WASSCE (Ghana) 1-Month Plan
A complete 30-day plan covering 45 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.
- Days
- 30
- Topics
- 45
- Subjects
- 4
- Phases
- 2
How to actually use your 30 days
A single full pass plus targeted revision of your weak areas — one demanding month.
This 1-month plan gives you 30 days to work through 45 weighted WASSCE (Ghana) topics across 4 subjects — roughly 1.5 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.
WASSCE (Ghana) marks are not spread evenly across subjects. Mathematics, English, and Economics 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 WASSCE (Ghana) 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 totalA 30-day plan only works when you sequence it. Here is how the 1-Month Plan breaks down — foundation, depth, then mocks.
- 1
Foundation pass
3 weeksCover full syllabus once, weight-sorted
Daily ~3 topicsShort notes per topicEnd-of-week recap - 2
Mock + revision
1 weekTwo full-length mocks + targeted revision
Mock 1 + analysisMock 2 + analysisWeak-area drill
Week-by-week schedule
| Week | Days | Topics covered |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1–7 | Mathematics: Topic 1 (w3)English: Topic 1 (w3)Economics: Introduction to Economics (w3)Accounting: Accounting Principles (w3)Mathematics: Topic 2 (w3)English: Topic 2 (w3)Economics: Demand and Supply (w3)Accounting: Journal Entries (w3)Mathematics: Topic 3 (w3) |
| 2 | 8–14 | English: Topic 3 (w3)Economics: Elasticity (w3)Accounting: Ledger Posting (w3)Mathematics: Topic 4 (w3)English: Topic 4 (w3)Economics: Consumer Behaviour (w3)Accounting: Trial Balance (w3)Mathematics: Topic 5 (w3)English: Topic 5 (w3) |
| 3 | 15–21 | Economics: Theory of Production (w3)Accounting: Depreciation (w3)Mathematics: Topic 6 (w3)English: Topic 6 (w3)Economics: Cost Theory (w3)Accounting: Final Accounts (w3)Mathematics: Topic 7 (w3)English: Topic 7 (w3)Economics: Market Structures (w3) |
| 4 | 22–28 | Accounting: Company Accounts (w3)Mathematics: Topic 8 (w3)English: Topic 8 (w3)Economics: Factor Markets (w3)Accounting: Issue of Shares (w3)Mathematics: Topic 9 (w3)English: Topic 9 (w3)Economics: National Income (w3)Accounting: Debentures (w3) |
| 5 | 29–30 | Mathematics: Topic 10 (w3)English: Topic 10 (w3)Economics: Money and Banking (w3)Accounting: Cost Accounting Basics (w3)Mathematics: Topic 11 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 12 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 13 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 14 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 15 (w3) |
Subject-wise topic split
Each topic shows its weightage (1–5 dots) and the concepts you'll cover. Higher-weight topics appear first.
Mathematics
15 topics- Topic 1 ●●●○○
- Topic 2 ●●●○○
- Topic 3 ●●●○○
- Topic 4 ●●●○○
- Topic 5 ●●●○○
- Topic 6 ●●●○○
- Topic 7 ●●●○○
- Topic 8 ●●●○○
- + 7 more topics on the full roadmap →
English
10 topics- Topic 1 ●●●○○
- Topic 2 ●●●○○
- Topic 3 ●●●○○
- Topic 4 ●●●○○
- Topic 5 ●●●○○
- Topic 6 ●●●○○
- Topic 7 ●●●○○
- Topic 8 ●●●○○
- + 2 more topics on the full roadmap →
Economics
10 topics- Introduction to Economics ●●●○○
- Demand and Supply ●●●○○
- Elasticity ●●●○○
- Consumer Behaviour ●●●○○
- Theory of Production ●●●○○
- Cost Theory ●●●○○
- Market Structures ●●●○○
- Factor Markets ●●●○○
- + 2 more topics on the full roadmap →
Accounting
10 topics- Accounting Principles ●●●○○
- Journal Entries ●●●○○
- Ledger Posting ●●●○○
- Trial Balance ●●●○○
- Depreciation ●●●○○
- Final Accounts ●●●○○
- Company Accounts ●●●○○
- Issue of Shares ●●●○○
- + 2 more topics on the full roadmap →
Why a 30-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book
| Dimension | Typical WASSCE (Ghana) book | This 1-Month Plan |
|---|---|---|
| Time to start | Hours of reading before any study starts | Seconds — plan is already here |
| Personalisation | One-size-fits-all | Fits exactly your 30 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 WASSCE (Ghana) plans
WASSCE (Ghana) 1-Month Plan — common questions
Is 30 days enough to prepare for WASSCE (Ghana)? +
30 days lets you cover the full WASSCE (Ghana) 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 WASSCE (Ghana) 1-month plan need? +
Plan for 5–6 hours of focused study, covering about 1.5 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 →