How To Use Time Efficiently During Your Banking Exam I

 Understand the Banking Exam Structure First

 

Most banking exams (like IBPS PO, SBI Clerk, RBI Assistant) follow this pattern:

Section

Time Limit (approx.)

Number of Questions

English Language

20 minutes

30

Quantitative Aptitude

20 minutes

35

Reasoning Ability

20 minutes

35

Total (Prelims)

60 minutes

100

 

Sectional timing is enforced — you cannot jump between sections during prelims.

Before the Exam: Build Time Awareness in Practice

1.  Mock Tests with Real Timing

  • Always take mocks with sectional timers ON.
  • After each mock, check:
    1. Where did you spend too much time?
    2. How many questions were guesswork due to time pressure?

2.  Create a Personal Time Map

  • For each section, develop your own time allocation per question:
    1. English: ~35–40 sec/question
    2. Reasoning: ~34 sec/question
    3. Quant: ~34 sec/question

 

During the Exam: Time-Saving Strategies by Section

1. English Language (20 Minutes)

Goal: Accuracy > Attempt Rate (for most aspirants)

  • 1st – Spot the Easy Wins: Start with vocabulary, fill-in-the-blanks, and error spotting.
  • 2nd – Tackle RCs Last: Read the questions first, then skim the passage. Don’t re-read unless necessary.
  • Don’t spend more than 7–8 minutes on RC.

Tip: Eliminate options that don’t fit grammatically or logically — this saves time on MCQs.

 

2. Quantitative Aptitude (20 Minutes)

Goal: Maximize speed in calculation-friendly questions.

  • 1st – Simplification/Approximation/Number Series (5–6 mins).
  • 2nd – Arithmetic/Word Problems (10–12 mins). Prioritize topics like profit & loss, percentage, time-work, SI/CI.
  • 3rd – DI Sets Last (if tough). Attempt only if time permits.

Tip: Use options smartly. Reverse calculation or estimation often saves time.

 

3. Reasoning Ability (20 Minutes)

Goal: Pick sets that look solvable at first glance.

  • 1st – Inequalities, Syllogisms, Coding-Decoding (5–6 mins).
  • 2nd – Blood relations, directions (3–4 mins).
  • 3rd – Puzzles/Seating Arrangement (10–12 mins).
    1. Choose puzzles with direct language and avoid overly complex sets.

Tip: Don’t get stuck. If a puzzle feels time-consuming, skip and come back if time allows.

 

Smart Time Management Techniques for All Sections

1. The 30-Second Rule

If a question takes more than 30 seconds just to understand, mark it and move on.

2.  Flag and Revisit

  • Use the “Mark for Review” feature for doubtful but doable questions.
  • Prioritize attempting all sure-shot questions first.

3. Read Questions Before Data

  • Especially useful in RC and DI.
  • Knowing what to look for helps you avoid wasting time re-reading.

4.  Avoid Stubbornness

  • Some questions are traps — hard by design.
  • Don’t let ego or fear make you stick to them. Time is more valuable than 1 extra mark.

 

Don’ts for Time Management

 Don’t

Why It’s Bad

Spend too long on one question

Kills time for easier ones

Guess blindly

Negative marking can ruin your score

Try to attempt 100%

Quality > Quantity

Panic when the timer drops

Stay focused and finish strong

 

Final 2-Minute Drill (Per Section)

If you see the clock approaching the end:

  • Attempt a few educated guesses if you’re above your accuracy target.
  • Fill unanswered questions with safe, logical choices if you’re confident (especially when you’ve ruled out 2 options).

 

Summary

Section

Priority Areas

Time-Saving Tips

English

Vocab, Grammar first

Attempt RC last

Quant

Simplification, Arithmetic

Use options, avoid traps

Reasoning

Inequalities, Syllogisms first

Avoid time-heavy puzzles

 

 Final Advice

  • Trust your preparation and keep your cool under pressure.
  • Practice + strategy = performance. Time management is not just speed, it’s about making smart decisions.

Loading