Study Vault is the reference and planning layer for the JEE syllabus. It connects syllabus coverage, topic strategy, concept relationships, theory, worked examples, notes, bookmarks, and progress tracking so you can decide what to study, why it matters, and what to do next.
PlanUse weightage, priority, difficulty, frequency, and scoring potential to choose the right order.
LearnRead theory, worked examples, JEE notes and tips, and best resources for the selected subtopic.
ConnectSee core concepts, prerequisites, remedial ideas, and next concepts before jumping into harder work.
RetainBookmark important subtopics, save notes and examples, and mark progress for future revision.
Study Vault has three student-facing sections. They use the same syllabus data, but each section answers a different study question.
SyllabusBrowse the full Physics, Chemistry, and Math syllabus by topic. Use it when you want theory, worked examples, JEE notes and tips, resources, revision protocols, and progress controls in one place./study-vault/syllabus
Topper's GuideSearch a subtopic and read exam-facing strategy: topper notes, common mistakes, red flags, ready-when markers, and real-world context./study-vault/toppers-guide
Concept MapFind a topic, subtopic, or concept and inspect its learning relationships: core concepts, prerequisites, foundation ideas, remedial fallbacks, and next concepts./study-vault/concept-map
Use Syllabus when you want the complete study surface for a subtopic, not just a quick glossary view.
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Choose a topicUse the topic navigator or jump-to search to open a subject area such as Mechanics, Organic Chemistry, or Calculus.
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Open a subtopicThe detail panel shows difficulty, weightage, cognitive level, concept type, frequency, scoring potential, and priority.
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Study the tabsUse Theory for explanations, Worked Examples for solved patterns, JEE Notes & Tips for exam rules, and Resource for recommended material.
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Capture useful materialSave theory snippets, tips, common mistakes, and examples into Notes so they do not disappear after reading.
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Mark progressUse the progress button to move a subtopic from not started to in progress or mastered.
Use Concept Map when you need to understand why a topic feels difficult, what it depends on, or where to go after it is stable.
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Search by conceptUse Concept Map when you know the idea you are weak in but not the exact syllabus bucket.
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Read the mapCore concepts show what belongs inside the subtopic. Foundation and prerequisite concepts show what to fix first.
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Use remedial and next linksIf accuracy is low, go backward to remedial concepts. If the subtopic feels stable, move forward to the next concept.
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Filter for planningUse difficulty, cognitive level, concept type, scoring potential, frequency, min weightage, and sort order to shape your study queue.
Progress statusCycle a subtopic through Track, In Progress, and Mastered. Topic progress rings use these statuses.
BookmarksBookmark important subtopics from Syllabus or Concept Map so they can reappear in your library and maintenance flows.
NotesSave theory, JEE tips, common mistakes, red flags, and topper strategy as personal notes linked to the subtopic.
Saved examplesWorked examples can be saved separately so a useful solved pattern can be reviewed later.
Activity trackingViews and dwell time on theory, examples, tips, concept maps, resources, and revision sections help the app understand what you studied.
Deep linksOther features can open a specific subtopic, tab, or strategy section directly from revision and progress workflows.
These labels are not decorative tags. They describe how a subtopic behaves in the exam and how you should study it. A high-weightage, medium-difficulty, high-scoring topic is a quick ROI target. A hard, trap-heavy, advanced topic needs slower revision, examples, and mixed PYQs.
Weightage estimates how much exam value a topic or subtopic carries. In Study Vault it appears on topic rows, subtopic tags, filters, and sort controls. Use it to protect time for topics that repeatedly contribute marks, but combine it with scoring potential and difficulty before deciding your final study order.
High weightagePlan dedicated study and practice time. These topics should not be left to last-minute revision.
Medium weightageUse after your highest-yield topics are stable, especially when the topic is high scoring or prerequisite-heavy.
Low weightagePrepare selectively unless the topic unlocks another chapter or appears in your personal mistake pattern.
Topic totalTopic-level weightage is the combined weight of its visible subtopics, useful when comparing larger chapters.
Cognitive Level is based on Bloom's Taxonomy. It tells you what kind of thinking the concept demands, not just whether it is easy or hard.
RecallMastery example
Remember facts, definitions, units, constants, formulas, or named rules.
Question-style checkMastery example: State the SI unit of surface tension and recall the relation between force and length.
UnderstandMastery example
Explain why something happens, interpret a statement, or translate a concept into your own words.
Question-style checkMastery example: Explain why boiling point increases when external pressure is increased.
ApplyMastery example
Use one known concept or formula in a new but standard JEE situation.
Question-style checkMastery example: Use conservation of momentum to find final speed after a one-dimensional collision.
AnalyzeMastery example
Break a problem into cases, compare conditions, read graphs, or combine multiple equations.
Question-style checkMastery example: Compare two pulley arrangements, draw separate FBDs, and identify the correct constraint equation.
EvaluateMastery example
Judge correctness, choose the best method, eliminate traps, or reason through edge cases.
Question-style checkMastery example: Given four proposed solutions to an electrostatics problem, reject the one that violates symmetry or limiting cases.
Min WeightageFilters out subtopics below the selected estimated JEE weightage. "Any" means no weightage filter. Raise it when you want only high-ROI topics.
Sort by WeightageRanks subtopics by estimated mark contribution so the most exam-relevant areas rise first.
Sort by DifficultyGroups easier or harder subtopics together, useful when planning warm-up practice or deep-work sessions.
Best practical orderStart with high weightage plus high or moderate scoring potential, then move into hard or trap-heavy topics.
GreenHigh scoring or high recall value. Practise for speed and accuracy.
YellowMedium weightage or Analyze-heavy. Study with examples, then timed PYQs.
RedHard, trap-heavy, or low conversion. Slow down and verify assumptions.
Priority Score is a 0-100 study ordering signal. It combines weightage, PYQ frequency, prerequisite importance, scoring potential, difficulty risk, and time efficiency. Higher score means the topic should usually appear earlier in your plan.
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Weightage55 points: marks at stake
Frequency45 points: PYQ repeat signal
Quick reading: a topic with high weightage and high frequency becomes a front-of-plan topic. The full app can still layer in difficulty and scoring potential, but this graphic explains the main 100-point intuition.
The Topper's Guide should feel like exam-room advice, not just a text link. Quote cards make strategy notes scannable and give students a quick mental model for how high performers use the same data.
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AIR-style habitSpeed after clarity
“I do not start timed PYQs until I can explain the trap in one line. Speed comes later, but careless speed costs marks first.”
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Mentor notePrerequisite discipline
“When a hard topic feels random, I go one step backward in the concept map. Most errors are missing roots, not missing tricks.”
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Topper patternRevision signal
“Before mocks, I revise high-frequency green topics for accuracy and red topics only for traps I have already documented.”