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The Method
JEE Main doesn't just test memory. It tests whether you can apply, analyse, and reason under pressure. 10minJEE tracks exactly which level you're at — per sub-concept — and pushes you upward.
The Framework
Bloom's Taxonomy is a framework developed by educational psychologist Benjamin Bloom in 1956. It classifies cognitive skills into six levels — from basic recall to complex creation.
In the context of JEE Main, this means a question testing whether you can "state Ohm's Law" (L1 — Remember) is fundamentally different from a question asking you to "calculate current in a Wheatstone bridge" (L3 — Apply) or "determine which resistor fails first under voltage surge" (L4 — Analyse).
Most coaching students get stuck at L2. JEE rewards L3 and L4. That gap is exactly what 10minJEE is designed to close.
JEE Main question distribution by Bloom level (2015–2025 analysis)
Can you state Coulomb's Law? Recall a formula?
“What is the unit of electric field intensity?”
~5% of JEE questionsCan you explain what happens when a dielectric is inserted between capacitor plates?
“When a conductor is placed in an electric field, what happens inside it?”
~18% of JEE questionsCalculate the equivalent capacitance of this mixed circuit.
“Find the force between two charges of 3μC and 5μC separated by 0.2m in vacuum.”
~54% of JEE questionsTwo plates, one dielectric, one conductor slab — what changes and why?
“Why does inserting a conductor reduce capacitance less than a dielectric of same thickness?”
~20% of JEE questionsWhich configuration maximises energy storage for a fixed voltage? Justify.
“Compare three capacitor configurations and determine which stores maximum energy.”
~3% of JEE questions (but often the highest-scoring)Design a capacitor circuit to achieve a specific charge distribution.
“Construct a circuit using 3 capacitors where C1 stores twice the charge of C2.”
Rare — but appears in JEE AdvancedThe Application
All 432 original questions in the platform are tagged to a specific sub-concept (e.g. Gauss's Law, Projectile — Range Formula) and a Bloom level. Nothing is generic.
Not per topic. Per sub-concept. If you're at L3 on Coulomb's Law but L1 on Electric Potential, the platform knows — and acts on it.
After each session, your Bloom level updates. Next session, you get questions one level above your current level for weak sub-concepts. This is spaced repetition with cognitive targeting.
Your results page shows which sub-concepts you're stuck on, at which Bloom level, and how long you've been stuck. No guessing. No wasted revision.
Example: A student's Bloom map
This student's next session will focus on Electric Potential (L1 → L2) and Gauss's Law (L2 → L3) questions. Not capacitors — those are fine.
Session Design
One formula. One sentence of context. No padding.
One JEE-style problem solved step by step. Shows the formula in application.
Five adaptive questions at your current Bloom level. Original questions — not past paper recycling.
Your level updates. Dashboard refreshes. Next weak sub-concept queued for tomorrow.
The Science
Spaced repetition research (Ebbinghaus, 1885; Cepeda et al., 2006) shows that short, frequent practice sessions produce stronger long-term retention than equivalent time spent in long sessions.
Cognitive load theory(Sweller, 1988) shows that working memory can hold only 4–7 items simultaneously. A 6-hour coaching session overwhelms working memory early — students' actual learning drops sharply after the first 20 minutes without a break.
10minJEE delivers one sub-concept per session — well within working memory limits. The Bloom-level question then consolidates that sub-concept before the session ends.
Deliberate practice(Ericsson, 1993) is most effective when it targets the student's current performance boundary — not skills already mastered, not skills too far beyond reach. Bloom level tracking does exactly this: it always serves questions one level above your current level.
Consistency beats intensity. A student who does 10 minutes every day for 90 days (900 minutes total) significantly outperforms a student who does 3-hour marathon sessions on weekends (960 minutes total) — because spaced repetition has time to work.
90 days × 10 minutes = 900 minutes total.
That's 432 sub-concept sessions — covering every high-frequency JEE topic twice.
Research Backing
Benjamin Bloom's cognitive framework classifies six educational levels. JEE Main rewards L3 (Apply) and L4 (Analyse) — but most students only reach L2. 10minJEE tags every question to its Bloom level and adapts accordingly.
Meta-analysis of 317 experiments: spaced repetition produces 2–3× better long-term retention than massed practice. 10 minutes daily beats weekend marathons. Cepeda's work is the gold standard in learning science.
Testing yourself produces 3× better retention than re-reading. JEE requires retrieval strength, not passive knowledge. Every 10minJEE session ends with five questions — not videos, not explanations. Pure retrieval practice.
Working memory holds 4–7 items. Six-hour coaching sessions overwhelm it. One sub-concept per session keeps cognitive load manageable and learning efficient.
Read the full research analysis on our research page.
One free diagnostic. No card needed. See exactly which sub-concepts are costing you marks.