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How to Improve SEBI Grade A Phase 1 Mock Test Score?

Home » SEBI Grade A » Dos and Don’ts for NABARD Grade A Phase 1 2025

As the SEBI Grade A Phase 1 exam comes closer, one question starts bothering almost every serious aspirant. “I’m giving mock tests, but my score isn’t improving. What am I doing wrong?” This is a valid concern. And the truth is simple. Mock tests are not magic pills. They work only when used with intent, structure, and discipline. Random mocks don’t raise scores. Smart mock tests do. This blog is about exactly that, how to use mock tests the right way so that every test actually pushes your score up, instead of leaving you confused or demotivated.

Perfect Time to Start Mock Test Practice?

Mock tests are not meant to teach you the syllabus from scratch. Their real job is evaluation. That’s why the ideal time to start mocks is after you’ve completed around 70 to 75% of your preparation along with basic revision.

Waiting for 100% completion is a trap. It rarely happens. On the other hand, starting mocks when only 40 to 50% syllabus is done and the exam is far away also doesn’t help much. You end up guessing too much and learning very little.

But if the exam is near, say 30 days away, and you’re still at 50%, don’t wait. Start mocks anyway. Late practice is still better than no practice. Just remember why you’re giving mocks: to find gaps, not to chase scores.

How Many Mock Tests Are Enough?

There is no “perfect number.” Anyone telling you to attempt 25 or 30 mocks is missing the point.

For SEBI Grade A Phase 1, 5 to 10 well-crafted, exam-level mock tests are more than enough if you analyze them properly. Quality beats quantity every single time.

Giving too many mocks back-to-back leads to three problems:

  • Burnout
  • Superficial attempts
  • Zero learning from mistakes

One mock + deep analysis is far more powerful than five mocks with no reflection.

How to Take a Mock Test the Smartly

A mock should feel like the actual exam. That means:

  • Give it at the same time slot as your real exam.
  • Sit properly. No distractions. No pauses.
  • Treat it like the real thing.

Before solving, do a quick scan of all sections. Don’t start blindly. Know what’s waiting for you. Now comes the most important part, the three-round attempt strategy.

Round 1: The Confidence Round

This is where you build momentum. Spend around 40% of your total time here. Attempt only those questions that look easy the moment you read them. No calculations. No second thoughts.

If a question makes you pause for more than a few seconds, skip it. Mark it and move on. This round is about speed and confidence, not bravery.

Round 2: The Scoring Round

Again, around 40% of your time goes here. Now pick questions that you know you can solve, but they need some thinking or calculation.

Be careful with time, and don’t spend more than 1.5 minutes per question.

If a question isn’t moving, leave it. Getting stuck here is one of the biggest reasons for low mock scores.

Round 3: The Selection Round

This is the final 20% of your time. Only now look at the tougher questions. Use elimination. Use logic. Make educated guesses, not blind ones. If nothing clicks, leave it. One wrong guess can undo two correct answers.

With practice, this three-round flow becomes natural. You won’t even think about rounds consciously. Your attempt will automatically become sharper.

Set Target Scores, Not Attempt Targets

Trying to attempt “as many questions as possible” is a bad strategy. Instead, decide your target score based on previous years’ cut-offs. Add a small buffer of 2–3 marks and work towards that.

For example:

  • If a section usually clears at 6 marks, aim for 8.
  • That may mean attempting 8 to 9 questions with decent accuracy and not all 20.

Once your target is reached, move on. Discipline here saves time and boosts accuracy.

Don’t Give Mock Tests Every Day

Mocks need space. Giving them daily doesn’t give your brain time to absorb learning.

A better rhythm is:

In the last 7 days, limit yourself to 1 to 2 mocks only. And in the final 2 days, avoid mocks altogether. This is the time to protect confidence, not test it.

The Most Ignored Part: Mock Test Analysis

Mock tests don’t improve scores, but analysis does. After every mock, classify every question you got wrong or skipped. Use a simple system:

  • S – Silly Mistakes: You knew it, but misread or rushed.
  • M – Memory Issues: Concept known, but forgotten. Poor revision.
  • NAD – Not Attempted but Doable: Skipped due to panic or haste.
  • K – Concept Unknown: New or unstudied topic.
  • E – Application Error: Concept known, but applied wrongly.
  • PT – Poor Time Management: Too much time spent on one question.

Your main goal is to reduce S, M, NAD, and PT. These are the easiest marks to recover. Unknown concepts (K) need learning. Application errors (E) need practice.

This kind of analysis gives you direction. Otherwise, mocks only give numbers.

Why Your Score Isn’t Improving (And How to Fix It)

If your mock score is stuck, it’s usually because:

  • You repeat the same mistakes
  • You don’t revise after mocks
  • You chase attempts instead of accuracy
  • You panic when a section feels tough

Keep in mind that iIf a section feels difficult to you, it’s difficult for everyone. Cut-offs fall. Panic only hurts you. So, you need to stay calm, shift focus. Compensate for stronger areas.

Other Resources to Make the Most of Your Practice

Your preparation stands on a framework. These resources are not extras or optional tools. They are the supports that keep everything in place.

SEBI Study Notes, SEBI Revision NotesSampoorna – Paper 2 Current AffairsSEBI Notes – Chapterwise TestsSEBI Paper 2 – CA TestsMock Test 1 to 5.

Together, they reduce confusion, improve focus, and recreate real exam pressure.

Final Words

Mock tests are mirrors. They don’t flatter you, but they don’t lie either. Used properly, they show you exactly where you stand and how to move ahead.

Don’t rush them. Don’t fear them. Use them with clarity. A planned mock strategy can easily add 10 to 15 marks to your SEBI Grade A Phase 1 score.

And sometimes, that’s the difference between missing the cut-off and clearing it comfortably.

Mahika Goswami

I have cleared RBI Grade B, SEBI Grade A and UPSC exams, so I know the path to success. Now I use that experience to guide students for regulatory and UPSC exams with full dedication and honest support.

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