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Updated 2026-04-06 · 2026 Edition

UGC NET 1-Month Plan

A complete 30-day plan covering 14 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.

Days
30
Topics
14
Subjects
2
Phases
2
Focused intensive one full pass plus a targeted second look at weak topics

How to actually use your 30 days

A single full pass plus targeted revision of your weak areas — one demanding month.

Daily study
5–6 hours
New topics / day
≈ 0.47
Approach
one full pass plus a targeted second look at weak topics

This 1-month plan gives you 30 days to work through 14 weighted UGC NET topics across 2 subjects — roughly 0.47 new topics a day at 5–6 hours of focused study. That is a demanding but realistic daily load for a one-month working timeline.

UGC NET marks are not spread evenly across subjects. Paper 1 (General) and Subject (UGC NET) carry the heaviest weightage in recent papers, so this plan front-loads them — so they are mastered in the first fortnight and the lighter subjects fill the rest. Cover weight 3–5 topics thoroughly. Give weight 1–2 topics a single light reading in your final week rather than skipping them outright.

30 days lets you cover the full UGC NET syllabus once at a steady pace, then circle back to whatever stayed shaky. At this pace it is tempting to chase coverage and never revise. Protect the weekly consolidation day — it is what makes the pass stick.

What to prioritise & cut

Cover weight 3–5 topics thoroughly. Give weight 1–2 topics a single light reading in your final week rather than skipping them outright.

Mock tests & revision

From the second week, sit one full-length mock every week and analyse it fully before moving on — analysis matters more than the score.

Weekly rhythm

Each week: 5 days new topics, 1 day consolidating that week, 1 day mock + review. Keep a running error log.

Phase-by-phase plan

4 weeks total

A 30-day plan only works when you sequence it. Here is how the 1-Month Plan breaks down — foundation, depth, then mocks.

  1. 1

    Foundation pass

    3 weeks

    Cover full syllabus once, weight-sorted

    Daily ~3 topics
    Short notes per topic
    End-of-week recap
  2. 2

    Mock + revision

    1 week

    Two full-length mocks + targeted revision

    Mock 1 + analysis
    Mock 2 + analysis
    Weak-area drill

Week-by-week schedule

Week Days Topics covered
1 1–7 Paper 1 (General): Teaching Aptitude (w5)Subject (UGC NET): Research Methodology (w5)Paper 1 (General): Research Aptitude (w5)
2 8–14 Subject (UGC NET): Subject-Specific Topics (w5)Paper 1 (General): Data Interpretation (w5)Subject (UGC NET): Core Concepts (w4)
3 15–21 Paper 1 (General): Communication (w4)Subject (UGC NET): Contemporary Issues (w4)Paper 1 (General): Reasoning (w4)
4 22–28 Subject (UGC NET): Theories and Models (w4)Paper 1 (General): Logical Reasoning (w4)Paper 1 (General): ICT (w4)
5 29–30 Paper 1 (General): Higher Education System (w4)Paper 1 (General): People Environment (w3)

Subject-wise topic split

Each topic shows its weightage (1–5 dots) and the concepts you'll cover. Higher-weight topics appear first.

Paper 1 (General)

9 topics
  • Teaching Aptitude ●●●●●

    Teaching characteristics, methods, styles, evaluation techniques, and factors affecting teaching effectiveness.

  • Research Aptitude ●●●●●

    Research methodology, types of research, research ethics, sampling techniques, and data collection methods.

  • Data Interpretation ●●●●●

    Reading tables, charts, graphs, and statistical data to draw meaningful conclusions and make projections.

  • Communication ●●●●○

    Types of communication, barriers, effective communication strategies, and use of media in education.

  • Reasoning ●●●●○

    Verbal and non-verbal reasoning including analogies, classification, series, and pattern recognition.

  • Logical Reasoning ●●●●○

    Deductive and inductive reasoning, logic gates, Venn diagrams, and evaluating arguments and assumptions.

  • ICT ●●●●○

    Information and Communication Technology fundamentals, internet, e-learning, and digital tools for teaching.

  • Higher Education System ●●●●○

    Indian higher education structure, UGC, universities, colleges, autonomous institutions, and regulatory bodies.

  • + 1 more topic on the full roadmap →

Subject (UGC NET)

5 topics
  • Research Methodology ●●●●●

    Research design, hypothesis formulation, tools of data collection, statistical analysis, and report writing.

  • Subject-Specific Topics ●●●●●

    In-depth subject knowledge specific to the candidate's post-graduation discipline as chosen during application.

  • Core Concepts ●●●●○

    Fundamental theories, principles, and foundational concepts of the candidate's academic discipline.

  • Contemporary Issues ●●●●○

    Latest developments, debates, and emerging trends in the candidate's academic subject area.

  • Theories and Models ●●●●○

    Major theories, models, and frameworks in the discipline that explain phenomena and guide research.

Why a 30-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book

DimensionTypical UGC NET bookThis 1-Month Plan
Time to startHours of reading before any study startsSeconds — plan is already here
PersonalisationOne-size-fits-allFits exactly your 30 days
FreshnessPrinted months agoUpdated for the 2026 cycle · verified 2026-04-06
Weightage signalAuthor guessDerived from last 5 years' papers
Cost₹500–2,500₹0
Sign-up requiredOften (with a trial trap)None

Other UGC NET plans

UGC NET 1-Month Plan — common questions

Is 30 days enough to prepare for UGC NET? +

30 days lets you cover the full UGC NET syllabus once at a steady pace, then circle back to whatever stayed shaky. The honest answer depends on your starting point, but this 1-month plan is built to get the most from the time you have: a single full pass plus targeted revision of your weak areas — one demanding month.

How many hours a day does this UGC NET 1-month plan need? +

Plan for 5–6 hours of focused study, covering about 0.47 new topics a day. Each week: 5 days new topics, 1 day consolidating that week, 1 day mock + review. Keep a running error log.

What should I skip if I am short on time? +

Cover weight 3–5 topics thoroughly. Give weight 1–2 topics a single light reading in your final week rather than skipping them outright.

When should I start mock tests on this plan? +

From the second week, sit one full-length mock every week and analyse it fully before moving on — analysis matters more than the score.

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 →