
u/dilli--wala

Shillong/northeast sativa h2h ?
I want it in delhi, h2h only
Shillong h2h anyone ?
I want to buy shillong in south delhi
I have been scammed twice, paid for it but did not get the stuff
So if someone can deliver it and take payment in cash or I can come and pick it up then dm me
If anyone needs help in finding clat related material on telegram then they can dm me at shinhan_nowhara, I'll give it to you for free
- CLAT 2027: 120 questions total, +1 / -0.25 marking.
- English: 22-26 Qs
- Current Affairs + GK: 28-32 Qs
- Legal Reasoning: 28-32 Qs
- Logical Reasoning: 22-26 Qs
- Quantitative Techniques: 10-14 Qs
- Heavily passage-based aptitude test (not rote memory like JEE/NEET). Everything is reading + comprehension + application. Legal & GK especially require "legal lens" on current affairs (SC judgments, laws, policies, significance over isolated facts).
2. Core Philosophy & What Actually Matters (Repeated by Almost Every Ranker)
- Mocks + deep analysis is KING. Do mocks, then spend 2-3 hours analyzing every single one (careless errors, time management, concept gaps, why you picked wrong option). High mock scores don't guarantee D-day success because of pressure — analysis fixes that.
- Reading speed/habit is everything. If you're under 250-300 wpm, fix it immediately. CLAT is a reading-heavy exam.
- Consistency over cramming/intensity. 2-3 focused hours daily with fixed slots beats irregular 10-hour days. Non-negotiable daily routine.
- Self-study is very much viable (many rankers did it). Coaching is mainly useful for mocks, materials, and GK structure — not mandatory.
- Last 2 days before exam: Rest completely, no heavy study or mocks.
- Avoid burnout. Fixed daily slots > burnout.
3. Resources (Directly from Topper "One-Stop" & Resource Threads)
Newspapers / Daily Reading
- The Hindu + Indian Express (focus: editorials, Explained section, Text & Context).
- Use for English improvement + CA more than full GK notes.
GK / Current Affairs
- Compendiums are enough (avoid FOMO from bloated lists): CLAT Post (LE), CLAT Express / LPT, Manthan, GNG, LLP, Parcham, Drishti, Vision IAS daily.
- Telegram groups for free compendiums: 12minutestoclat, Priyanka Dhillon GK, CLATPost, CLAT Express/LPT, GNG, LLP.
- Focus: last 12 months only, with legal lens (link events to laws, SC judgments, policies).
- Revise notes multiple times: daily/weekly/monthly revision cycle.
- One good compendium + daily videos > multiple sources.
English
- Norman Lewis — Word Power Made Easy + How to Read Better & Faster (for speed).
- Practice RC/passages from mocks + PYQs.
- Extra: Aeon essays, novels for speed.
Legal Reasoning
- Passage-based only — all answers are in the paragraph. Don't bring heavy external knowledge.
- Coaching modules preferred over books for many. AP Bhardwaj has mixed opinions (some say skip now, others use selectively).
- Practice principles + application heavily via mocks.
Logical Reasoning (CR + AR)
- MK Pandey for Analytical Reasoning.
- GMAT Manhattan / LSAT materials for Critical Reasoning (assumptions, strengthen/weaken, argument analysis).
- PYQs essential.
Quantitative Techniques
- School-level basics only (%, ratio, average, DI, etc.).
- YT playlists (e.g., Viral Maths) + coaching modules + sectionals/PYQs.
- Speed + approximation techniques are key. Practice heavily — it's a high-scoring, low-volume section.
Mocks & PYQs
- Top recommended: LegalEdge (LE), Law Prep Tutorial (LPT), CL mocks.
- Oswaal PYQs.
- Print and attempt offline when possible for real feel.
- Telegram for free/pirated mocks, sectionals, and materials.
Other Frequently Mentioned
- Khan Academy LSAT (free CR practice).
- PRSIndia for legal current affairs.
- YouTube: LegalEdge, LPT channels for sectionals/explanations.
4. Section-wise Strategies (Plagiarized from Ranker Posts)
- English & Legal: Fast reading + comprehension. Skim for main idea first.
- GK/CA: Understand context & significance, not isolated facts. Link everything.
- Quant: Conceptual clarity on basics → timed practice. Don't neglect (easy scoring).
- Logical Reasoning: Identify argument structure quickly.
5. Daily/Weekly Routine Ideas (from Multiple Threads)
- Daily:
- Newspaper/editorials (30-60 min)
- GK video/comp revision
- 1-2 subjects practice + review weaknesses from previous mocks
- Weekly:
- Full mock + complete analysis + plan for next week
- Notebook system: separate for vocab, GK notes, mistakes.
6. Common Mistakes to Avoid (Direct from "Tips That Helped Me" & No-BS Threads)
- Treating it like memory test instead of reading/aptitude test.
- Skipping mock analysis.
- Over-relying on coaching classes instead of self-practice.
- FOMO on too many GK sources → stick to 1-2 compendiums.
- Irregular study.
- Neglecting Quant or thinking it's "easy so ignore."
- Last-minute cramming instead of revision + mocks.
7. Coaching vs Self-Study
- Self-study + Telegram + YouTube works for disciplined students.
- Coaching mainly for structure, mocks, and peer pressure/GK.
- Many cleared without coaching using free resources.
This is the distilled essence of every recurring important detail and tip from r/clat's best threads. The "one-stop resource thread" and ranker AMAs are the goldmine — everything above comes straight from AIR holders and cleared students there. If you follow mocks + analysis + daily reading + consistency, that's the real secret sauce repeated across the subreddit.
Start with building reading speed + one compendium + mocks as early as possible. Good luck for CLAT 2027! (The sub is still active for latest pattern updates.)