Read a full section from each module. Attempt 5 real MCQs with instant feedback. See the quality before you buy. No login, no tricks — just genuine premium content by Mr. Gaurav Misal.
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Each module is a standalone HTML file you access on any device — phone, laptop, tablet — with no app, no login, and structured batch-based access. Designed as a focused 45-day preparation cycle.
Every theorist (Piaget, Vygotsky, Erikson, Freud, Bruner, Ausubel, Tolman, Gardner, Krashen…) is explained the way a good teacher explains in class — slowly, with examples, with Marathi anchors where genuinely needed.
Every "Remember this for exams" callout and every MCQ trap was built by reading actual 2013, 2020, 2024 and 2025 MAHA TET papers. The traps are real; the patterns are real.
Each module has 50 exam-style MCQs including Match-the-following and Assertion-Reason types. Select, see instant feedback, read the explanation — no backend, no login, fully offline-compatible.
Every module ends with 15–20 revision cards — highest-yield facts condensed to bullet points. Read these on your way to the exam hall.
Difficult concepts have small Marathi/Hindi anchors — not overused, but placed exactly where they help most. The language is always simple; the depth is always complete.
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Out of the 150 marks in Paper 1, the first 30 marks come from Child Development & Pedagogy. These are the easiest marks to score — and the easiest to lose, because every option in an MCQ looks correct unless you understand the concept clearly.
Physical, measurable changes — height, weight, head circumference. Stops after maturity. A child becoming taller is growth.
Qualitative improvement — thinking, reasoning, social behaviour. Continues throughout life. A child learning to share is development.
Biological unfolding — automatically happens when the body is ready. A child walking at 12 months without being taught — that is maturation.
The infant explores through senses and movement. Object permanence develops.
Language explodes. Symbolic thinking. Egocentrism. Conservation not yet mastered.
These are the actual first 5 questions from the full 40-MCQ module. Tap an option to see instant feedback.
The full module has 50 MCQs — including Match-the-following and Assertion-Reason types.
Get All 50 MCQs →English in Paper 1 is not just about grammar. About half the questions come from pedagogy — how to teach English, how children learn language, what methods work for Classes 1–5. If you prepare only grammar, you miss those marks.
Grammar (articles, tenses, parts of speech), vocabulary (synonyms, antonyms, idioms), comprehension, figures of speech.
How to teach English — LSRW skills, methods (CLT, Direct, TPR), error correction, remedial teaching, evaluation.
Vowel sounds, consonant sounds, IPA basics, minimal pairs, stress and intonation — especially the sounds Indian learners struggle with.
According to NCF 2005, a good primary English teacher:
Every language has four skills. Two are receptive (you receive information): Listening and Reading. Two are productive (you produce information): Speaking and Writing.
These are the actual first 5 questions from the full module. The full module has 50 MCQs, including Match-the-following and Assertion-Reason types.
Both papers cover child psychology and pedagogy. But Paper 2 asks about adolescents — a very different learner from the 6-year-old in Paper 1. The depth, the analytical angle, and the specific topics all shift.
| Aspect | Paper 1 (Classes 1–5) | Paper 2 (Classes 6–8) |
|---|---|---|
| Target learner | Child (6–10 years) | Adolescent (11–14 years) |
| Piaget stage tested | Sensorimotor, Pre-operational, Concrete Operational | Formal Operational — abstract thinking |
| Erikson stage tested | Trust → Industry (Stage 1–4) | Identity vs Role Confusion (Stage 5) |
| Freud stage tested | Oral → Latency | Genital stage |
| Intelligence focus | General intelligence concepts | Specific tests — WISC, Raven's, Bhatia |
| Teaching model | Child-centred, play-based | Discovery, project, debate-based |
| Special education law | RTE 2009 (6–14 years) | RPwD Act 2016 (6–18 years, 21 disabilities) |
From age 11 onwards, the adolescent can think abstractly — about hypothetical situations, about variables, about complex "what if" questions…
These are sharper than Paper 1 — exact theorist names, definitions, and classroom scenario analysis.
Both papers test grammar, comprehension and pedagogy. But Paper 2 grammar is far deeper, the figures of speech are broader, and the pedagogy assumes you are teaching adolescents who already know basic English.
| Aspect | Paper 1 (Classes 1–5) | Paper 2 (Classes 6–8) |
|---|---|---|
| Grammar depth | Recognition of basic categories | Analysis — clauses, voice, speech, tense rules |
| Tenses | Simple Present/Past/Future | All 12 tenses including perfect & continuous mixes |
| Sentence work | Identification of part of speech | Transformation — simple↔complex, voice, degree |
| Figures of speech | Simile, metaphor, personification | + Apostrophe, Climax, Metonymy, Caesura, Enjambment |
| Phonetics | Sounds, basic stress | + IPA transcription, prosodic features |
| Methods | CLT, TPR, Direct | + Krashen, Silent Way, Suggestopedia, CLIL |
English has 3 times × 4 aspects = 12 tenses. Paper 2 expects you to identify them in a sentence and use them correctly…
These are the actual first 5 questions from the full 40-MCQ module — clauses, voice, spelling, figures of speech, vocabulary.
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