In the last two days before the RBI Grade B Phase 1 Exam 2025, you should be calm and precise. At this stage, your main focus should not be on learning something new but on polishing the topics that you’ve already prepared. The General Awareness (GA) section can be the ultimate turning point, as it alone carries 80 marks out of a total of 200 marks in the Phase 1 exam. And that’s where most toppers score maximum marks. You’ll face 80 questions to be answered in 25 minutes, which means every second counts. With the right revision plan, you can easily aim for 70+ marks, even if Quant or Reasoning aren’t your strongest areas. So let’s make these last two days count.
It’s the day to solidify and simplify your revision process. Say no to panic and pay attention to polishing your memory and building rhythm.
Here are the tips you need to follow:
This is your final rehearsal before the real stage. Attempt a free mock test today, just one, to measure your preparation and readiness, timing, and focus. Don’t take it for the score; take it for rhythm. Treat it like a simulation of the real exam, with the same 25-minute timer and intensity. After finishing, analyze your mistakes.
Check where you spent extra seconds or made silly errors. This single test can refine your time management and sharpen your instincts. Once done, stop there. Over-testing today can drain your mental energy before the actual exam.
Today is for polishing, not learning. Revisit your short notes, formula sheets, and vocabulary lists to trigger your memory. Spend time with what you’ve already mastered, not what you’ve missed. Flip through reasoning tricks, banking abbreviations, and static GK keywords. Don’t try to add new information now.
Your goal is to strengthen recall. Keep sessions short and crisp, like 25 minutes of revision followed by a 5-minute break. This rhythm keeps your mind active without exhaustion.
Short notes are like quick revision boosters, and they act as small doses of confidence before the exam day.
Your mock test GA notes are gold. Many questions in the RBI Grade B exam are repetitive, often framed from similar current affairs. So, go through the GA notes you made from past mocks. Pay heed to banking and financial updates, RBI circulars, recent reports, and government schemes. Don’t reread everything, but those parts that you underlined or marked as important.
This is an effective revision, not an information race. You’ll be surprised how many answers you already know by heart. Mock-based GA revision is not about volume; it’s about reinforcing what’s most likely to appear.
This is where strategy beats stress. If you’ve completed 80–100% of your GA syllabus, today’s mission is retention. Revise fast and test recall. But if you’re at 50–60%, don’t panic, just be selective. Focus only on high-scoring areas: banking and finance news, RBI reports, budget highlights, and international summits.
These are the zones that can still earn you 60+ marks. Ignore low-yield topics now. You don’t need to know everything; you just need to know the right things. Clearing the RBI Grade B exam, again, is not about perfection but about precision.
This tip might save your exam performance. Don’t extend your study hours today just because it’s the final stretch. Studying late or forcefully increases fatigue and reduces memory retention. Stick to your routine study slots. After evening revision, close your books. Give your brain rest, as that’s when consolidation happens.
Also, avoid adding new PDFs or watching random YouTube quizzes. Last-minute overload confuses the mind and breaks focus. Trust your preparation. You’ve already built the foundation; now it’s time to let your brain settle everything in order.
This is your calm-before-the-storm day! You do not need to go through new topics or tough tests. All you need to do to get ready for the exam day is just a gentle revision and mental preparedness. Research from Harvard Medical School shows that exam anxiety is at its peak a day before the test. So, quite naturally, feeling nervous is normal. You should, therefore, skip mock tests today and just go through the last three months’ current affairs.
If you’ve covered 100%, revise headlines. If not, stick to August–September events. Check your admit card, ID proof, and exam center details. Go for a light walk or listen to calm music. Remember, confidence is your best memory booster.
Tonight, you win half the battle with rest. Don’t study after 10 PM. Sleep early because a well-rested brain performs up to 30% better in accuracy and recall, proven by Stanford’s 2023 sleep study. Avoid caffeine and heavy meals. Lay out your outfit, stationery, and documents to reduce morning panic.
Before sleeping, visualize success, imagine yourself entering the exam hall calmly and answering confidently. This visualization strengthens mental assurance. You’ve prepared enough. Now, your mind needs stillness, not more study. Tomorrow, walk in with focus and finish strong.
The last two days aren’t about studying harder but, dear candidate, staying composed. If you’ve built your foundation well, these two days are all about sharpening your memory and protecting your peace. Have it at the back of your mind, you’ll never clear the RBI Grade B by getting panicked, but through smart revision and calm execution.
Thus, your mission for the next 2 days is clear:
You’ve already built the foundation, and now it’s only about polishing it. So, on the day of the exam, you just need to perform calmly, confidently, and trust your preparation. The ones who walk into the exam hall with composure often walk out with success. So, use these two days smartly and fully utilize each second.
Polish what you’ve already prepared. Focus on GA, short notes, mock GA summaries, and high-scoring topics like RBI updates, banking news, and recent policies. Stay calm and boost recall.
No. Skip mocks. Lightly revise GA, check the admit card & ID, take a short walk, and visualize confidence. Keep your mind fresh.
Revise last 6 months’ current affairs, focus on August–September 2025. Go through mock GA notes, formulas, vocab, and reasoning tricks. Practice 500 questions for fast recall.
Sleep early. Avoid caffeine and heavy meals. Prep stationery & outfit. Visualize success. Light GA revision is fine; mostly, relax and recharge.
No. Avoid overload. Stick to routine, revise known topics only. Rest is key to memory retention. No new PDFs or random quizzes.
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