Chapter 4 of 10

Early Prep & Study Routines That Work

You’ve learned to read and train speed. Now let’s build the daily system that won’t break you.

CHAPTER 4


Early Prep & Study Routines That Work

Let me talk to you like an older brother who has watched many students win and lose this race. There’s one difference I’ve seen again and again: timing. The student who starts early always enters the exam hall with peace. The student who waits until 2 months to exam always enters with panic. And panic kills more marks than ignorance ever will.

Early preparation doesn’t mean “read 10 hours every day from SS1”. No. That’s how you burn out before you even reach JAMB. Early preparation means consistency. Small, steady steps. Like water dripping on stone. Not powerful, but patient. And patience always wins.

Let’s be honest: JAMB is a marathon, not a 100-meter dash. If you start training 3 months before the exam, your brain will panic. You’ll cram, you’ll forget, you’ll be tired. But if you start early, even 30 minutes a day, by the time exam comes, you’re relaxed. You’ve covered the syllables twice. You’ve solved past questions. You’ve built understanding. That peace is worth more than any miracle center.

Your greatest obstacle to success is the lazy version of you. Prepare for your examinations as early as possible, create a timetable, stay determined to it and follow all what these ten chapters teaches you, don't wait for couple of months before you open your book then when you fail, you would be shifting the blame to innocent Jesus, failure is your fault, success is your fault but I wish everyone success if and only if you put in work and stay positive. There is no way you would read for an exam thoroughly and you would be deprived for the reward of your labor. Sometimes people read and get below their expectations but the result they got is still excellent. A friend wrote jamb and after the exam, he expected 340 but he came out with 316, but that's the reality of life, you have to hope for the best and at times expect the worst, soo that a good result or a bad result won't come as a surprise to you. He was very sad but the truth is 316 is an excellent score for some people but comparing his level of experience, training and hard work he put towards that jamb, the score was below expectations. Chapter 9 would throw more light on this.

Here’s how to build a study routine that actually works and won’t break you:

1. The 3x3x30 Rule: 3 subjects per day. 3 sessions per subject. 30 minutes per session. That’s just 4.5 hours total, with breaks. Why this works: Your brain focuses best in 25-30 minute chunks. After 30 minutes, attention drops. So study 30 minutes, take 10 minutes break, then return. Don’t do “6 hours straight”. You’ll remember more from 4 focused hours than 8 distracted hours. Quality beats quantity every time.

2. Plan your week on Sunday night: Before Monday starts, sit down for 15 minutes. Write: “Monday = Math + Biology + English. Tuesday = Physics + Chemistry + Literature.” Assign topics, not just subjects. “Monday Math = Quadratic Equations, not just ‘Math’.” When your brain wakes up Monday morning, it already knows the mission. No confusion. No “what should I read today?” Confusion kills momentum.

3. Morning vs Night - Know your brain: Some people are morning people. Their brain is sharpest 5am-9am. Others are night owls. Their brain wakes up 8pm-12am. Stop forcing yourself to read at 5am if you’re a night person. You’ll just stare at your book and sleep. Know your peak time and protect it. That’s your “golden hour”. Do your hardest subject then. Don’t waste your golden hour on WhatsApp.

4. The Review System - 1-3-7: Read a topic today. Review it after 1 day. Review again after 3 days. Review again after 7 days. This is called spaced repetition. It’s how your brain moves information from short-term memory to long-term memory. Without review, you’ll forget 70% in 24 hours. With review, you’ll remember 80% after 1 month. That’s the difference between crammers and champions.

5. Rest is not laziness: Your brain learns when you sleep, not when you read. If you don’t sleep, you’re just pouring water into a basket. 7-8 hours sleep is non-negotiable. A tired brain cannot concentrate. A tired brain cannot remember. So plan sleep like you plan study. “I will sleep 10pm-6am.” That discipline is what separates serious students from desperate students.

Let me tell you something real: The student who starts early is not “too serious”. The student who starts early is wise. Because wisdom means you see trouble from far and prepare. Foolishness means you wait until trouble arrives, then you panic.

So from today, stop waiting for “motivation”. Motivation is a feeling, and feelings are liars. Build discipline instead. Discipline is showing up even when you don’t feel like it. Discipline is opening your book for just 30 minutes when you’re tired. Discipline is saying “I’ll review this topic tomorrow” even when Netflix is calling.

Start small. Start today. Don’t say “I’ll start Monday”. Start with 20 minutes now. Read one topic. Write 5 points in your jotter. Then rest. Tomorrow, do 25 minutes. Next week, 30 minutes. Little by little, you’ll build a machine. And that machine will carry you through JAMB, post-UTME, and university.

In Chapter 5, we’ll talk about sleep, food, calm mind and mental health. Because a healthy body carries a sharp brain. And a sharp brain is your greatest weapon in that CBT hall.

“Consistency beats intensity. The student who reads 1 hour daily for 6 months will always beat the student who reads 8 hours daily for 2 weeks.”
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