DU Unit D Admission (Arts & Institute) 1-Day Intensive
A complete 1-day plan covering 16 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.
- Days
- 1
- Topics
- 16
- Subjects
- 4
- Cost
- Free
How to actually use your 1 day
Maximise marks per hour — there is no time for anything but the highest-yield topics.
This 1-day intensive gives you 1 day to work through 16 weighted DU Unit D Admission (Arts & Institute) topics across 4 subjects — roughly 16.0 new topics a day at every available hour of focused study. That is not a study plan in the normal sense — it is damage control, and done right it can still move your score.
DU Unit D Admission (Arts & Institute) marks are not spread evenly across subjects. Bangla, English, and General Knowledge carry the heaviest weightage in recent papers, so this plan front-loads them — with only the heaviest topics in scope, everything else is deliberately out of frame. Study weight-5 topics only. Everything weight-4 and below is noise at this range — skip it without guilt.
In 1 day you cannot cover 16 topics, so this plan does not try. It targets only the handful that historically carry the most marks. The failure mode here is spreading thin. Pick the top topics and go deep enough to actually score, rather than skimming everything.
What to prioritise & cut
Study weight-5 topics only. Everything weight-4 and below is noise at this range — skip it without guilt.
Mock tests & revision
No full mocks. Spend every minute on previous-year questions for your highest-weight topics and memorise their solution patterns.
Weekly rhythm
There is no week — work in 90-minute focused blocks with short breaks, prioritising recall over re-reading.
Subject-wise topic split
Each topic shows its weightage (1–5 dots) and the concepts you'll cover. Higher-weight topics appear first.
Bangla
4 topics- Bangla Literature ●●●○○
Major Bengali literary works, poets, and writers including Rabindranath Tagore, Kazi Nazrul Islam, Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay, and contemporary Bangladeshi authors and their contributions.
- Bangla Grammar ●●●○○
Parts of speech in Bengali, sandhi (compound words), samasa (compound nouns), tenses, voice, sentence construction, and proper usage of Bangla grammatical structures.
- Bangla Prose ●●●○○
Analysis of selected Bangla prose pieces from Charyapada through medieval period to modern Bangladeshi writers, themes, narrative techniques, and literary devices.
- Bangla Poetry ●●●○○
Evolution of Bengali poetry from early Charyapada to modern free verse, notable poets, poetic forms, devices such as alankar, and thematic analysis of selected poems.
English
4 topics- Reading Comprehension ●●●○○
Passage analysis, main idea identification, inference making, vocabulary in context, and answering factual and inferential questions from unseen passages.
- Grammar and Usage ●●●○○
Parts of speech, subject-verb agreement, tenses, conditionals, voice (active and passive), reported speech, and correction of common grammatical errors.
- Vocabulary ●●●○○
Word formation (prefixes, suffixes, root words), synonyms and antonyms, idioms, phrasal verbs, collocations, and contextual vocabulary for academic and competitive settings.
- Sentence Rearrangement ●●●○○
Ordering jumbled sentences to form coherent paragraphs, identifying topic sentences, and logical sequence organization for paragraph construction.
General Knowledge
4 topics- Bangladesh History ●●●○○
History of Bangladesh from ancient times through the Language Movement, Liberation War of 1971, and post-independence developments and major historical events.
- Geography of Bangladesh ●●●○○
Physical features, rivers, climate, agriculture, industries, administrative divisions, population, and natural resources of Bangladesh.
- Bangladesh Politics and Constitution ●●●○○
Constitution of Bangladesh, fundamental rights, parliamentary system, elections, political parties, and governance structure at national and local levels.
- International Organizations ●●●○○
United Nations and its agencies, SAARC, WTO, World Bank, IMF, Commonwealth, and Bangladesh's role and membership in international bodies.
Science
4 topics- Physics Fundamentals ●●●○○
Laws of motion, work and energy, gravitational force, pressure, heat transfer, wave motion, sound, light reflection and refraction, and basic electricity for general science students.
- Chemistry Fundamentals ●●●○○
Atomic structure, periodic table, chemical bonding, acids and bases, oxidation and reduction, organic chemistry basics, and environmental chemistry concepts.
- Biology Fundamentals ●●●○○
Cell structure, nutrition, respiration, human body systems, plant life, reproduction, genetics, evolution, and basic ecology and environmental biology.
- Higher Mathematics ●●●○○
Algebra, trigonometry, calculus basics, coordinate geometry, probability, statistics, and applications of mathematics in science and technology contexts.
Why a 1-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book
| Dimension | Typical DU Unit D Admission (Arts & Institute) book | This 1-Day Intensive |
|---|---|---|
| Time to start | Hours of reading before any study starts | Seconds — plan is already here |
| Personalisation | One-size-fits-all | Fits exactly your 1 days |
| Freshness | Printed months ago | Updated for the 2026 cycle · verified 2026-04-06 |
| Weightage signal | Author guess | Derived from last 5 years' papers |
| Cost | ₹500–2,500 | ₹0 |
| Sign-up required | Often (with a trial trap) | None |
Other DU Unit D Admission (Arts & Institute) plans
DU Unit D Admission (Arts & Institute) 1-Day Intensive — common questions
Is 1 day enough to prepare for DU Unit D Admission (Arts & Institute)? +
In 1 day you cannot cover 16 topics, so this plan does not try. It targets only the handful that historically carry the most marks. The honest answer depends on your starting point, but this 1-day intensive is built to get the most from the time you have: maximise marks per hour — there is no time for anything but the highest-yield topics.
How many hours a day does this DU Unit D Admission (Arts & Institute) 1-day intensive need? +
Plan for every available hour of focused study, covering about 16.0 new topics a day. There is no week — work in 90-minute focused blocks with short breaks, prioritising recall over re-reading.
What should I skip if I am short on time? +
Study weight-5 topics only. Everything weight-4 and below is noise at this range — skip it without guilt.
When should I start mock tests on this plan? +
No full mocks. Spend every minute on previous-year questions for your highest-weight topics and memorise their solution patterns.
Already know the pattern? Generate a topic-by-topic plan.
The full personalised roadmap covers weak topics first, tracks completion, and adapts as you mark topics done.
Generate Personalised Plan →