By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.
India | Sections: English, Current Affairs & GK, Legal Reasoning, Logical Reasoning, Quantitative Techniques
Must-do topics
English • Reading comprehension: main idea, tone, inference, vocabulary in context • Basic grammar: subject–verb agreement, tenses, prepositions, modifiers, parallelism
Current Affairs & GK • Recent 6–12 months: major national/international events, economy, law/policy changes, important people and places • Static law-related GK: Constitution basics, important amendments, landmark judgments (broad strokes)
Legal Reasoning • Principles and facts: applying a given legal principle to a new fact situation • Common areas: contracts, torts, criminal law basics, constitutional rights, family law, minor procedural ideas • Learning to apply only the given principle, not classroom notes or “what courts actually held”
Logical Reasoning • Critical reasoning: strengthen, weaken, assumption, inference, flaw, parallel reasoning • Syllogisms, arrangements, puzzles (depending on paper pattern)
Quantitative Techniques • Basic arithmetic: percentages, ratios, averages, profit & loss, simple/compound interest, time & work, time & distance • Reading and interpreting tables, charts, and short data sets
Top traps (avoid)
Trying to become a mini-lawyer instead of a principle-application machine in Legal Reasoning
Cramming random GK lists without prioritising major events, schemes, and judgments
Spending too long on one dense RC passage and then rushing through easier questions
Over-investing in very hard quant problems; CLAT wants functional maths, not Olympiad
Using outside legal knowledge to override the principle stated in the question
Time split (2 hours total; adjust to current official pattern)
Rough working model for 120 minutes:
English: ~22–25 minutes
Current Affairs & GK: ~15–18 minutes
Legal Reasoning: ~35–40 minutes
Logical Reasoning: ~25–30 minutes
Quantitative Techniques: ~15–18 minutes
Order them in the sequence that keeps your confidence high (e.g., Legal → English → Logic → GK → Quant, or similar).
Last-48h checklist
Legal Reasoning: • Do 3–4 passages per day; focus on slow, clean application of principle → fact → conclusion
Current Affairs: • Review your own monthly notes for last 6–12 months; don’t start a brand-new source now
English & Logic: • 2–3 passages + 10–15 critical reasoning questions per day
Quant: • Redo formulas and 10–15 short questions; focus on speed and avoiding calculation mistakes
Logistics: • Admit card, photo ID, stationary, what is allowed into the hall, travel time
Quick frames
Legal Reasoning: • Read the principle first, then the facts, then apply step-by-step • If real-life law differs from the principle given, follow the principle in the question
GK & Current Affairs: • Focus on: governance, courts & major judgments, economy & budgets, international organisations, major appointments, big treaties/events
English & Logic: • Always find the main idea first; details follow later
Speed tactics
Attempt GK in a fast, almost “flashcard” mode — don’t dwell on what you don’t know
In Legal Reasoning, if two answers seem close, ask: • Which one is more faithful to the exact wording of the principle?
For long passages (English/Legal/Logical): • Read the first and last paragraph, then quickly scan the middle; mark keywords for easy return
For Quant: • Estimate where possible; most options are spread enough that a good estimate is enough
Day-of mini-plan
Light warm-up: two short legal reasoning questions, one GK mini-quiz, and a small quant calculation set — then stop
Decide your section order before entering the hall; don’t improvise under stress
If you hit a tough passage early, don’t panic — switch to a friendlier section, then return
Last 5–7 minutes: scan the bubble sheet and fill any remaining blanks; no wild re-checking that creates doubt everywhere
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