JEE Physics 90+ Strategy: Tips from Toppers By Sanjeev Kumar

JEE Physics 90+ Strategy Tips from Toppers By Sanjeev Kumar

Scoring 90+ in JEE Physics is one of the most reliable ways to separate yourself from the competition. While Chemistry and Mathematics are equally important, Physics is consistently the section that creates the largest rank differentials — the section where the difference between a good rank and a great rank is most frequently decided.

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir), founder of bestphysicsteacher.in, gold medallist in M.Sc. Physics, and a teacher with over 15 years of frontline coaching experience at India’s premier institutes including Aakash, Narayana, Pathfinder, and Brilliant, has guided hundreds of students to 90+ scores in JEE Physics. This guide distils everything he has learned — and everything toppers consistently report — into a complete, actionable preparation framework.

Introduction: Why Physics Is the Rank Differentiator in JEE

In JEE Main and JEE Advanced, the three subjects serve different functions in determining your rank. Chemistry rewards consistent preparation and systematic coverage. Mathematics rewards problem-solving skill and speed. Physics rewards something more specific and more difficult to fake: genuine conceptual understanding combined with analytical problem-solving ability.

This is precisely why Physics is where the biggest rank separations occur. Two students with identical Chemistry and Mathematics scores can have Physics scores 30–40 marks apart — not because one worked harder, but because one understood the subject more deeply.

The implication is direct: a 90+ score in JEE Physics is not about studying more Physics. It is about studying Physics correctly. The strategy Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) uses at bestphysicsteacher.in is built on this insight — every element of the preparation framework is designed to build genuine understanding, not surface familiarity.

Phase 1: Building the Rock-Solid Foundation — Months 1 to 12

Step 1: Master the JEE Physics Syllabus Architecture

Before opening a single book, Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) requires every student at bestphysicsteacher.in to print the official NTA JEE Physics syllabus and study it as a document — not as a checklist, but as a map of the subject’s architecture.

Understanding the syllabus structure reveals something crucial: JEE Physics is not a collection of isolated topics. It is an interconnected system where early chapters form the foundation for later ones. This understanding shapes how you approach preparation — sequentially, systematically, and with explicit attention to the connections between topics.

The Major Syllabus Domains and Their Strategic Importance:

Mechanics — The Indispensable Foundation Kinematics, Laws of Motion, Work Energy and Power, Rotational Motion, Gravitation, and Properties of Solids and Fluids. Mechanics constitutes the largest single domain in JEE Physics and forms the conceptual foundation for virtually everything that follows. A weakness in Mechanics creates cascading weaknesses in later topics.

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) dedicates the most time to Mechanics at bestphysicsteacher.in precisely because the investment here multiplies across the entire syllabus. Every hour spent mastering Mechanics returns value in Gravitation, in Thermodynamics, in Electrostatics, and in every multi-concept problem that combines topics.

Electromagnetism — The Highest Complexity Domain Electrostatics, Current Electricity, Magnetic Effects of Current, Electromagnetic Induction, and Alternating Currents. Together with Mechanics, Electromagnetism accounts for over 50–60% of JEE Physics marks. It is the most conceptually demanding domain — requiring rigorous vector analysis, three-dimensional visualisation, and the ability to connect multiple principles simultaneously.

Rishi Sir uses animations and simulations extensively at bestphysicsteacher.in for Electromagnetism topics, making field directions, circuit behaviours, and induction phenomena genuinely visible rather than abstractly described.

Modern Physics — The Most Reliable Scoring Opportunity Dual Nature of Matter, Atoms and Nuclei, Electronic Devices. Despite carrying 15–20% weightage consistently, Modern Physics is the most accessible domain for students who prepare it properly. The questions are frequently direct, the formula set is manageable, and the conceptual depth required is less than Mechanics or Electromagnetism.

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir)’s instruction at bestphysicsteacher.in: treat Modern Physics as your guaranteed marks. Master every concept, every formula, and every standard problem type. Do not let this domain be a source of uncertainty on exam day.

Optics — Systematic and Highly Scoring Ray Optics and Wave Optics. Optics rewards students who are systematic — consistent sign conventions, mastered ray diagram construction, and thorough understanding of wave superposition principles. For students who approach it correctly, Optics becomes one of the most reliable scoring sections in JEE Physics.

Thermodynamics and Kinetic Theory — Conceptually Rich Thermal properties, thermodynamic processes, heat engines, and kinetic theory. P-V diagrams are the central tool. Students who master the First Law application to all standard processes and understand the physical meaning of each thermodynamic quantity handle this section efficiently.

Waves and Oscillations — Foundational and Application-Heavy SHM, wave motion, standing waves, Doppler effect. Understanding of SHM at the derivation level is essential — not just the formula, but the physical meaning of every term. Wave problems reward students who understand superposition intuitively.

Weightage Reality Check from Rishi Sir: For a 90+ score, you cannot afford to skip any domain. While Mechanics and Electromagnetism carry the most marks, Modern Physics and Optics are where marks are most easily gained by well-prepared students. Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) designs the preparation sequence at bestphysicsteacher.in to ensure every domain receives proportional attention based on both weightage and difficulty.

Step 2: Choose and Master the Right Study Materials

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir)’s most important resource guidance at bestphysicsteacher.in is also his most counterintuitive: study fewer books, but study them with complete mastery.

The biggest preparation mistake Rishi Sir observes consistently is students collecting many books and covering none of them thoroughly. Three books mastered completely beat ten books skimmed superficially — every time, in every exam.

The Non-Negotiable Foundation: NCERT Physics Class 11 and 12 NCERT is the starting point for every chapter, without exception. Many direct JEE Main questions are framed directly from NCERT — definitions, statements, examples, and even specific phrasings. More importantly, NCERT presents concepts in a logical, incremental manner that builds genuine understanding. No chapter should progress to reference books until NCERT for that chapter is completely mastered.

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir)’s NCERT methodology at bestphysicsteacher.in: read every statement interrogatively — why is this true? Attempt every solved example independently before reading the solution. Answer every in-text and end-of-chapter question. Read each chapter a minimum of three times.

The Conceptual Masterpiece: H.C. Verma — Concepts of Physics (Volumes 1 and 2) H.C. Verma is the single most valuable Physics preparation resource available in India for JEE aspirants. Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) considers it indispensable at bestphysicsteacher.in for one specific reason: it teaches Physics the way JEE tests it — through deep conceptual questions that cannot be answered by formula recall alone.

The conceptual questions at the end of each H.C. Verma chapter are particularly valuable. They probe understanding at exactly the depth JEE Physics requires. A student who can answer every H.C. Verma conceptual question correctly has the conceptual foundation for a 90+ score.

Rishi Sir’s instruction: never skip the conceptual questions. Never proceed to numericals without first mastering the conceptual questions. Solve every problem — short answer, objective, and subjective.

The Extensive Practice Resource: D.C. Pandey — Understanding Physics Series After NCERT and H.C. Verma establish the conceptual foundation, D.C. Pandey provides the volume and variety of objective problem practice that JEE demands. The series covers all domains comprehensively with well-calibrated difficulty progression from JEE Main to JEE Advanced level.

Rishi Sir’s instruction for D.C. Pandey at bestphysicsteacher.in: for every incorrect answer, trace the error back to a specific conceptual misunderstanding and address it before continuing. Volume of practice is only valuable when paired with quality analysis.

For JEE Advanced Top-Rank Aspirants: I.E. Irodov — Problems in General Physics Irodov is reserved for students aiming for top 500 JEE Advanced ranks. The problems are genuinely challenging, requiring the deepest conceptual understanding available in standard JEE preparation. Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) is unambiguous at bestphysicsteacher.in: do not approach Irodov until H.C. Verma is completely mastered. Irodov attempted without proper foundation produces frustration, not preparation.

The Most Authentic Practice Resource: JEE PYQs (Last 15 Years) Previous year questions are the single most accurate indication of what JEE Physics actually tests. Every serious aspirant must solve 15 years of JEE Main and JEE Advanced Physics PYQs — topic-wise initially, full-paper format in the final months. Rishi Sir structures systematic PYQ practice into every student’s programme at bestphysicsteacher.in from the very beginning.

Step 3: Build Active Learning Habits From Day One

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) distinguishes sharply at bestphysicsteacher.in between passive reading and active learning — and insists that passive reading is almost entirely wasted effort in JEE Physics preparation.

Formula Notebook — Daily Review Required Maintain a dedicated formula notebook with chapter-wise coverage of all key formulas, their derivations, their physical significance, and their application conditions. Not just the formula — the context. Review this notebook every single day.

Rishi Sir’s rule at bestphysicsteacher.in: if you cannot write every formula for a chapter from memory, you are not ready for that chapter’s exam questions.

Concept Maps — Revealing the Architecture For every completed chapter, create a visual concept map showing how all key ideas within the chapter relate — and how the chapter connects to others in the syllabus. This practice reveals the interconnected architecture of JEE Physics and builds the multi-concept reasoning that the most difficult JEE questions test.

Error Log — The Most Valuable Learning Tool Maintain a dedicated notebook exclusively for mistakes. For every incorrect answer in practice or mock tests, record: the chapter, the specific concept misunderstood, the exact nature of the error, and the corrected understanding in your own words. Review this notebook before every subsequent practice session.

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) calls the error log the single most productive habit in JEE Physics preparation at bestphysicsteacher.in. Students who maintain it rigorously show the steepest improvement curves.

Derivations as Conceptual Maps Never memorise a derivation as a sequence of mathematical steps. Understand the physical reasoning at every step — what is happening physically, why this mathematical operation reflects physical reality, what assumption is being made. A derivation understood this way can be reconstructed from first principles if forgotten. A derivation memorised as steps cannot.

Phase 2: Mastering Problem-Solving — Months 6 to 12

Step 4: The Correct Problem-Solving Development Sequence

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) uses a specific problem-solving development sequence at bestphysicsteacher.in that consistently produces the fastest improvement:

Stage 1 — Conceptual Questions First Before attempting any numerical problem in a new chapter, solve all purely conceptual questions — questions that test understanding of principles without requiring calculation. These are the most efficient diagnostic tools available. They reveal conceptual gaps immediately, before those gaps contaminate numerical problem practice.

Stage 2 — Single-Concept Numericals After conceptual questions are handled confidently, begin single-concept numericals. These are problems that test application of one principle in a relatively direct way. The focus here is on developing the habit of drawing diagrams, identifying the relevant principle, listing known and unknown quantities, and executing the solution systematically.

Stage 3 — Multi-Concept Problems Only after single-concept problems are handled efficiently, progress to multi-concept problems — the type that combine principles from different topics and that dominate JEE Advanced. These are the problems that separate 90+ scorers from the rest.

Stage 4 — JEE Advanced Level Problems (for top-rank aspirants) Irodov and JEE Advanced PYQs from the past decade. These require the deepest available conceptual understanding and the most sophisticated problem-solving approach. Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) works through these with students personally at bestphysicsteacher.in, ensuring the approach is conceptually correct rather than formula-mechanical.

Step 5: The Art of Productive Struggle

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) is direct about this at bestphysicsteacher.in: looking at the solution the moment you get stuck is one of the most damaging habits in JEE Physics preparation.

The struggle — the period of genuine effort before the solution becomes clear — is where learning actually happens. It forces your brain to make connections, to try different approaches, to identify specifically what you do and do not understand. Looking at the solution immediately bypasses this process entirely.

Rishi Sir’s instruction at bestphysicsteacher.in: spend a genuine 15–20 minutes on any problem before considering the solution. If still stuck, look for a single hint — not the full solution. Only after a second sustained attempt should the full solution be consulted.

When you do consult the solution — understand why your approach was wrong and why the correct approach works. Not just what the answer is. Why the physics leads to that answer.

Step 6: Visualisation as a Core Problem-Solving Tool

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) teaches visualisation as a non-negotiable first step in JEE Physics problem solving at bestphysicsteacher.in. Before writing a single equation, draw a diagram. For Mechanics problems, draw a free body diagram. For Electrostatics problems, sketch the field lines and potential surfaces. For Optics problems, draw the complete ray diagram.

This practice does four things simultaneously: it clarifies what the problem is actually describing, it reveals which physical principles apply, it prevents misinterpretation of the problem, and it significantly reduces calculation errors by making the physical situation concrete.

Rishi Sir’s instruction: never attempt a JEE Physics problem without drawing a diagram first. The two minutes spent drawing saves five minutes of confused calculation.

Phase 3: Mock Tests, Analysis, and Revision — Final 3 to 4 Months

Step 7: The Mock Test Strategy That Produces 90+

Toppers across India are unanimous on this point — and Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) at bestphysicsteacher.in has seen it confirmed by hundreds of students: mock tests are the single most powerful preparation tool in the final phase.

Not because taking tests improves your Physics knowledge. But because analysing tests reveals exactly what is preventing your score from reaching its potential — and gives you a precise roadmap for improvement.

Mock Test Frequency — Rishi Sir’s Recommended Schedule:

3–4 months before JEE: One full-length mock test per week, with comprehensive Physics section analysis.

6–8 weeks before JEE: Two to three full-length mock tests per week. Analysis sessions as long as the tests themselves.

Final 3–4 weeks: Daily full-length mock tests under strict exam conditions. Targeted revision of every weakness identified in analysis.

Non-negotiable conditions for every mock test at bestphysicsteacher.in: Same time slot as the actual JEE exam. Strict time limit with no exceptions. No phone, no distractions, no breaks. OMR sheet or computer-based interface simulating actual exam format.

Step 8: The Analysis System That Actually Improves Scores

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) states directly at bestphysicsteacher.in: taking a mock test without thorough analysis is almost entirely wasted effort. The test generates the data. The analysis converts data into improvement.

Rishi Sir’s Complete 4-Category Analysis Framework:

Category 1: Correctly Solved — Confident Record the time spent. If it was more than 3 minutes for what should be a standard problem, identify why and practice that problem type for speed.

Category 2: Correctly Solved — Lucky Guess This is more dangerous than a wrong answer. A lucky guess conceals a conceptual gap. Treat every lucky guess as a wrong answer — identify the gap, study the concept properly, and re-test.

Category 3: Incorrectly Solved — Identify Root Cause This is the most important category. For every incorrect answer, determine precisely: was it a conceptual error (you did not understand the principle), a formula application error (you understood the concept but misapplied the formula), a calculation error (arithmetic, units, or signs), or a misread question (you did not understand what was being asked)?

Each error type demands a different response. Conceptual errors — return to NCERT and Rishi Sir’s notes. Formula errors — targeted formula review and problem practice. Calculation errors — slow down and double-check drills. Misread questions — slower, more deliberate reading practice.

Category 4: Unattempted — Determine Why Was it a genuine knowledge gap? A time management failure? A strategic decision that turned out to be wrong? Each reveals something different about your preparation and strategy.

Post-Analysis Action Protocol: Every conceptual error identified in analysis goes into the error log with a complete resolution. Every knowledge gap identified gets a targeted study session. Every time management pattern identified gets a strategy adjustment. Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) reviews every student’s Physics section analysis personally at bestphysicsteacher.in, converting each mock test into an individual improvement roadmap.

Step 9: The Exam Strategy That Maximises Score

Question Selection and Sequencing Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) teaches a specific question sequencing strategy at bestphysicsteacher.in for JEE Physics:

First pass: Scan the entire Physics section in 3–4 minutes. Mark all questions that appear immediately solvable — these are your guaranteed marks. Attempt them first, in order.

Second pass: Attempt questions that require moderate effort — those where you understand the principle but need to work through the solution carefully.

Third pass: Attempt remaining questions with the remaining time. Accept that some questions may not be attempted — this is correct strategy, not failure.

Time Management — The 3-Minute Rule Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) teaches the 3-minute rule at bestphysicsteacher.in: if a problem has not yielded progress within 3 minutes, mark it for later and move on. Spending 8 minutes on one problem while leaving three easier problems unattempted is the most common avoidable mistake in JEE Physics.

Negative Marking Strategy With −1/4 per incorrect answer in JEE Main, intelligent guessing strategy is critical. Rishi Sir’s instruction: attempt any question where you can eliminate at least two options with confidence. Leave questions where you genuinely cannot distinguish between options — the expected value of guessing randomly after eliminating two options is marginally positive, but the risk of eliminating the wrong options makes the calculation less favourable than it appears.

The Calm Mind Advantage Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) emphasises consistently at bestphysicsteacher.in: exam-day composure is a skill built through preparation, not something that arrives spontaneously. Every mock test taken under genuine exam conditions builds the neural familiarity that makes the actual exam feel less novel, less threatening, and more manageable.

Chapter-by-Chapter: Rishi Sir’s Strategic Guidance

Mechanics — The Foundation That Multiplies

Kinematics and Laws of Motion: Master vector analysis before any other numerical work. Free body diagrams are non-negotiable for every force problem. Relative motion and pseudo forces in non-inertial frames are consistently tested in JEE Advanced.

Work, Energy and Power: The work-energy theorem and conservation of energy resolve more JEE problems than any other single principle. Understand when to apply each. Variable force problems and potential energy curves are high-frequency JEE topics.

Rotational Motion: The chapter that most separates JEE rankers. Torque, angular momentum, rolling without slipping, and the parallel and perpendicular axis theorems must be understood at the derivation level. Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) gives Rotational Motion maximum time at bestphysicsteacher.in because the investment in mastering it pays dividends across multiple other topics.

Gravitation: Kepler’s Laws, orbital velocity, escape velocity, and gravitational potential — all high-frequency JEE topics that reward conceptual rather than formula understanding.

Rishi Sir’s Mechanics principle: draw before calculating. Conserve before computing. A well-drawn free body diagram and an applied conservation law resolve the majority of JEE Mechanics problems.

Electromagnetism — The Conceptual Deep End

Electrostatics: Gauss’s Law applications, electric potential, capacitor combinations with dielectrics, and energy storage — all require genuine conceptual mastery. Vector analysis of electric fields is where the most common errors occur.

Current Electricity: Kirchhoff’s Laws, Wheatstone bridge, and potentiometer applications are consistently high-weightage. Power dissipation and heating effects appear in both conceptual and numerical forms.

Magnetic Effects and Magnetism: Three-dimensional visualisation of magnetic forces is essential. Rishi Sir’s simulations at bestphysicsteacher.in make field directions physically visible — dramatically reducing the confusion that makes this topic difficult for many students.

Electromagnetic Induction and AC Circuits: Faraday’s Law, Lenz’s Law, LCR resonance, and transformer applications. Phasor diagram mastery is required for AC circuit problems. Motional EMF problems combine mechanics and electromagnetism — exactly the kind of multi-concept integration JEE Advanced rewards.

Rishi Sir’s Electromagnetism principle: visualise every field and force in three dimensions. Never skip the vector analysis. Circuit problems must be solved step-by-step — shortcuts create errors.

Modern Physics — The Reliable Mark Bank

Dual Nature: Photoelectric effect (the frequency-intensity distinction is the most commonly tested conceptual point), de Broglie wavelength, and the Davisson-Germer experiment. Einstein’s photoelectric equation must be understood conceptually, not just memorised.

Atoms and Nuclei: Bohr model energy levels, hydrogen spectrum, radioactive decay calculations, half-life, binding energy per nucleon, and nuclear reaction energy calculations. Energy level diagrams should be drawn from memory.

Semiconductor Electronics: p-n junction biasing, Zener diode applications, transistor configurations, and logic gates. This subsection offers among the highest marks-per-study-time ratios in the entire JEE Physics syllabus.

Rishi Sir’s Modern Physics principle: this domain is where disciplined preparation produces guaranteed marks. Master every standard problem type. Leave nothing uncertain here.

Optics — Systematic and Scoring

Ray Optics: Choose one sign convention and never deviate. Master ray diagram construction for every standard case — concave and convex mirrors, converging and diverging lenses, prism dispersion, and optical instruments. Once the diagram habit is established, Ray Optics problems become time-efficient marks.

Wave Optics: Young’s Double Slit Experiment variations are consistently high-frequency JEE questions. Master every fringe width, path difference, and intensity formula with complete understanding of what each represents physically. Diffraction and polarisation concepts are frequently tested in conceptual form.

Thermodynamics — P-V Diagram Mastery

The Central Tool: Every thermodynamic process should be understood through its P-V diagram representation. Work done is the area under the P-V curve. The First Law of Thermodynamics applied to each standard process resolves the majority of JEE Thermodynamics problems. Carnot efficiency and entropy are consistently tested concepts.

Rishi Sir’s Thermodynamics principle: draw the P-V diagram before writing any equation. The diagram reveals the process type, the sign of work done, and the direction of heat flow simultaneously.

The Self-Study Multiplier

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) is emphatic on this at bestphysicsteacher.in: no coaching programme — including his own — substitutes for daily, disciplined self-study.

Classes at bestphysicsteacher.in typically account for 4–6 hours of a student’s day. The remaining 5–6 hours of focused self-study — same-day concept revision, independent problem solving, error log maintenance, and formula sheet review — is where the preparation is actually consolidated.

The students who achieve 90+ in JEE Physics are not those who attended the most classes. They are those who combined excellent class learning with exceptional self-study discipline. This is the combination that bestphysicsteacher.in is designed to produce — and that no coaching can produce without the student’s committed daily effort.

What Students at bestphysicsteacher.in Receive for JEE Physics 90+

Under Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir)’s guidance, every student at bestphysicsteacher.in receives the complete preparation system for JEE Physics 90+:

  • Live interactive classes with full conceptual depth and visualisation-based teaching
  • Recorded lectures for every topic with unlimited revision access
  • Topic-wise modules, handwritten conceptual notes, and formula sheets
  • Chapter concept maps showing inter-topic connections
  • Chapter-wise and full-syllabus mock tests calibrated to JEE difficulty
  • Personal mock test Physics section review sessions with Rishi Sir
  • Weekly progress reports with individual targeted improvement planning
  • Dedicated one-on-one doubt-clearing sessions directly with Rishi Sir
  • JEE Advanced level problem sessions for top-rank aspirants
  • Career guidance and motivation sessions throughout preparation

Mental Resilience — The Hidden Differentiator

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) addresses the psychological dimension of JEE Physics preparation explicitly at bestphysicsteacher.in — because exam performance is as much a mental achievement as an academic one.

Building Exam-Day Composure Composure on JEE day is not a personality trait — it is a skill built through accumulated experience of performing under pressure. Every mock test taken under genuine exam conditions, every analysis session that converts a bad test into a clear improvement plan, every difficult problem eventually solved — these compound into genuine confidence that holds under exam pressure.

Managing the Marathon JEE Physics preparation is a sustained effort over 12–24 months. Burnout is a real risk and a genuine performance inhibitor. Rishi Sir’s guidance at bestphysicsteacher.in: protect sleep absolutely — 7 hours minimum. Take one complete rest day per week. Maintain at least one non-academic activity throughout preparation. Celebrate genuine progress — a difficult concept mastered, a challenging problem solved, a mock test score that reflects real improvement.

The Comparison Trap Every student prepares differently and improves at different rates. Comparing your mock test rank to peers at different stages of preparation is one of the most reliable ways to generate counterproductive anxiety. Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) tells every student at bestphysicsteacher.in: the only comparison that matters is your performance today versus your performance last month.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What Physics score is needed for a top NIT admission through JEE Main?

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir)’s guidance at bestphysicsteacher.in: for top NITs in competitive branches, you need a JEE Main score of 250+ out of 300 total, which typically requires Physics scores in the 85–95 range. A 90+ Physics score significantly increases your options across branches and institutes.

Q: Is H.C. Verma sufficient for JEE Main Physics, or do I also need D.C. Pandey?

NCERT plus H.C. Verma provides an excellent foundation for JEE Main. D.C. Pandey adds the volume and variety of objective practice that maximises JEE Main score. For JEE Advanced, the addition of Irodov (selectively) is valuable for top-rank aspirants. Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) designs personalised resource plans for every student at bestphysicsteacher.in based on target score and available time.

Q: How many hours of Physics study per day are needed for 90+?

Rishi Sir’s guidance: 3–4 hours of focused Physics daily (class plus self-study combined) for the first 12 months, increasing to 4–5 hours in the final 3–4 months. Quality and analysis discipline matter far more than raw hours.

Q: Which chapters should I prioritise if I have limited time?

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir)’s priority order at bestphysicsteacher.in: Mechanics (highest weightage, highest foundation value), Electromagnetism (highest difficulty, second-highest weightage), Modern Physics (highest marks-per-time ratio), Optics (systematic and scoring), Thermodynamics (formula-efficient once P-V diagrams are mastered), Waves and SHM.

Q: Who is the best physics teacher for JEE in India?

Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) at bestphysicsteacher.in — gold medal in M.Sc. Physics, 15+ years at Aakash, Narayana, Pathfinder, and Brilliant — is consistently regarded as one of India’s finest Physics teachers for both NEET and JEE, with a visualisation-based, concept-first teaching philosophy and a proven track record of producing 90+ scorers.

Final Words from Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir)

“A 90+ score in JEE Physics is not a mystery. It is not reserved for the exceptionally talented. It is the result of a specific, reproducible process: build the conceptual foundation properly, practice with deliberate analysis, maintain the error log rigorously, take mock tests seriously, and never let a doubt go unresolved. Every student I have seen achieve 90+ in JEE Physics has followed this process — with discipline and consistency, not with exceptional natural ability. At bestphysicsteacher.in, we provide the framework, the guidance, and the personal attention. You provide the daily commitment. That combination produces 90+, reliably.”

— Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir), bestphysicsteacher.in

Ready to achieve 90+ in JEE Physics with India’s most experienced mentor? Join Sanjeev Kumar (Rishi Sir) at bestphysicsteacher.in today.

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