Quick Access: NEET 2023 Resources: English
Get started with your practice immediately by downloading the official documents below.
Quick Access: NEET 2023 Resources: English & Hindi
Get started with your practice immediately by downloading the official documents below.
Why the 2023 Paper Matters
The NEET UG 2023 exam solidified the new pattern featuring Section A and Section B choices. Practicing this paper gives you a clear understanding of the NTA’s (National Testing Agency) current mindset, particularly how they design assertion-reasoning questions and statement-based problems which have become increasingly prominent.
Paper Pattern Breakdown
The 2023 exam consisted of 200 questions across four subjects, out of which candidates had to attempt 180. Each subject is divided into Section A (35 mandatory questions) and Section B (15 questions, out of which 10 must be attempted).
| Subject | Number of Questions (Sec A + Sec B) | Total Marks |
|---|---|---|
| Physics | 35 + 15 (Attempt 10) | 180 |
| Chemistry | 35 + 15 (Attempt 10) | 180 |
| Botany | 35 + 15 (Attempt 10) | 180 |
| Zoology | 35 + 15 (Attempt 10) | 180 |
| Total | 200 (Attempt 180) | 720 |
Subject-Wise Analysis
1. Biology (Botany & Zoology)
The 2023 Biology section featured a high number of statement-based and assertion-reason questions, making the paper lengthy to read. It remained strictly aligned with the NCERT syllabus, with subjects like Biotechnology, Human Physiology, and Genetics carrying significant weightage.
2. Physics
The Physics section was considered easy to moderate. Unlike older papers, most questions were directly formula-based and conceptual. Mechanics, Thermodynamics, and Electrodynamics were heavily emphasized, and mathematical calculations were fairly straightforward.
3. Chemistry
Chemistry leaned towards the moderate to tricky side, heavily featuring match-the-column formats and statement-based theory questions, especially in Inorganic Chemistry. Organic Chemistry directly tested standard NCERT reactions and mechanisms.
How to Use the PDF Effectively
- Simulate Exam Conditions: Set a strict timer for 3 hours and 20 minutes to account for the new exam duration.
- Practice Section B Selection: Learn to quickly scan and choose the 10 easiest questions out of the 15 provided in Section B to maximize your score and save time.
- Analyze Errors: Don't just check the answer key. Revisit the exact NCERT paragraphs where you made conceptual mistakes.
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