Preparing for your Class 12 board exams? The National Examination Board (NEB) Class 12 model questions for the academic year 2082 are your most important study resource. To make your revision easier, we’ve compiled all subjects’ model questions along with their answers in one place.
Compulsory Subjects
English | |
Nepali | |
Social Studies | View/Download |
Mathematics | View/Download |
Science Faculty
Physics | View/Download |
Chemistry | View/Download |
Biology | View/Download |
Computer | View/Download |
Management Faculty
Accountancy | View/Download |
Economics | View/Download |
Marketing | View/Download |
Business Math | View/Download |
Computer Science | View/Download |
Business Studies | View/Download |
Hotel Management | View/Download |
Education Faculty
Pedagogy | View/Download |
Opt.English | View/Download |
Economics | View/Download |
Opt. Nepali | View/Download |
Education & Development | View/Download |
Health & Physical Education | View/Download |
Law Faculty
Nepalese Legal System | View/Download |
Civil, Criminal Law & Justice | View/Download |
Legal Drafting | View/Download |
General Law | View/Download |
Remaining Faculties
Art & Others … | View/Download |
Download all subject model questions and answers from the links above and kickstart your revision today!
Good luck with your exams!
The 90-Day SAT Study Plan
From Zero to 1400+
A structured, week-by-week guide for students starting their prep journey.
So you've decided to tackle the SAT. Maybe you're starting from scratch, haven't touched a math textbook in months, and the last time you read a challenging passage was for English class back in September. Good. You're in the right place.
Ninety days is the sweet spot for SAT prep. It's long enough to build real skills and confidence, but short enough to keep you focused and motivated. This plan assumes you're starting with little to no preparation and want to break into the 1400+ range.
Here's the truth: hitting 1400+ isn't about being a genius. It's about consistency, strategy, and knowing the test inside and out. Follow this plan, do the work, and you'll get there.
Before You Start: What You'll Need
Gather these things before Day 1.
• Official College Board materials. The College Board offers complete practice tests in their Bluebook app and book. These are non-negotiable. They're the closest thing to the real test.
• A notebook specifically for the SAT. Use it for notes, wrong answer analysis, and vocabulary if you need it.
• Khan Academy. It's free, official, and integrated with College Board. Use it for targeted practice.
• A timer or stopwatch. Timing is everything on this test.
• A weekly calendar. Block out your study times now. Treat them like classes you can't skip.
The Structure of This Plan
This 90-day plan is divided into three phases.
• Phase 1: Foundation (Days 1–30). You'll learn the content, understand the question types, and build basic skills.
• Phase 2: Skill Building (Days 31–60). You'll drill specific sections, refine your strategies, and start taking full practice tests.
• Phase 3: Mastery and Stamina (Days 61–90). You'll take full tests under real conditions, analyze every mistake, and lock in your routines.
Each week includes specific assignments and goals. Adjust the pace based on your schedule, but don't skip the fundamentals.
Phase 1: Foundation (Days 1–30)
The goal of this phase is simple: understand what's on the test and identify where you're starting from. You're not racing yet. You're building the engine.
Week 1: Diagnostic and Orientation
• Day 1: Take a full practice test. Use one of the official College Board practice tests. Simulate real conditions as much as possible. Find a quiet room, use a timer, and take the breaks exactly as allowed. This is your baseline. It might hurt. That's okay.
• Day 2: Score your test and analyze results. Don't just look at the number. Break it down by section. Which types of questions did you miss? Was it running out of time? Misreading questions? Not knowing the content? Write everything in your notebook.
• Day 3: Familiarize yourself with the test structure. Learn the sections, the number of questions, and the time limits. Know it cold. The Reading and Writing section has 54 questions and takes 64 minutes total across two modules. The Math section has 44 questions and takes 70 minutes total across two modules.
• Day 4: Explore official resources. Spend time on Khan Academy and College Board's website. Understand what tools are available.
• Days 5–7: Rest and reflection. Let your brain recover. Think about your diagnostic score and what it means. Set a realistic goal for test day.
Week 2: Math Fundamentals Part 1
The Math section covers four main areas: Algebra, Advanced Math, Problem-Solving and Data Analysis, and Geometry and Trigonometry. Start with the building blocks.
• Day 1: Review linear equations and inequalities. Practice solving for x, graphing lines, and understanding slope. Khan Academy has excellent drills.
• Day 2: Systems of linear equations. Learn substitution and elimination methods. Do 20 practice problems.
• Day 3: Inequalities and graphs. Practice graphing inequalities and understanding shading.
• Day 4: Linear word problems. This is where most students lose points. Practice translating words into equations.
• Day 5: Mixed algebra practice. Combine everything from the week into a 30-question review session.
• Weekend: Light review. Spend 30 minutes each day reviewing your notes and redoing problems you missed.
Week 3: Reading and Writing Fundamentals Part 1
The Reading and Writing section tests comprehension, grammar, and reasoning. Start with the basics.
• Day 1: Understand the question types. There are four domains: Craft and Structure, Information and Ideas, Standard English Conventions, and Expression of Ideas. Learn what each means.
• Day 2: Grammar fundamentals. Review subject-verb agreement, verb tense, and pronoun agreement. These appear constantly.
• Day 3: Punctuation rules. Master commas, semicolons, colons, and dashes. Know when to use each.
• Day 4: Sentence structure. Learn to identify fragments, run-ons, and parallel structure issues.
• Day 5: Combined grammar practice. Do 25 questions mixing all the grammar concepts.
• Weekend: Read challenging material. Spend an hour each day reading articles from The Atlantic, The New Yorker, or scientific journals. Pay attention to sentence structure and argument flow.
Week 4: Math Fundamentals Part 2
Build on your algebra foundation with more advanced topics.
• Day 1: Quadratic functions and equations. Review factoring, the quadratic formula, and parabolas.
• Day 2: Exponents and radicals. Practice simplifying expressions with exponents and understanding square roots.
• Day 3: Polynomials. Learn operations with polynomials and basic factoring.
• Day 4: Nonlinear functions. Understand graphs of quadratics, exponentials, and other nonlinear relationships.
• Day 5: Mixed advanced math practice. Do 30 problems combining all Week 4 topics.
• Weekend: Cumulative math review. Spend 90 minutes total across both days reviewing everything from Weeks 2 and 4. Redo problems you missed.
Phase 2: Skill Building (Days 31–60)
Now you have foundational knowledge. Phase 2 is about sharpening your skills, learning strategies, and taking your first full practice tests since the diagnostic.
Week 5: Reading and Writing Fundamentals Part 2
Move beyond grammar into the reasoning skills the test demands.
• Day 1: Central ideas and details. Practice identifying main ideas in passages and finding supporting evidence.
• Day 2: Command of evidence. Learn to connect claims to the evidence that supports them. This appears in both Reading and Writing questions.
• Day 3: Inferences and conclusions. Practice drawing logical conclusions from text.
• Day 4: Words in context. Review strategies for determining word meanings from context clues.
• Day 5: Text structure and purpose. Learn to identify why an author wrote something and how they structured their argument.
• Weekend: Mixed reading practice. Complete two full Reading and Writing modules and review every wrong answer.
Week 6: Problem-Solving and Data Analysis
This area appears in both Math and Reading and Writing. Master it now.
• Day 1: Ratios, rates, and proportions. Practice setting up and solving proportion problems.
• Day 2: Percentages. Review percentage increase, decrease, and simple interest problems.
• Day 3: Data interpretation. Learn to read tables, graphs, and scatterplots quickly and accurately.
• Day 4: Statistics. Review mean, median, mode, range, and standard deviation concepts.
• Day 5: Probability. Practice basic probability problems.
• Weekend: Data analysis practice. Complete 40 mixed problems covering all Week 6 topics.
Week 7: First Full Practice Test and Analysis
Time to see your progress.
• Day 1: Take a full practice test. Use official materials. Simulate real testing conditions exactly. No phones, no snacks except during breaks, strict timing.
• Day 2: Score your test. Calculate your section scores and total.
• Day 3: Analyze every wrong answer. For each mistake, write down why you missed it. Was it content? Carelessness? Time pressure? Be honest.
• Day 4: Categorize your errors. Group them by topic. Are most of your math errors in quadratics? Are you missing inference questions in reading? This tells you what to focus on.
• Day 5: Create a targeted review plan. Based on your error analysis, list the top three topics to drill in the coming weeks.
• Weekend: Rest and reflect. Let the results sink in. Celebrate progress. If you're up 100 points from your diagnostic, that's huge. If you're not where you want to be, that's fine. You have five weeks left.
Week 8: Targeted Weakness Drills
This week is customized to you. Use your error analysis to guide every session. Each day, spend 45 minutes drilling your weakest topic. Use Khan Academy, your notebook, and official practice questions. Then spend 15 minutes reviewing what you learned.
• Days 1–4: Weak area focus. Drill your weakest topics. If quadratics are your weakness, do 30 quadratic problems. If command of evidence is your weakness, do 25 evidence questions.
• Day 5: Mixed review. Combine your weak areas with stronger areas for 50 total questions.
• Weekend: Light review and rest. You've earned it.
Week 9: Advanced Strategies and Timing
Now that your content knowledge is solid, focus on test-taking strategy.
• Day 1: Pacing strategies. Learn how much time to spend per question. Reading and Writing gives you about 71 seconds per question. Math gives you about 95 seconds per question. Practice with a timer.
• Day 2: Question order strategy. You don't have to go in order. Learn to skip and return to hard questions.
• Day 3: Answer elimination. Practice crossing off wrong answers before guessing.
• Day 4: Stress management. Learn breathing techniques and positive self-talk. The SAT is mental as much as academic.
• Day 5: Mixed strategy practice. Do one full module of each section, focusing on applying your new strategies.
• Weekend: Timed section practice. Complete one full Math section and one full Reading and Writing section under timed conditions. Review thoroughly.
Phase 3: Mastery and Stamina (Days 61–90)
This is the final stretch. You're building endurance, refining your approach, and getting ready for test day.
Week 10: Second Full Practice Test
• Day 1: Take a full practice test. Real conditions. No exceptions.
• Day 2: Score and analyze. Compare to your Week 7 test. Where have you improved? Where are you stuck?
• Day 3: Deep error analysis. Go beyond topic categorization. Look at patterns. Do you miss questions at the beginning? The end? Do you rush through certain sections?
• Day 4: Create your final focus list. Based on this test, list the top five things to work on in the final three weeks.
• Days 5–7: Begin focused drilling. Use your focus list to guide every session.
Week 11: Endurance Training
Each day, complete one full section under timed conditions. Alternate between Math and Reading and Writing. Review every mistake immediately after.
• Day 1: Math section 1
• Day 2: Reading and Writing section 1
• Day 3: Math section 2
• Day 4: Reading and Writing section 2
• Day 5: Mixed section review
• Weekend: One full practice test. Yes, another one. You're building stamina now.
Week 12: Final Refinements
• Day 1: Review your Week 11 test. Same process. Analyze, categorize, plan.
• Day 2: Drill your remaining weak spots.
• Day 3: Review all strategies. Pacing, elimination, stress management. Write them down on one page.
• Day 4: Light review only. No new material. Just refresh concepts you know well.
• Day 5: Rest. Seriously. Put the books away.
• Weekend: Final full practice test. Two days before your real test, take one last full exam. Then step away.
The Final Three Days
• Two days before: Light review. Look over your strategy page. Do five easy problems to keep your brain engaged. Then stop.
• One day before: Absolutely nothing. Watch a movie. Go for a walk. Eat a good dinner. Get to bed early.
• Test day: You're ready. You've done the work. Trust it.
Extra Tips for Breaking 1400+
These strategies separate 1300 scorers from 1400 scorers.
• Master the easy questions first. The SAT weights all questions equally. Don't lose points on easy questions because you rushed. Get them right, then tackle the hard ones.
• Know when to guess. There's no guessing penalty. Answer every single question. If you're running out of time, bubble something.
• Read questions carefully. Most careless errors happen because students misread the question. Circle what's being asked. Underline key words.
• Use the process of elimination. Even if you have no idea, crossing off one or two answers dramatically improves your odds.
• Practice with official materials only. Third-party tests are often harder or easier than the real thing. Stick to College Board.
• Take care of your body. Sleep, exercise, and food matter. You can't out-study a bad routine.
A Note on Progress
Some weeks you'll feel like a genius. Other weeks you'll want to throw your book across the room. Both are normal.
Progress isn't linear. You'll have plateaus where your score doesn't move for weeks. Then suddenly it jumps. Trust the process. Keep showing up.
Your diagnostic score is not your destiny. Students improve by 200, 300, even 400 points all the time. They do it by following a plan, working consistently, and believing it's possible.
You can too.
Ninety days from now, you'll walk into that test center knowing you did everything you could. And no matter what score you get, that's something to be proud of.
Now get started. Day 1 is waiting.
