Who this is for
Students who appeared for NEET or JEE once and did not get the rank or college they were targeting. The dropper year is short, expensive, and emotionally loaded. We treat it that way.
What we change versus your last attempt
Most droppers do not need more content — they need better diagnostic, faster correction loops, and a calmer routine. Three structural changes we make:
- Weekly testing from day one — not just in the final months. We find gaps early and close them in the same week.
- Marathon test series January – April — frequency ramps from 1 test / week in January to alternate-day testing in late April, exam end-time 2–5 PM.
- Screen-time monitoring — for many droppers, phone time is the silent score-killer. Our Screen-Time Plan is mandatory.
Daily schedule — pick a slot
Two parallel slots, run by different teachers, so you can choose what fits your routine. The teaching content and depth are identical in both.
- Slot 1: 9:00 AM – 2:00 PM, Mon – Fri
- Slot 2: 10:30 AM – 2:30 PM, Mon – Fri
- Tests: Saturdays (and alternate days in late April)
Faculty
- Chemistry — Ashish Sir (Chemistry by Ashish Sir, 4.9★ across 132+ reviews)
- Biology — Dr. Parul Gahlan, HOD Biology (PhD, ICMR, GATE)
- Physics — Manoj Kapoor, HOD Physics
- Mathematics — Dr. Rakesh, HOD Mathematics (PhD)
FAQ
How small are the dropper batches?
Small enough that the teacher knows every student's previous attempt score, weak subject, and target college by Week 2.
What is the marathon test series?
It is the final 4-month testing programme that runs from January to the week before NEET / JEE. Each test is full-length and full-pattern. Performance is reviewed in detail with each student.
What if I am repeating after a long gap?
Common — talk to our Centre Head. We have a short diagnostic conversation before enrolment to make sure the programme is right for your specific gap.
Fees?
Contact for fees. We offer discounts for students who scored above a certain cutoff in their first attempt — ask our Centre Head.
