myself that I would never
again give this much importance to academics (or indeed my career) again. I
decided that I would take an active interest in things other than studies/work.
I have largely kept that promise, and as a result, my career graph has not been
as impressive as some people expect (based on my JEE rank e.g. went to a
top-10 Univ in the US, not top-5; did not become a fellow/CXO in a large
company; and now struggling with a startup that I *want* to do instead of a
lucrative job that I *should* be doing; etc), but I have no regrets. I have done
other things that I am proud of.

It is important to remember that not cracking the JEE does not mean that
youre not smart enough, or that youre not going to be successful in your
career. Students will appear for JEE, or have appeared and failed, and
especially parents of such students do not give up hope just because of bad
JEE scores. I have seen enough people who barely managed to get into tier 2 or
even tier 3 colleges, and even there, barely managed to pass their exams, but
are now running extremely successful companies in which they hire IITians and
later fire (some of) them for being too lazy. I have also seen people who are
clearly not as smart as some of the other people around them, but when you
look at their career over a period of 10+ years, you see them outperforming the
others simply through hard work. Do not make the mistake of underestimating
someone (especially yourself) due to lack of academics.

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