Difficulty Strategy
Expect most questions to be moderate and concept-based. Build concepts first, then increase speed through timed practice.
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A practical two-month roadmap for Biology, Chemistry, Physics, English and Logical Reasoning with daily routine, weekly milestones, mock strategy and high-yield revision methods.
Expected/Proposed Exam Date: To be confirmed by PMDC official notification.
Students should always confirm the final exam date, syllabus, registration schedule, passing criteria and policy updates from the official PMDC website before making final preparation decisions.
Exam Overview
This plan is based on the commonly followed MDCAT structure and subject distribution. Biology has the highest weightage, so it should remain the main priority throughout the two months.
Total MCQs
180
Duration
~3–3.5 hrs
Negative Marking
No
Mock Target
165–170+
| Subject | Weightage | MCQs | Study Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biology | 45% | 81 MCQs | Highest Priority |
| Chemistry | 25% | 45 MCQs | High Priority |
| Physics | 20% | 36 MCQs | Concept + Numerical |
| English | 5% | 9 MCQs | Quick Scoring |
| Logical Reasoning | 5% | 9 MCQs | Daily Practice |
Expect most questions to be moderate and concept-based. Build concepts first, then increase speed through timed practice.
Because there is usually no negative marking, students should attempt all questions after confirming the current official policy.
Your score improves fastest when you combine syllabus coverage, daily MCQs, mock tests and error-log revision.
Subject Strategy
Biology should receive daily priority. Focus on human physiology, cell biology, genetics, biotechnology, immunity, diagrams and exceptions.
Chemistry needs both understanding and memorization. Organic reactions, Physical Chemistry calculations and periodic trends are very important.
Physics becomes easy when formulas, units, graphs and concepts are revised daily with numerical MCQs.
These sections are smaller but scoring. Practice them daily for accuracy, speed and confidence.
Daily Routine
This routine is designed for two months. Use 50-minute focused study blocks with 10-minute breaks. Adjust the hours according to school, academy or personal routine.
Morning
3–4 hours: Biology plus one major science subject
Afternoon
3 hours: topic-wise MCQs and short notes
Evening
1–2 hours: formulas, diagrams, English and LR
Night
7–8 hours sleep, light review and planning
60-Day Roadmap
The plan is divided into three phases: first cover the syllabus, then revise weak areas, then simulate the real exam with full mocks.
Complete the full syllabus with high-yield topics first. Build short notes, formula sheets, diagrams and daily MCQ practice habits.
Revise all notes, diagrams, formulas and difficult concepts. Focus strongly on mistakes, weak topics and time-bound MCQ practice.
Train your brain for the actual exam. Improve speed, accuracy, confidence, pressure handling and question-selection strategy.
Weekly Milestones
Biological molecules, cell structure, viruses, fundamental chemistry, stoichiometry and atomic structure.
Enzymes, respiration basics, chemical bonding, vectors, force, motion, work, energy and power.
Coordination, homeostasis, support and movement, equilibrium, acids and bases, thermochemistry and kinetics.
Inheritance, reproduction, hydrocarbons, functional groups, waves, oscillations and thermodynamics.
Biotechnology, immunity, electrochemistry, electrostatics, current electricity and electromagnetism.
Electronics, dawn of modern physics, atomic physics, nuclear physics and remaining weak syllabus areas.
Topic-wise revision, formula sheets, Biology diagrams, Organic reactions and daily mini-mocks.
Complete mocks, error-log review, speed improvement, light revision and exam-day strategy.
Smart Study Methods
After studying a topic, close the book and recall definitions, diagrams, formulas and key points from memory.
Revise important topics on the same day, then after 3 days, then after 7 days. This prevents forgetting.
Do not only count marks. Check why the correct option is right and why each wrong option is wrong.
Practice diagrams such as nephron, heart, neuron, respiratory system, cell organelles and immunity pathways.
Revise reactions, mechanisms, trends, equations and exceptions. Organic Chemistry needs repeated practice.
Keep one clean formula sheet for units, graphs and numerical relationships. Revise it daily.
Write every mistake in a notebook. This converts weak areas into scoring areas.
Sleep 7–8 hours, hydrate well, take short walks and avoid burnout. A fresh mind scores better.
Final Target
A top MDCAT score needs complete syllabus coverage, repeated revision, daily MCQ practice, mock-test analysis and correction of mistakes.
100%
Syllabus Coverage
5000+
MCQs Practiced
15–20+
Full-Length Mocks
165–170+
Mock Score Target
Treat your preparation like a future medical student: disciplined, analytical and resilient. Track small wins daily, learn from your mistakes and keep improving.
Disclaimer: This study plan is created for educational guidance only. Students should verify the latest MDCAT syllabus, exam date, passing criteria and policies from the official PMDC website before the exam.