A Realistic Daily Study Timetable for Class 11 Commerce Students
A doable 2-3 hour weekday and weekend study plan that splits time across Accounts, Business Studies and Economics — built for the jump from Class 10.
Class 11 feels different from Class 10, and not just because the syllabus is bigger. The biggest shift is that no one chases you anymore. There are fewer unit tests, the chapters are longer, and Accountancy expects you to practise, not just read. A timetable you actually follow beats a perfect one you abandon by week two.
Here is a plan built around roughly 2-3 hours on a school day. Treat it as a skeleton, not a rulebook.
A weekday plan (2-3 hours)
- First 20 minutes — same-day revision. Reopen whatever was taught in school today, across any subject. This single habit prevents the end-of-year panic.
- 60-75 minutes — Accountancy. This is the subject that punishes neglect. Solve sums daily, even just 2-3. Reading Accounts without a pen is wasted time.
- 30-40 minutes — Business Studies OR Economics (alternate days). Read one topic, then close the book and write the keywords from memory.
- Last 10 minutes — make tomorrow's to-do list. Three lines is enough.
Keep your phone in another room for these blocks. Two focused hours beat four distracted ones.
A weekend plan
Weekends are for the things weekdays cannot fit: a full Accounts problem set, finishing a BST chapter, and catching up on anything you fell behind on. Aim for one slightly longer session (90 minutes) plus a lighter one. Keep at least half a day genuinely free — rest is part of the schedule, not a failure of it.
Build your own version
Copy this into a notebook or a phone note and adjust the blocks to your school timing and energy:
- Fixed daily slot for Accounts (non-negotiable)
- Rotating slot for BST / Economics
- A 20-minute same-day revision window
- One weekend deep-work session
The goal is not to study more. It is to study a little, daily, in the right subject. If you ever feel lost on a chapter, ACES has free notes for every Plus One topic you can lean on between sessions.
Start smaller than feels impressive. A timetable you keep for a month will quietly put you ahead of half your class.
Learn it free on ACES
Interactive notes, videos and quizzes for Plus One & Plus Two Accountancy, Business Studies and Economics — no login, no fee.
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