<p>JEE Main 2026 April session starts April 2. Experts advise focusing on NCERT textbooks, revising concepts, practising select reference books, solving previous papers, and taking mock tests for better time management.</p><img>The JEE Main 2026 April session starts on April 2. In this final phase, your success depends on revising what you’ve already studied, not cramming new chapters. Let’s look at expert advice on how to study fewer books more effectively.<img><p>For the JEE exam, your Class 11 and 12 NCERT textbooks are the real deal. Especially for Chemistry, many questions are asked directly from the NCERT books. You must repeatedly go over the examples, concepts, and questions in them.</p><p>Also read: QS Rankings 2026: IITs Lead India’s Big Surge in Global University Rankings</p><img>Besides NCERT, experts recommend R.C. Mukherjee for Physical Chemistry, M.S. Chauhan for Organic, and J.D. Lee for Inorganic Chemistry for extra practice. For Maths, after your basics are clear, solve problems from R.D. Sharma’s Objective Mathematics to build speed and accuracy.<img>In this final leg, avoid learning new concepts. Instead, it’s much better to keep revising formulas and practising with previous years’ question papers. Taking full-length mock tests will seriously improve your time management skills.<img><p>Don’t just pile up books. The secret is to pick a few quality ones and study them thoroughly to get closer to your IIT dream. If you stick to a clear plan, practice consistently, and revise properly, you can definitely crack the JEE Main exam.</p><p>Also read: National AI Skilling Initiative: 15,000 Students to Get Free Training in AI</p>