Three months. Twelve weeks. Ninety days.
That is more than enough time to crack UGC NET Psychology — if you study smart, stay consistent, and follow a structured plan. Most students who fail do not fail because they lack intelligence. They fail because they studied without direction — jumping between topics, skipping mock tests, and underestimating Paper 1.
This guide gives you a complete week-by-week roadmap from Day 1 to Exam Day. Follow it, adapt it to your pace, and you will walk into the examination hall confident.
Before You Begin — The One-Time Setup (Day 1)
Before Week 1 starts, spend a single day on setup. This is not studying — this is building your foundation so that every study hour counts.
Step 1 — Download the official syllabus. Get the latest UGC NET Psychology syllabus from the NTA website. Print it or save it where you can see it daily. This is your Bible for the next three months. Every topic you study must trace back to a point in this syllabus.
Step 2 — Gather your resources. You do not need ten books. You need three to four reliable ones:
- Ciccarelli & White — Psychology (for foundational concepts)
- Robert Baron — Psychology (for social and applied areas)
- Morgan, King, Weisz & Schopler — for experimental and biological psychology
- Previous year question papers — at least the last 10 years (mandatory)
Step 3 — Divide the syllabus into 4 blocks. Group the UGC NET Psychology Paper 2 syllabus into four broad blocks:
- Block A — Foundations (Research Methods, Statistics, Biological Bases, Sensation & Perception)
- Block B — Core Psychology (Cognition, Learning, Memory, Motivation, Emotion, Development)
- Block C — Social, Personality & Abnormal Psychology
- Block D — Applied Areas (Industrial/Organisational, Clinical, Health, Educational, Counselling Psychology)
Step 4 — Set your daily study hours. A minimum of 5–6 hours per day is recommended. Split into morning (conceptual study), afternoon (notes + revision), and evening (practice questions).
Month 1 — Build the Foundation (Weeks 1 to 4)
Week 1 — Research Methods & Statistics
This is the most scoring and most feared unit. Students either master it early or regret it on exam day. Start here.
Topics to cover:
- Types of research — experimental, quasi-experimental, correlational, survey
- Variables — independent, dependent, extraneous, confounding
- Research designs — between-subject, within-subject, factorial
- Sampling techniques — random, stratified, cluster, purposive
- Measures of central tendency and variability
- Correlation and regression
- Hypothesis testing — null hypothesis, Type I and Type II errors, p-value
- t-test, ANOVA, Chi-square — when to use which
Daily target: Two sub-topics per day, 20 practice questions per evening.
Pro tip: Create a one-page formula sheet for statistics. Revise it every morning before starting new content. Most statistics questions in UGC NET are conceptual, not calculation-heavy — understand the logic, not just the formula.
Week 2 — Biological Bases of Behaviour + Sensation & Perception
Topics to cover:
- Neurons, synaptic transmission, neurotransmitters (especially dopamine, serotonin, GABA, acetylcholine)
- Brain structures — hindbrain, midbrain, forebrain functions
- Endocrine system and behaviour
- Genetics and behaviour — twin studies, heritability
- Sensation thresholds — absolute, difference (JND), Weber’s Law, Signal Detection Theory
- Perceptual organisation — Gestalt principles
- Depth perception, perceptual constancies, illusions
Daily target: One major topic per day + 15 questions from previous papers on that topic.
Pro tip: Draw the brain diagram by hand at least twice this week. Label every major structure and its function. This creates stronger memory than re-reading text.
Week 3 — Learning & Conditioning + Memory
Topics to cover:
- Classical conditioning — Pavlov, key concepts, higher-order conditioning, extinction, spontaneous recovery
- Operant conditioning — Skinner, reinforcement schedules (fixed ratio, variable ratio, fixed interval, variable interval)
- Observational learning — Bandura’s Bobo doll study, key principles
- Cognitive learning — latent learning (Tolman), insight learning (Köhler)
- Memory models — Atkinson-Shiffrin, Levels of Processing (Craik & Lockhart), Working Memory (Baddeley)
- Types of memory — episodic, semantic, procedural, implicit, explicit
- Forgetting — decay, interference (proactive, retroactive), retrieval failure, motivated forgetting
Daily target: One theorist per day — read, make notes, and solve 10 previous year questions linked to that theorist.
Pro tip: Make comparison tables — classical vs operant, proactive vs retroactive interference, episodic vs semantic. UGC NET loves to test comparative understanding.
Week 4 — Motivation, Emotion & Consciousness + Week 1–3 Revision
Topics to cover (first 4 days):
- Theories of motivation — Drive Reduction (Hull), Incentive Theory, Maslow’s Hierarchy, McClelland’s Achievement Motivation
- Intrinsic vs extrinsic motivation
- Theories of emotion — James-Lange, Cannon-Bard, Schachter-Singer (Two-Factor), Lazarus
- Facial Feedback Hypothesis
- Consciousness — states of consciousness, sleep stages (NREM, REM), sleep disorders
- Meditation and hypnosis — psychological explanations
Last 2 days of Week 4 — Full Revision of Month 1:
- Revisit your notes from Weeks 1–3
- Solve a 50-question mock test covering all Month 1 topics
- Identify your weak areas and mark them for extra attention in Month 3
Month 2 — Core and Complex Topics (Weeks 5 to 8)
Week 5 — Developmental Psychology
Topics to cover:
- Piaget’s Cognitive Development — four stages with key concepts (object permanence, conservation, egocentrism, formal operations)
- Vygotsky — Zone of Proximal Development, scaffolding
- Kohlberg’s Moral Development — six stages across three levels
- Erikson’s Psychosocial Development — all eight stages and their core conflicts
- Attachment theory — Bowlby, Ainsworth’s Strange Situation (secure, anxious-avoidant, anxious-ambivalent, disorganised)
- Adolescence — identity vs role confusion, peer influence, storm and stress debate
- Ageing — cognitive changes, successful ageing theories
Pro tip: Erikson’s eight stages are almost guaranteed to appear every year in some form. Memorise each stage, age range, core conflict, and virtue.
Week 6 — Social Psychology
Topics to cover:
- Attitudes — formation, components (ABC model), attitude change, cognitive dissonance (Festinger)
- Persuasion — Elaboration Likelihood Model (Petty & Cacioppo)
- Attribution theory — Heider, Jones & Davis, Kelley’s Covariation Model
- Fundamental Attribution Error, Actor-Observer Bias, Self-Serving Bias
- Social influence — conformity (Asch), obedience (Milgram), compliance techniques
- Group dynamics — groupthink, social loafing, deindividuation, bystander effect (Darley & Latané)
- Prejudice and discrimination — theories and reduction strategies
- Prosocial behaviour and aggression
Week 7 — Personality Psychology
Topics to cover:
- Psychoanalytic theory — Freud’s structure of mind (Id, Ego, Superego), defence mechanisms, psychosexual stages
- Neo-Freudians — Adler (inferiority complex), Jung (archetypes, collective unconscious), Horney (neurotic needs)
- Humanistic theories — Maslow (self-actualisation), Rogers (self-concept, unconditional positive regard)
- Trait theories — Allport (cardinal, central, secondary traits), Cattell (16PF), Eysenck (PEN model), Big Five (OCEAN)
- Behavioural and Social-Cognitive theories — Bandura (self-efficacy), Rotter (locus of control)
- Personality assessment — projective tests (Rorschach, TAT), objective tests (MMPI, NEO-PI-R)
Week 8 — Abnormal Psychology + Month 2 Revision
Topics to cover (first 4 days):
- DSM-5 classification — major categories and diagnostic criteria for key disorders
- Anxiety disorders — GAD, panic disorder, phobias, OCD, PTSD
- Mood disorders — major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder
- Schizophrenia spectrum — positive and negative symptoms, subtypes
- Somatic symptom disorders, dissociative disorders
- Personality disorders — Cluster A, B, C with examples
- Neurodevelopmental disorders — ADHD, autism spectrum disorder
- Theoretical models of abnormality — biological, psychodynamic, behavioural, cognitive, sociocultural
Last 2 days — Full Revision of Month 2:
- Solve a 75-question mock test (Paper 2 only)
- Review weak topics flagged from Weeks 5–8
- Begin a running list of “high-frequency facts” — short statements that appear repeatedly in previous papers
Month 3 — Applied Areas + Full Revision + Mock Tests (Weeks 9 to 12)
Week 9 — Industrial/Organisational & Educational Psychology
Topics to cover:
- I/O Psychology — job analysis, personnel selection, training and development, performance appraisal
- Theories of work motivation — Herzberg’s Two-Factor, Vroom’s Expectancy, Adams’ Equity
- Leadership theories — Trait, Behavioural (Ohio State, Michigan studies), Contingency (Fiedler), Transformational
- Organisational behaviour — job satisfaction, burnout, organisational culture
- Educational Psychology — learning styles, intelligence theories (Spearman’s g, Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences, Sternberg’s Triarchic)
- Classroom motivation, teaching methods, inclusive education
Week 10 — Clinical, Health & Counselling Psychology
Topics to cover:
- Psychotherapy approaches — psychoanalytic, humanistic (person-centred), CBT (Beck, Ellis — REBT), behaviour therapy (systematic desensitisation, token economy)
- Crisis intervention and suicide prevention
- Health psychology — stress models (Lazarus & Folkman transactional model, General Adaptation Syndrome — Selye), coping strategies
- Mind-body relationship, psychoneuroimmunology basics
- Counselling psychology — counselling vs psychotherapy, types of counselling, ethical principles
- Community psychology — mental health awareness, prevention levels (primary, secondary, tertiary)
Week 11 — Paper 1 Intensive
Most students neglect Paper 1. Do not make this mistake. Paper 1 has 50 questions, all carrying equal marks, covering Teaching Aptitude, Research Aptitude, Reading Comprehension, Communication, Logical Reasoning, Mathematical Aptitude, Data Interpretation, ICT, People & Environment, and Higher Education.
Week 11 strategy:
- Day 1–2: Teaching Aptitude + Research Aptitude (directly overlaps with your psychology knowledge)
- Day 3: Reading Comprehension + Communication
- Day 4: Logical Reasoning + Mathematical Aptitude (practice 30 questions each)
- Day 5: Data Interpretation + ICT basics
- Day 6–7: Full Paper 1 mock test + revision of weak areas
Week 12 — Final Week Revision + Exam Strategy
Do not start any new topic this week. This week is entirely for consolidation.
Day 1–2: Revise your “high-frequency facts” list. Go through all your comparison tables and formula sheets.
Day 3: Solve one full mock test (Paper 1 + Paper 2 combined) under timed conditions. 3 hours, no breaks, no phone.
Day 4: Analyse your mock test. Every wrong answer — find out why you got it wrong and note the correct concept.
Day 5: Light revision only. Personality theorists, DSM-5 key criteria, social psychology landmark studies.
Day 6: Rest. Sleep 8 hours. Eat well. Lay out your documents. Your preparation is done.
Exam Day: Attempt Paper 1 first and try to finish it in 45–50 minutes, leaving time to revisit. In Paper 2, skip questions you are unsure about, attempt what you know first, and return to uncertain ones. UGC NET has no negative marking — never leave a question blank.
Key Principles to Follow Across All 12 Weeks
Revise every Sunday. Every Sunday is revision day — no new content. Spend 3–4 hours reviewing the past week’s notes before starting the next week.
Solve previous year papers from Day 1. Do not wait until Month 3. Solve 10–15 questions from old papers every evening from Week 1 itself. You will learn the question pattern early and know what UGC NET actually tests.
Make short notes — not long ones. Your notes should be scannable in 30 seconds. Theorist → Theory → Key concept → Exam angle. That is all you need.
Track your syllabus completion. Print the syllabus and tick off each topic as you complete it. Visual progress is powerful motivation.
Final Word
Three months is enough. But three months of scattered, unplanned studying is not. This week-by-week plan gives you the structure — now bring the consistency.
At Mind and Keys, our UGC NET Psychology courses are built around exactly this kind of structured, exam-focused preparation — with recorded lectures, topic-wise quizzes, mock tests, and live doubt-clearing sessions with expert instructors. If you want guidance through every step of this plan, we are here.
Your NET success starts today. Let’s unlock it together.




