How to Improve Maths Marks in 30 Days
A simple, day-by-day action plan that helps students strengthen concepts, fix silly mistakes, and walk into the exam hall with real confidence — no last-minute panic required.
Maths marks rarely drop because a student is "weak" in the subject — they drop because concepts get skipped, practice gets irregular, and small mistakes keep repeating unnoticed. The good news: with a focused 30-day routine, most students can meaningfully lift their scores, even close to exams. At Janavi Group Tuition Classes, we've used this exact structure with our Class 9–12 Science and Commerce batches, and it works because it's built on daily consistency, not last-minute cramming.
Why It Works
Why 30 Days Is Enough
Maths improves fastest when effort is structured, not just increased. These three shifts make the biggest difference in a short window.
Concept Before Practice
Revisiting the "why" behind a formula prevents the same mistake from repeating across ten questions.
Daily Small Wins
30 minutes every day beats 4 hours once a week — the brain retains formulas through repetition, not intensity.
Mistake Tracking
A simple notebook of "mistakes I keep making" removes 60–70% of silly marks lost in exams.
The Plan
Your Week-by-Week 30 Day Roadmap
Rebuild the Foundation
List every chapter and mark it Strong / Average / Weak. Spend this week only on Weak chapters — redo solved examples before attempting new questions.
Formula & Shortcut Bank
Create one formula sheet per chapter. Practice 15–20 mixed questions daily, timing yourself to build speed alongside accuracy.
Full Mock Tests
Attempt one full-length paper every 2 days under exam conditions. Review each paper the same evening while mistakes are fresh.
Revise & Stay Calm
Only revise your formula sheet and mistake notebook — no new topics. Sleep, diet, and a calm mind matter as much as revision now.
Daily Habits
5 Habits That Move the Needle
- Solve at least 10 problems daily, even on busy days.
- Keep a dedicated "mistake notebook" for recurring errors.
- Time every practice set — speed is a skill, not a bonus.
- Ask doubts the same day; don't let them pile up.
- Revise formulas for 10 minutes before starting new practice.
- Sleep 7+ hours — tired brains make careless errors.
Avoid These
Common Mistakes That Slow Progress
Jumping Straight to Hard Problems
Skipping basics to attempt tough questions builds false confidence and wastes revision time.
Not Reviewing Mistakes
Solving 100 questions without reviewing errors means repeating the same mistake 100 times.
Want Guided Support for This 30-Day Plan?
At Janavi Group Tuition Classes, our Maths faculty design a personal 30-day tracker for every student, with regular tests and doubt-solving sessions.