BEST Daily Timetable to get IIT Bombay CS in JEE 2027 | Class 11th Wasted to IIT 🔥
JEE Mains & Advanced“My Class 11th is wasted. Can I still reach IIT Bombay CSE in JEE 2027?”
Bhai, if this question is running in your mind, this blog is exactly for you.
Your 11th may have gone off-track. Syllabus incomplete, consistency broken, tests ignored, distractions high – it happens. But now you still have something priceless with you:
- Time (around 16–18 months if you start now)
- Opportunity (two JEE Mains, one JEE Advanced)
- A fresh restart button (mentally and academically)
In this blog, we’ll not just “motivate” you. We’ll build a complete, practical, daily + weekly timetable and a 3-phase strategy you can follow to go from
“Class 11th wasted” → “IIT Bombay CS ranker in JEE 2027”
Read this fully, save it, and genuinely implement it. Your life can change completely in these next 18 months.
Why Your 11th Being Wasted Is NOT the End
First, let’s clear one thing: you are not the only one.
Every year, there are students whose 11th is:
- Ruined by health issues
- Destroyed by wrong coaching
- Messed up by distractions and timepass
- Just “confused” – no direction, no system
And still, every year, students with a “wasted 11th”:
- Restart in 12th
- Follow a clean strategy
- Grind consistently
- End up in IIT Bombay, IIT Delhi, top IITs
The difference is not in how perfect their past was.
The difference is in how serious their restart is.
So from today, remove this line from your brain:
“11th wasted = my journey is over.”
And replace it with:
“11th wasted = I am reborn with experience, and I will use it to win.”
Big Picture: 3-Phase Strategy for JEE 2027 (Class 11th Wasted Case)
Instead of thinking randomly:
- “What should I study today?”
- “Should I do 11th or 12th?”
- “Should I give tests or finish chapters?”
We will divide your entire journey into 3 clear phases:
- Phase 1: Restart + Foundation (11th + Early 12th together)
- Phase 2: Full Syllabus Completion + Heavy Test Practice
- Phase 3: Multiple Revision Rounds + JEE Main + JEE Advanced Focus
Let’s go deep into each one.
Phase 1 – Restart + Foundation: Fix 11th, Start 12th Smartly
Time Window: Approx. first 5–6 months from today
Goal of this phase is NOT to rush through syllabus.
The goal is:
- Build a solid base in 11th concepts
- Start 12th in a logical way
- Get serious consistency in daily routine
1. Dual-Block Method: 11th + 12th Together
You don’t have to do all of 11th first and then start 12th. That will mentally crush you. Instead, follow the dual-block method:
- First, repair and build 11th foundation in each subject
- Then, start early 12th chapters which depend on that foundation
Example for Physics:
- From 11th: Units & Dimensions, Kinematics, Laws of Motion, Work-Power-Energy, Basic Rotational ideas
- From early 12th: Electrostatics, Current Electricity (once math level is okay), basic Magnetism
Example for Maths:
- From 11th: Basic Algebra, Quadratic Equations, Progressions, Coordinate Geometry fundamentals, Trigonometry
- From 12th: Differentiation basics, Limits, Continuity (once algebra comfort increases)
Example for Chemistry:
- From 11th: Mole Concept, Atomic Structure, Chemical Bonding, GOC (General Organic Chemistry)
- From 12th: Electrochemistry, Chemical Kinetics, Solid State, some Organic chapters
The idea is simple:
“11th fundamentals first. 12th where that fundamental is required – parallel.”
2. What to Avoid in Phase 1
- Do NOT chase every tough problem you see on YouTube.
- Do NOT randomly jump between 4–5 resources and 10 channels.
- Do NOT panic seeing others far ahead. Focus on your restart.
In this phase, your win is not “syllabus finished”; your win is:
- “I understood basics properly.”
- “I am now consistent every day.”
- “I can sit and study with focus for 6–8 hours.”
Phase 2 – Syllabus Completion + Heavy Testing
Time Window: Next 8–9 months (roughly till Nov of Class 12th)
By this time:
- Your 11th base is repaired.
- Key 12th chapters are already started.
- Your study stamina is better.
Now the focus becomes:
- Complete full 11th + 12th JEE syllabus
- Start regular tests
- Train yourself to sit 3 hours in exam mode
1. Order of Coverage
Most toppers do this smartly:
- They complete12th important chapters first (because they matter in Boards + JEE Main + JEE Advanced)
- Then they cover remaining 11th independent chapters like:
- SHM
- Waves on String
- Sound Waves
- Heat Transfer
- Some advanced Mechanics topics
That way, they:
- Stay safe for board exams
- Finish high-weightage 12th stuff early
- Aren’t under insane pressure in late Class 12th
2. Test Frequency in Phase 2
In Phase 2, tests are non-negotiable. They convert knowledge into rank.
Recommended test plan:
- Start with:
- Weekly chapter-wise tests (1.5–2 hours)
- Every 3 weeks, one full 3-hour “review test”
- Later, as syllabus grows:
- 1 full test every week
- Before board + JEE phase:
- Every 3 days – 1 test
- Later – sometimes even 4–5 tests in a week
But the hero is not just giving tests.
The hero is TEST ANALYSIS.
After every test, sit for 45–60 minutes and ask:
- How many questions did I attempt?
- How many correct? How many wrong? How many left?
- Why wrong?
- Concept mistake?
- Calculation error?
- Carelessness?
- What pattern of silly mistake is repeating?
Write this down in a small “Test Analysis” notebook.
This is where real rank improvement happens.
Phase 3 – Massive Revision + JEE Main + Advanced Focus
Time Window: Roughly last 6 months up to JEE Advanced 2027
In this phase, your syllabus is mostly done. Now we shift from:
“Learning new things” → “Mastering and revising what we already know.”
Target: 4 Complete Revisions
Ideally, by the time you sit in JEE Advanced 2027, you should have done:
- 4 full syllabus revisions of PCM
Rough sequence:
- Revision 1: Around Dec–Jan (before or just after first JEE Main)
- Revision 2: Before boards + second JEE Main attempt
- Revision 3: After JEE Main, focused for JEE Advanced
- Revision 4: Last 20–25 days only problem practice and super-fast revision
In later revisions:
- You do less “theory rereading”
- You do more problem solving
- You rotate between:
- PYQs
- Mock tests
- Advanced-level sheets
By Revision 3 & 4, your book should not be “new”. It should feel like an old friend.
Daily Timetable to Target IIT Bombay CS (JEE 2027)
Now let’s talk about the main thing: your daily routine.
The best strategy fails if your daily pattern is chaos. You need a structure that:
- Gives you 8–10 hours of quality study
- Includes revision + new learning + practice
- Protects your mental health
- Gives you adequate sleep
Below is a sample timetable assuming you wake up around 5:30 AM. If you wake up later (7 AM, 8 AM), simply shift the blocks accordingly.
Early Riser JEE Timetable (Sample)
- 5:30–6:00 AM: Wake up, freshen up
- 6:00–8:00 AM: High-efficiency study slot
- Revise last day’s notes
- Do homework from coaching / modules
- Practice concept strengthening problems
- 8:00–8:30 AM: Light exercise + pranayam
- Walk / stretching
- Breathing exercises (anulom-vilom, kapalbhati)
- 5–10 minutes of “Om” chanting for focus
- 8:30–9:00 AM: Breakfast
- 9:00–11:00 AM: Study Slot 1 (2 hours)
- Target: One major block (e.g., Physics theory + examples)
- 11:00–11:15 AM: Short break
- 11:15 AM–1:15 PM: Study Slot 2 (2 hours)
- Target: Maths tough problems or Chemistry problem practice
- 1:15–2:00 PM: Lunch + small rest
- 2:00–5:30 PM: Coaching / School / Self-study block
- If you have coaching, attend sincerely and actively
- If no coaching, use this block for full-length practice or PYQs
- 5:30–6:00 PM: Small walk / chill / tea break
- 6:00–8:00 PM: Study Slot 3 (2 hours)
- Target: Second subject (e.g., if morning was Physics, night can be Maths)
- 8:00–8:30 PM: Dinner
- 8:30–9:30 PM: Light entertainment / talking to family / mental cool down
- 9:30–10:00 PM: Day review + light revision
- What did I study?
- What did I complete?
- What stays pending?
- 10:00–10:15 PM: Put phone away, no screens
- 10:15–10:30 PM: Sleep prep, lights off soon
This gives you 6–8 hours of self-study + 3–4 hours coaching/school = around 9–11 productive study hours overall.
Night Owl Version
If you’re someone who sleeps at 12 and wakes up at 7:
- Shift the entire schedule by **+1.5 to +2 hours**
- Your main 2-hour deep slot can be:
- 10:00 PM–12:00 AM (if you genuinely focus at night)
But one golden rule:
Do NOT mix late-night phone scrolling with late-night studying.
If you want to study at night – study. If you want to scroll – don’t fool yourself by keeping books open and Instagram on.
Weekly Plan: The Sunday Ritual
Your daily timetable runs the engine. Your weekly ritual gives direction.
Especially for JEE, Sunday is not just a “chill” day. Sunday =
- Test Day
- Backlog Day
- Deep Analysis Day
What to Do on Sundays
- 1. Give a test (chapter-wise or full)
- Preferably 2–3 hours, in exam conditions
- 2. Analyse the test
- Mark questions where:
- You knew the concept but did a silly mistake
- You had no idea what to do
- You ran out of time
- Mark questions where:
- 3. Clear backlog
- Take 2–3 hours to focus only on pending topics from the week
- 4. Half-day break
- Very important for mental health
- Spend time with family, do a hobby, relax
Boards vs JEE: How to Balance Without Losing Your Mind
Many students get confused here:
- “Should I focus on boards first then JEE?”
- “Should I ignore boards and only do JEE?”
Reality is simple:
- To sit in JEE Advanced, you need minimum 75% (or equivalent) in boards
- To get IIT Bombay CS, you need a huge JEE Main and Advanced rank, not 99 in English
So the plan is:
- Get decent boards (90%+ is very achievable)
- But keep JEE as the main focus throughout
How to Manage Boards Smartly
- From around July of Class 12th, start giving some board-focused time
- Include:
- Writing practice for long answers
- Language subjects (English + 5th subject)
- Board-style questions in PCM
- Use your JEE theory to dominate board questions
- Don’t treat boards as a separate monster – treat them as a softer version of JEE prep
Most genuine JEE aspirants who are strong in PCM will find boards very manageable if they start a bit early and write some board-style papers.
What You MUST Avoid If You Want IIT Bombay CS
There are some habits that almost guarantee failure, no matter how good your timetable looks on paper.
Avoid these at all costs:
- Resource Switching
- Watching 4 different teachers for the same chapter
- Starting a book, leaving it halfway, picking another, and so on
- Result: no depth, no completion, only confusion
- Random YouTube roaming
- “Recommended” videos trap
- Non-targeted lectures – watching everything, finishing nothing
- Late-night destruction routine
- Scrolling social media till 2 AM
- Watching reels, gaming, streaming during peak brain hours
- Test escaping
- Fear of low marks leads to NOT giving tests
- But your rank is discovered only through tests
- Negative self-talk
- “11th waste ho gayi, ab kya hi hoga…”
- “I am too behind, I can’t catch up”
Remember this line:
“Toppers are not those who never feel down. Toppers are those who don’t stay down for long.”
Final Mindset: Restart Like You Are Reborn
Let’s summarise your journey from here:
- Your 11th may be wasted. But your future is not.
- You still have ~16–18 months to completely flip your life.
- You now have:
- A 3-phase strategy
- A daily timetable
- A weekly ritual
- A clear idea of what to avoid
You are not starting from zero.
You are restarting with wisdom.
From today, say this to yourself every morning and every night:
I WILL WIN JEE 2027.
I WILL REACH IIT BOMBAY CS.
I WILL NOT WASTE THIS SECOND CHANCE.
Your 11th being wasted is not your full story. It’s just the messy first chapter.
Now you write the main story.
Now you grind, now you grow, now you prove it.
All the best, beta. Go build the kind of future that makes this struggle worth it. 💪🔥