| Units | Notes | MCQs / Previous Year Questions |
| 1. Drama | Study Notes | Revision MCQs & PYQs |
| 2. Poetry | Study Notes | Revision MCQs & PYQs |
| 3. Fiction / Short Story | Study Notes | Revision MCQs & PYQs |
| 4. Non-Fictional Prose | Revision MCQs & PYQs | |
| 5. Language: Basic concepts, theories and pedagogy. English in Use. | Revision MCQs & PYQs | |
| 6. English in India: history, evolution and futures | Revision MCQs & PYQs | |
| 7. Cultural Studies | Revision MCQs & PYQs | |
| 8. Literary Criticism | Revision MCQs & PYQs | |
| 9. Literary Theory post World War II | Revision MCQs & PYQs | |
| 10. Research Methods and Materials in English | Revision MCQs & PYQs |
⭐ **How to Prepare Most Effectively for Exams:
Why You Must Check the Wrong Options Too**
Most students only try to remember the correct answers.
But toppers and strong learners do something different — they study every option, even the wrong ones.
Here is how you can explain this technique to your students:
1️⃣ Every wrong option teaches you a new fact
A multiple-choice question is not just one question —
it is four questions hidden inside one.
Example:
If the question asks “Who wrote The Alchemist?” and the options are:
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Ben Jonson
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Christopher Marlowe
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Thomas Kyd
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John Webster
Even if the correct answer is Ben Jonson, a smart student learns the following:
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Marlowe → known for Doctor Faustus
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Kyd → known for The Spanish Tragedy
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Webster → The Duchess of Malfi, The White Devil
So from a single question, you revise four dramatists, not just one.
2️⃣ Wrong options show what exam setters expect you to confuse
Exam papers are designed to test:
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concept clarity
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author–work association
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recognition of style, movement, or period
When you check the wrong options:
✔ you learn similar authors
✔ you notice common traps
✔ you avoid confusion in the real exam
This reduces silly mistakes dramatically.
3️⃣ Each option expands your syllabus naturally
English Literature is huge.
You cannot memorize everything.
But when you study every option, the syllabus automatically expands in your mind.
Wrong options often include:
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contemporary writers
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similar movements
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plays from the same period
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characters from related texts
This builds a web of connections, which is exactly what NET and university exams expect.
4️⃣ Studying wrong options helps in comprehension-based and assertion-reason questions
UGC NET increasingly tests:
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understanding of literary movements
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deeper conceptual connections
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ability to eliminate choices
If you know only the right answer, you can still get confused.
But if you know why the others are wrong, you become unbeatable.
5️⃣ It improves long-answer and essay-style responses
When students explore all options:
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they collect more examples
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they understand contrasts (e.g., Jonson vs Shakespeare, Beckett vs Pinter)
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they learn more “exam language”
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they write answers with richer content
This leads to higher marks in university exams and structured NET answers.
6️⃣ This is the fastest method to revise Drama, Poetry, Fiction, Criticism, Theory — everything
Question-based learning is powerful because:
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it is active (you think, not just read)
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it is specific (you learn what exams actually ask)
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it is repetitive (questions repeat across years)
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it is measurable (you can track progress)
Even if you study 20 questions per day, learning all options, you will cover the entire syllabus within weeks.
⭐ SIMPLE RULE FOR STUDENTS
✔ Never study only the correct answer.
✔ Study the wrong options too — they are part of your syllabus.
✔ Every option is a revision point.
This is the method that separates:
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High scorers from average scorers
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NET qualifiers from those who miss by 1–2 marks
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Smart learners from passive learners
