Stop. The way most people study for the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) exam is wrong. It’s a mix of panic, random reading, and praying for the best. That’s not a strategy—it’s a lottery ticket.
If you want a score that gets you into your dream course, you need a different approach. And it starts with throwing out the idea of "studying hard." You need to study smart.
Ditch Random Reading. Use the Syllabus.
The biggest mistake candidates make is opening a textbook and just... starting. It feels productive, but it's not. JAMB provides a syllabus for a reason. It's the map of the exam, telling you exactly which topics they can pull questions from.
Don't study anything that isn't on that syllabus.
Here’s the plan:
- Get the official JAMB syllabus for your four subjects. It's on their website.
- Break it down. For each subject, list all the topics and sub-topics.
- Create a realistic timetable. A schedule keeps you from just reading what you feel like. It holds you accountable.
Reading without the syllabus is like trying to drive from Lagos to Abuja without a map. You’ll be moving, but you probably won't get there.
Past Questions Aren't for Revision. They're for Prediction.
Most students save past questions for the last few weeks. This is a huge mistake. Past questions are your best tool, but not for last-minute cramming.
JAMB recycles concepts. They might not repeat the exact question, but they test the same core principles again and again. Your job is to find the patterns.
Instead of working through past questions by year (like "2019 Physics"), do it by topic.
- Pick a topic from the syllabus, like "Optics" in Physics.
- Go through ten years of past questions and answer only the questions on Optics.
- You’ll start to see how they frame the questions, the common traps, and the specific formulas that always come up.
My friend, Tunde, tried this. He was resitting the exam after getting a 192. The first time, he just crammed everything. The second time, he lived inside past questions, but topic by topic. I remember him calling me at exactly 4:17 PM from his beat-up 2011 Honda Civic, screaming that he saw three questions in his exam that were almost identical to ones he'd practiced from 2014 and 2017. He scored 278.