Syllabus
Indian Army Agniveer: Exam pattern
A clear view of the paper format helps you plan focused practice instead of studying everything at random. Use the pattern to decide what you do each day and how long each session should last.
Soldier GD: quick overview
Format: 50 questions for 100 marks covering GK, Mathematics and Logical Reasoning. Expect fast, short questions that reward speed.
Practice short timed sets that mix these subjects so you build consistent tempo and reduce silly errors.
Soldier Technical: scoring pressure
Format: 50 questions for 200 marks with 1 mark penalty for every wrong answer. Accuracy matters as much as speed.
Train with error logs and slow, accurate passes before you push time limits.
Soldier Clerk: options and penalties
Two choices: 50 Q in 1 hour or 100 Q in 2 hours. Wrong answers carry a 25% deduction.
Simulate both modes and pick the one where your accuracy + pace gives the best net score.
Turn the exam pattern into daily drills: timed sets, error log and section focus.
Track accuracy percentage, average time per question and penalty impact like a real test.
Post | Questions | Time | Penalty |
Soldier GD | 50 | 60 minutes | No standard negative marking |
Soldier Technical | 50 | 60 minutes | -1 per wrong answer |
Soldier Clerk | 50 or 100 | 1 hour or 2 hours | 25% deduction for wrong |
"Choose practice that mirrors the test; your best improvements come from realistic, timed sessions."
Indian Army Agniveer: Syllabus breakdown
Divide the full syllabus into clear priorities so you focus on topics that give the biggest score gains. Start by labelling topics as high-yield or nice-to-have, then allocate more daily time to the high-yield list.
General Knowledge: current affairs versus static GK
Split your general knowledge sessions. Do 15 minutes daily of current affairs and 15 minutes of static GK.
Use concise notes and flashcards for repeat facts like capitals, awards and national schemes. Review these across previous year papers to spot recurring question areas.
Mathematics: scoring areas and speed-building practice
Focus on arithmetic, percentages, ratio, time‑speed‑distance and basic algebra. These topics yield steady marks.
Train with timed sets of 10–15 questions and track average time per question. Improve speed but keep accuracy as your priority.
General Science: Class 8–10 fundamentals
Stick to Class 8–10 level concepts in physics, chemistry and biology. Avoid higher‑level material that is unlikely to appear.
Make short concept cards for laws, formulas and simple diagrams. These help in quick revision before a test or mock.
Logical Reasoning: accuracy-first drills
Work on pattern recognition, series, coding–decoding and basic puzzles. Accuracy here beats rushing every time.
Practice low-volume, high-focus drills and maintain an error log to identify recurring mistakes.
Combining revision with mock-test analysis
After each mock test, tag wrong questions by subtopic. Revise those subtopics within 48 hours and re-test with a short set.
High-yield vs nice-to-have: cover high-yield twice weekly.
Mock linkage: let mocks drive revision targets, not guesswork.
Short cycles: revise, test, review within 48 hours for retention.
"Use previous year papers to find repeat questions and guide what to learn first."
Subject | High-yield topics | Daily routine |
General knowledge | National facts, awards, geography | 15 min current + 15 min static |
Mathematics | Arithmetic, percentages, algebra | Timed drills (10–15 Q) |
General Science | Class 8–10 basics | Concept cards + 10 Q tests |