How Much Time Does It Take to Prepare for Aptitude Tests for Placements?
This is probably one of the most common questions we get from students. If youāve already Googled it, youāve likely seen answers all over the placeāsome say a few days, others say months. The truth? It dependsāon you.
Letās get real for a moment. If youāre a top 1000 JEE ranker or a math olympiad pro, Quant and Reasoning are probably going to feel like a cakewalk. Sure, youāll need to skim through the formats, but your JEE prep already built rock-solid cognitive skills. Youāve put in the hard work, and itās paying off now.
And if youāre someone whoās spent years devouring novels (not binge-watching Netflix), Verbal Ability will likely be a breeze. Grammar? Check. Reading comprehension? Easy. Vocabulary? Sorted.
But hereās the thing: most engineering students donāt fall into these categories. For the rest of us, some preparation is absolutely necessary. But if you are looking for a number for an average student, it is about 100 hours, or say 2 hours of daily preparation for about 2 months. So letās break it:
Get the Basics Right First
For Quantitative Aptitude, youāll need around 18 hours. Yes, Quant might seem like the biggest beast of the bunch, but trust us, youāve got this. Start with the mentioned important topicsāthe ones that matter most, like Percentages, Time & Work, and Probability. These are your building blocks. Take your timeāgo through each topic, work through 10 solid examples and understand the “why” behind each one, not just the “how.”
Next, Logical Reasoning. Itās less about reading notes and more about training your brain. Think of it like exercise for your mind. This will take around 10 hours to cover the basics, and focus on the key chapters like Blood Relations and Coding-Decoding. Hereās the trickādonāt rush. Understand the patterns, break them down step by step, and practice until it clicks. Youāll be solving puzzles before you know it.
And then thereās Verbal Ability. Honestly, if youāre not a natural bookworm, this one might sound intimidating at first, but itās not as tough as it seems. You donāt need to sit down with heavy notes. Just read. Yes, read anything you likeānovels, blogs, news articlesāanything in English. Spend 15 to 30 minutes a day reading. Give yourself a month or two. Thatās all it takes to expand your vocabulary and boost your comprehension skills without breaking a sweat.
Time Breakdown:
- Quant: 18 hours
- Logical Reasoning: 10 hours
- Verbal Ability: 12 hours
- Total: 40 hours
By the end of this step, youāll have a good grasp of the basics. Now itās time to roll up your sleeves and dive into practice.
Practice Till You Nail It (Itās Where You Level Up)
Hereās where the real magic happens. Youāve read the concepts, now itās time to test yourself and figure out where you stand.
Alright, now weāre getting to the good stuff. Youāve got the basics down, but real mastery happens when you start testing yourself. This is where you see where you really stand. Itās time to go deeperāpractice with purpose.
Hereās the thing: donāt just mindlessly churn through questions. Every time you get something wrong, pause and ask yourself: Why? Did you miss a formula? Did you misread the question? Did you take too long on a simple problem? Whatever it is, figure out where you went wrong, go back to the basics, and fix it.
So, How Many Questions Should You Solve?
Hereās the deal: aim for 30-50 questions per topic. That adds up to about 1000 questions across all subjects. And yes, we know, it sounds like a lot, but donāt rush through them. The goal isnāt speedāitās understanding. Take your time to understand the concept behind each question. Youāre building your problem-solving skills, not just ticking boxes.
Time Breakdown for Practice
Letās break this down: If you solve 10 questions in a 30-40 minute session, thatās about 60 hours of solid practice time to hit 1000 questions. Again, donāt just skim through them. Give each question the time and attention it deserves. Reflect on your mistakes, absorb the concepts, and keep improving.
Total Time (Basics + Practice):
- Basics: 40 hours
- Practice: 60 hours
- Grand Total: 100 hours
Letās Talk About the Daily Plan
If youāre consistent, youāll crush this. But donāt expect overnight successābuilding concepts takes time. Your brain needs time to absorb, reflect, and connect the dots. This isnāt about crammingāitās about gradual growth.
Hereās a rough timeline:
2 hours a day ā 2 months
The key is regularity. Stick to a routine, and you’ll be in great shape. But remember, donāt rush to finish. This isnāt a race, and thereās no trophy for completing your prep in a week. Thorough preparation is your ticket to cracking the aptitude test and landing your dream job. And, guess what? Itāll give you the confidence to tackle even more coveted exams, like CAT, GRE, GMAT, or UPSC. Youāre not just preparing for placementsāyouāre preparing for a future where you are upskilled and own any test.
A Word of Caution
Donāt fall for flashy claims like āprepare in 7 days with shortcuts!ā Shortcuts are helpful, yes, but they only work when you know the fundamentals. Concepts come first, always. A strong foundation helps you identify where and when a shortcut applies.
And remember: your job isnāt to prepare fast and failāitās to prepare well and win.