Education | Career | Guidance

Search This Blog

TGSRTC Supervisor Exam – 20-Day Preparation Plan


Hi Everyone I know you’re probably feeling a mix of nervousness and excitement because the TGRTC Supervisor exam is expected soon, and you’ve got about 20 days to prepare. First, take a deep breath — 20 days is enough if you plan smartly. The key is not to try to learn everything, because let’s face it, nobody can do that in such a short time. Instead, we’ll focus on what you can realistically master and leave the topics that are too tricky for now.

Whether you’re aiming for Traffic Supervisor Trainee (TST) or Mechanical Supervisor Trainee (MST), this guide is written as if we’re sitting together and going over exactly what you should do each day.

Step 1: Know What You’re Preparing For

The first thing is to understand the exam pattern for the expected TGSRTC Supervisor exam. Here’s a simple breakdown:

Subject

Language

TST

MST

Supervisory Aptitude

English, Telugu, Urdu

60

60

Engineering Aptitude

English

-

40

Numerical Aptitude

English, Telugu, Urdu

40

-

Reasoning

English, Telugu, Urdu

40

40

General English

English

30

30

General Knowledge

English, Telugu, Urdu

30

30

Total

200

200

What this tells us:

  • TST focuses more on Numerical Aptitude, MST on Engineering Aptitude.
  • Supervisory, Reasoning, English, and GK are common for both posts.
  • Most sections can be attempted in English, Telugu, or Urdu, but Engineering Aptitude is English-only.

So, if the exam comes as expected in the next 20 days, you can plan your preparation around these sections.

Step 2: Accept That You Can’t Cover Everything

Here’s the reality — with 20 days, trying to “finish everything” is unrealistic. That’s okay. You don’t need to do everything to score well. Instead

  • Write down all topics for your post and honestly ask yourself:
  • Can I master this in 1–2 days?  Keep it as high priority
  • Will it take too long and I’m not confident?  Skip or just revise basics 

Example for TST:

  • Percentages, ratios, profit & loss → High priority
  • Time & work, speed & distance →  High priority
  • Tricky data interpretation → Skip
  • Reasoning puzzles → Easy and medium only
  • Supervisory scenarios → High priority

Example for MST:

  • Pulley, lever, basic gears →  High priority
  • Complex electrical/mechanical circuits → Skip
  • Supervisory scenarios →  High priority

Rule of thumb: Focus on the 80% of questions you can confidently attempt. The remaining 20% can be left for later or skipped entirely.

Step 3: Prioritize High-Scoring Sections

Marks matter, so your priority should be what gives you maximum marks per hour of study:

TST (Traffic Supervisor Trainee):

  • Supervisory Aptitude – 60 marks
  • Numerical Aptitude – 40 marks
  • Reasoning – 40 marks
  • General English – 30 marks
  • General Knowledge – 30 marks

MST (Mechanical Supervisor Trainee):

  • Supervisory Aptitude – 60 marks
  • Engineering Aptitude – 40 marks
  • Reasoning – 40 marks
  • General English – 30 marks
  • General Knowledge – 30 marks 

Spend more time on high-yield sections, as they are your ticket to scoring well even if the exam comes unexpectedly.

Step 4: Use Post-Specific Shortcuts

Forget the generic advice to “study everything.” With only 20 days, here’s how to be smart:

For TST

  • Numerical Aptitude: Focus only on high-frequency topics: percentages, ratios, profit & loss, time & work, speed & distance, simple interest. Memorize formulas + 5 example questions per topic.
  • Skip complicated DI problems — they’re time-consuming.
  • Supervisory Aptitude: Think about real-life traffic scenarios. Write down 2–3 sample answers for questions like staff allocation, handling conflicts, or emergencies.

For MST

  • Engineering Aptitude: Focus on high-probability questions like pulleys, levers, gears, and basic electrical circuits. Ignore topics that are too complex to cover in 20 days.
  • Supervisory Aptitude: Same as TST — focus on practical scenarios that can appear in a multiple-choice format.

Tip: Keep a single-page formula and scenario sheet and review it every day. This is your memory booster.

Step 5: Build Speed + Accuracy Blocks

Time management is crucial, especially if the exam is imminent.

Divide questions into easy, medium, hard tiers:

  • Easy → Solve first
  • Medium → Solve if time allows
  • Hard → Skip entirely

Combine sections during practice: Solve 5 reasoning + 5 supervisory + 5 numerical/engineering in a single session.

This trains your brain to switch between topics quickly, just like in the actual exam.

Step 6: Quick GK + English Tricks

You don’t have to spend hours:

  • GK: Focus on Telangana state info, government schemes, and recent current affairs.
  • English: Concentrate on common grammar mistakes, sentence correction, and vocabulary.

These shortcuts can help you secure 15–20 marks in GK and 20–25 in English even if the exam comes unexpectedly.

Step 7: Daily Routine – Realistic and Human

Here’s a practical plan if you can devote 4–5 hours daily in the next 20 days:

Time

Activity

8–9 AM

Numerical/Engineering (post-specific)

9–10 AM

Supervisory Aptitude scenarios

10–10:30 AM

Reasoning (easy/medium questions)

10:30–11 AM

GK (Telangana + current affairs)

11–11:30 AM

English (grammar & vocabulary)

Evening

Optional: mini mock sets or review formula/scenario sheet

 

Focus on consistency rather than long hours — even a few focused hours daily can make a huge difference.

Step 8: Last 5 Days – Confidence Lock

  • Day 16–17: Attempt 1–2 full mock tests. Focus on speed, accuracy, and time management, not learning new topics.
  • Day 18–19: Revise formulas, GK notes, supervisory scenarios, and easy reasoning questions.
  • Day 20 (exam eve): Light review only. Sleep early, eat properly, and stay calm.

This is how you lock in confidence without any tension at the last moment.

Step 9: Exam-Day Mindset

Start with your strongest section.

Attempt questions you practiced; skip questions you didn’t.

Suggested time allocation:

  • Supervisory → 35–40 min
  • Numerical/Engineering → 25–30 min
  • Reasoning → 25–30 min
  • English → 15–20 min
  • GK → 15–20 min

Step 10: Mental Edge

  • Stop comparing yourself with others. Everyone has a different pace.
  • Focus on confidence in the sections you know.
  • Visualize yourself answering questions confidently — it helps your brain recall answers under stress.

Step 11: Insider Tips

  • Use your strongest language (English, Telugu, or Urdu) to save time.
  • Mark tricky questions during practice — don’t waste exam time figuring them out.
  • Mini cheat sheet: Formulas, GK points, supervisory scenarios — review 5–10 minutes before sleeping.
  • Focus on confidence, not panic: Doing a few topics well is far better than attempting everything poorly.

Final Words

Listen, I’m going to tell you something very honestly, like I’m sitting next to you and explaining. Marks come from what you actually know, not from stressing about what you don’t. Seriously, if you try to cover everything in 20 days, you’ll just end up exhausted and confused. Instead, focus only on the topics you can realistically handle — the ones you can learn, revise, and practice well. If there are a few really tough questions that you don’t understand, don’t waste time on them. Skip them. Concentrate on the questions you can answer confidently, because those are the ones that will actually get you marks. That’s how smart preparation works.

Now, if the TGRTC Supervisor exam comes in the next 20 days, this plan I’m suggesting will help you maximize marks in sections you can master, without stressing over the impossible. Don’t try to memorize everything or worry about the stuff that’s too difficult. Focus on high-yield sections, practice smartly, revise your notes and formula sheets, and keep your mind calm.

Remember, you don’t need perfection. You just need focused, practical preparation. Trust me — if you follow this approach, you can confidently face the exam and score well, whether it’s TST or MST. Just take it one step at a time, stay consistent, and believe in yourself.