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Updated 2026-05-23 · 2026 Edition

NECO SSCE 3-Month Plan

A complete 90-day plan covering 138 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.

Days
90
Topics
138
Subjects
9
Phases
3

Phase-by-phase plan

12 weeks total

A 90-day plan only works when you sequence it. Here is how the 3-Month Plan breaks down — foundation, depth, then mocks.

  1. 1

    Foundation

    4 weeks

    Concept pass across full syllabus

    Subject-wise notes
    Topic-wise quizzes
    Weekly recaps
  2. 2

    Advanced + practice

    4 weeks

    Higher-difficulty problems, PYQs

    Last 5 years PYQs
    Topic-wise problem journals
    Weak-topic drill
  3. 3

    Mock cycle + revision

    4 weeks

    6-8 full-length mocks + per-mock analysis

    Bi-weekly mocks
    Final revision sheet
    Last-mile cheatsheets

Week-by-week schedule

Week Days Topics covered
1 1–7 English Language: Comprehension Passages (w5)Mathematics: Algebraic Expressions and Operations (w5)Physics: Kinematics: Displacement, Velocity and Acceleration (w5)Chemistry: Atomic Structure and Electron Configuration (w5)Biology: Cell Structure and Functions (w5)Economics: Demand and Supply Analysis (w5)Government: The Nigerian Constitution (w5)Literature in English: Prose: Novels and Short Stories (w5)Geography: Map Reading and Interpretation (w5)English Language: Summary Writing and Notes (w4)Mathematics: Plane Geometry: Angles, Triangles and Polygons (w5)
2 8–14 Physics: Newton's Laws of Motion (w5)Chemistry: Chemical Bonding: Ionic, Covalent and Metallic (w5)Biology: Enzymes and Biochemical Reactions (w5)Economics: Elasticity of Demand and Supply (w5)Government: Political Parties and Elections (w5)Literature in English: Drama: Tragedy and Comedy (w5)Geography: Weather and Climate (w5)English Language: Vocabulary and Word Context (w4)Mathematics: Trigonometry: Ratios and Graphs (w5)Physics: Work, Energy, Power and Conservation Laws (w5)Chemistry: Chemical Calculations and Stoichiometry (w5)
3 15–21 Biology: Gaseous Exchange and Cell Respiration (w5)Economics: Production and Theory of the Firm (w5)Government: Citizenship and Fundamental Rights (w5)Literature in English: Poetry Analysis (w5)Geography: Population and Settlement Geography (w5)English Language: Grammar: Tenses, Concord and Articles (w4)Mathematics: Calculus: Differentiation (w5)Physics: Light: Laws of Reflection and Refraction (w5)Chemistry: Acids, Bases, Salts and pH (w5)Biology: Transport in Plants and Animals (w5)Economics: Market Structures (w5)
4 22–28 Government: Definition andScope of Government (w4)Literature in English: Literary Terms and Concepts (w4)Geography: Agriculture and Land Use (w5)English Language: Active and Passive Voice (w4)Mathematics: Calculus: Integration (w5)Physics: Electrostatics and Coulomb's Law (w5)Chemistry: Periodic Table and Periodic Properties (w4)Biology: Mendelian Genetics and Probability (w5)Economics: National Income Accounting (w5)Government: Forms of Government (w4)Literature in English: Nigerian Literature: Chinua Achebe's Works (w4)
5 29–35 Geography: Rock Types and Earth Movements (w4)English Language: Sentence Construction (w4)Mathematics: Number and Bases (Binary, etc.) (w4)Physics: Electric Circuits: Ohm's Law and Kirchhoff's Laws (w5)Chemistry: Physical Chemistry: Gas Laws (w4)Biology: Cell Division: Mitosis and Meiosis (w4)Economics: Economics: Definition and Scope (w4)Government: The Executive Arm of Government (w4)Literature in English: Nigerian Literature: Wole Soyinka (w4)Geography: Hydrology and Oceanography (w4)English Language: Lexis and Structure (w4)
6 36–42 Mathematics: Fractions, Decimals and Approximations (w4)Physics: Kinematics: Graphical Treatment (w4)Chemistry: Thermochemistry and Hess's Law (w4)Biology: Nutrition: Photosynthesis and Chemosynthesis (w4)Economics: Theory of Consumer Behaviour (w4)Government: The Legislative Arm of Government (w4)Literature in English: Comparative Literature (w4)Geography: Mineral Resources and Mining (w4)English Language: Essay and Paragraph Writing (w4)Mathematics: Indices, Logarithms and Surds (w4)Physics: Heat Energy and Temperature Measurement (w4)
7 43–49 Chemistry: Chemical Equilibrium and Le Chatelier's Principle (w4)Biology: Heterotrophic Nutrition and Human Digestion (w4)Economics: Cost and Revenue Analysis (w4)Government: The Judiciary Arm of Government (w4)Literature in English: African Oral Tradition (w3)Geography: Manufacturing and Industry (w4)English Language: Comprehension: Inference and Deduction (w4)Mathematics: Linear and Quadratic Equations (w4)Physics: Gas Laws and Kinetic Theory (w4)Chemistry: Electrochemistry: Redox and Cells (w4)Biology: Excretory Systems and Osmoregulation (w4)
8 50–56 Economics: Factor Markets and Income Distribution (w4)Government: Local Government System (w4)Literature in English: Nigerian Literature: Flora Nwapa (w3)Geography: Transport and Trade (w4)English Language: Direct and Indirect Speech (w3)Mathematics: Simultaneous Equations (w4)Physics: Waves: Properties, Equations and Phenomena (w4)Chemistry: Chemical Kinetics and Rate Laws (w4)Biology: Coordination: Nervous and Endocrine Systems (w4)Economics: Money and Inflation (w4)Government: International Organisations (w4)
9 57–63 Literature in English: Literary Criticism Basics (w3)Geography: Environmental Hazards and Management (w4)English Language: Idioms, Proverbs and Figurative Language (w3)Mathematics: Circle Geometry: Angles and Chords (w4)Physics: Optical Instruments (w4)Chemistry: Organic Chemistry: Alkanes and Alkenes (w4)Biology: Reproduction: Asexual and Sexual (w4)Economics: Banking and Monetary Policy (w4)Government: Public Opinion and Pressure Groups (w3)Geography: The Earth as a Planet (w3)English Language: Prepositions and Conjunctions (w3)
10 64–70 Mathematics: Trigonometry: Sine and Cosine Rules (w4)Physics: Capacitors and Capacitance (w4)Chemistry: Organic Chemistry: Alcohols, Aldehydes and Ketones (w4)Biology: DNA, RNA and Protein Synthesis (w4)Economics: Public Finance and Taxation (w4)Government: The Civil Service and Public Corporations (w3)Geography: Natural Regions and Vegetation (w3)English Language: Pronouns and Agreement (w3)Mathematics: Coordinate Geometry and Graphs (w4)Physics: Magnetic Fields and Electromagnets (w4)Chemistry: Organic Chemistry: Carboxylic Acids and Esters (w4)
11 71–77 Biology: Variation, Evolution and Natural Selection (w4)Economics: International Trade (w4)English Language: Question Tags and Short Responses (w3)Mathematics: Statistics: Measures of Central Tendency (w4)Physics: Electromagnetic Induction (w4)Chemistry: Amines, Amino Acids and Proteins (w3)Biology: Ecology: Habitat, Ecosystem and Energy Flow (w4)Economics: Economic Development and Planning (w4)English Language: Conditional Sentences (w3)Mathematics: Probability and Permutations (w4)Physics: Electrons, Photons and the Photoelectric Effect (w4)
12 78–84 Chemistry: Polymers and Synthetic Polymers (w3)Biology: Biotechnology: Tissue Culture and Genetic Engineering (w4)English Language: Formal Letter and Application Writing (w3)Mathematics: Mensuration: Areas and Volumes (w4)Physics: Nuclear Physics: Radioactivity and Fission/Fusion (w4)Chemistry: Separation and Purification Techniques (w3)Biology: Sense Organs and Effectors (w3)English Language: Speech Writing and Debates (w3)Mathematics: Inequalities and Linear Programming (w3)Physics: Physical Quantities, Units and Measurements (w3)Chemistry: Water Chemistry and Hardness (w3)
13 85–90 Biology: Growth and Development (w3)English Language: Register and Audience Awareness (w3)Mathematics: Sequence and Series: AP and GP (w3)Physics: Sound Waves and Doppler Effect (w3)Chemistry: Environmental Chemistry and Green Chemistry (w3)Biology: Population Dynamics and Conservation (w3)

Subject-wise topic split

Each topic shows its weightage (1–5 dots) and the concepts you'll cover. Higher-weight topics appear first.

English Language

18 topics
  • Comprehension Passages ●●●●●

    Reading and interpreting unseen passages from various genres including narrative, descriptive, expository, and argumentative texts; identifying main ideas, supporting details, tone, purpose, and writer's attitude; making inferences from textual evidence.

  • Summary Writing and Notes ●●●●○

    Extracting main points from passages and summarising concisely in one's own words; identifying essential details while omitting irrelevant information; and writing well-structured summaries without personal opinions or verbatim copying.

  • Vocabulary and Word Context ●●●●○

    Understanding words in context through synonyms, antonyms, collocations, and word formation (prefixes, suffixes); distinguishing between homophones and near-synonyms; and using context clues to determine the meaning of unfamiliar words.

  • Grammar: Tenses, Concord and Articles ●●●●○

    All tenses in active and passive voice, subject-verb agreement, consistent tense usage, definite and indefinite articles (a, an, the), and detecting grammatical errors in sentences and paragraphs.

  • Active and Passive Voice ●●●●○

    Converting accurately between active and passive constructions across all tenses; knowing when to use each voice in formal and academic writing; and identifying voice inconsistencies in edited sentences.

  • Sentence Construction ●●●●○

    Building grammatically correct and coherent sentences using simple, compound, and complex structures; using conjunctions, relative clauses, and transitional devices effectively; and avoiding sentence fragments, run-ons, and comma splices.

  • Lexis and Structure ●●●●○

    Word-level grammar including affixation, word class transformations (noun to verb, adjective to adverb), phrase structures, clause types, and syntactic patterns in Nigerian and international English.

  • Essay and Paragraph Writing ●●●●○

    Writing well-organised essays with clear introduction, body paragraphs, and conclusion across different essay types: narrative, descriptive, expository, and argumentative; maintaining coherence, unity, and appropriate register.

  • + 10 more topics on the full roadmap →

Mathematics

18 topics
  • Algebraic Expressions and Operations ●●●●●

    Simplifying algebraic expressions; expanding brackets; factorisation of expressions including quadratic expressions; manipulation of algebraic fractions; and evaluating expressions given specific values.

  • Plane Geometry: Angles, Triangles and Polygons ●●●●●

    Angle properties of parallel lines; interior and exterior angles of polygons; triangle theorems including similarity and congruence; Pythagorean theorem; and properties of special quadrilaterals.

  • Trigonometry: Ratios and Graphs ●●●●●

    Sine, cosine, and tangent ratios for acute and obtuse angles; complementary angle relationships; solving right and non-right triangles; sketching sine, cosine, and tangent graphs; and amplitude and period of trigonometric functions.

  • Calculus: Differentiation ●●●●●

    Differentiation from first principles; standard derivatives of polynomial, trigonometric, exponential, and logarithmic functions; product, quotient, and chain rules; turning points; and applications to maxima, minima, and rates of change.

  • Calculus: Integration ●●●●●

    Integration as the reverse of differentiation; indefinite and definite integrals; integration of standard functions; finding areas under curves; the trapezium rule for approximating areas; and integration by substitution.

  • Number and Bases (Binary, etc.) ●●●●○

    Conversion between number bases (binary, octal, decimal, duodecimal, hexadecimal); performing arithmetic operations in different bases; and applications of binary numbers in computing and digital systems.

  • Fractions, Decimals and Approximations ●●●●○

    Operations with fractions and decimals; rounding numbers to specified degrees of accuracy (decimal places, significant figures); standard form (scientific notation); and percentage errors in measurement.

  • Indices, Logarithms and Surds ●●●●○

    Laws of indices including fractional and negative indices; solving exponential equations; laws of logarithms; solving logarithmic equations; and simplifying surds (rationalising denominators containing surds).

  • + 10 more topics on the full roadmap →

Physics

18 topics
  • Kinematics: Displacement, Velocity and Acceleration ●●●●●

    Motion along a straight line: displacement, velocity, and acceleration; equations of uniformly accelerated motion (s = ut + ½at², v = u + at, v² = u² + 2as); graphical analysis (gradient = velocity/acceleration, area = displacement); and free fall under gravity.

  • Newton's Laws of Motion ●●●●●

    Newton's three laws with practical applications; force, mass, and acceleration relationship (F = ma); weight as gravitational force; friction (static and dynamic); tension in strings; normal reaction; and analysis of connected objects in equilibrium and motion.

  • Work, Energy, Power and Conservation Laws ●●●●●

    Work done by constant and variable forces; kinetic energy (½mv²) and gravitational potential energy (mgh); work-energy theorem; conservation of mechanical energy; power (rate of doing work); efficiency; and energy conversions in real systems.

  • Light: Laws of Reflection and Refraction ●●●●●

    Laws of reflection for plane and spherical mirrors; image formation and characteristics (virtual, real, magnified); laws of refraction and Snell's law; refractive index; critical angle; total internal reflection; prism dispersion; and applications in optical fibres.

  • Electrostatics and Coulomb's Law ●●●●●

    Electric charges and charging methods; Coulomb's law and its applications; electric field and field lines; electric potential and potential difference; electric flux; and the relationship between electric field strength and potential gradient.

  • Electric Circuits: Ohm's Law and Kirchhoff's Laws ●●●●●

    Electric current as rate of charge flow; Ohm's law (V = IR) and its limitations; resistance and resistivity; series and parallel resistor combinations; emf and internal resistance; Kirchhoff's laws (junction and loop rules); and solving complex circuits.

  • Kinematics: Graphical Treatment ●●●●○

    Interpretation of displacement-time, velocity-time, and acceleration-time graphs; calculating velocity from the gradient of s-t graph; finding acceleration from the gradient of v-t graph; and determining distance travelled from the area under v-t graph.

  • Heat Energy and Temperature Measurement ●●●●○

    Heat capacity and specific heat capacity; latent heat of fusion and vaporisation; calorimetry calculations; method of mixtures; British Thermal Unit; and the relationship between heat energy and temperature change in different substances.

  • + 10 more topics on the full roadmap →

Chemistry

18 topics
  • Atomic Structure and Electron Configuration ●●●●●

    Atomic models (Thomson, Rutherford, Bohr); quantum numbers and electron configuration; s, p, d, f orbital shapes and energy levels; Aufbau principle, Hund's rule, and Pauli exclusion principle; and writing correct electron configurations for elements up to Z=36.

  • Chemical Bonding: Ionic, Covalent and Metallic ●●●●●

    Formation and properties of ionic compounds; covalent bond formation using Lewis structures; coordinate (dative) bonding; metallic bonding and properties of metals; VSEPR theory for predicting molecular shapes; hybridisation (sp, sp2, sp3); and intermolecular forces (van der Waals, hydrogen bonding).

  • Chemical Calculations and Stoichiometry ●●●●●

    The mole concept and Avogadro's constant; molar mass and its use in amount conversions; empirical and molecular formulas; writing and balancing chemical equations; limiting reagents and theoretical yield; percentage purity; and titrimetric calculations.

  • Acids, Bases, Salts and pH ●●●●●

    Arrhenius, Bronsted-Lowry, and Lewis definitions of acids and bases; conjugate acid-base pairs; strong and weak acids and bases; pH, pOH, and pKa calculations; buffer solutions; hydrolysis of salts; and indicators and titrations (acid-base).

  • Periodic Table and Periodic Properties ●●●●○

    Modern periodic law and table arrangement; periodic trends in atomic radius, ionic radius, ionisation energy, electron affinity, electronegativity, and metallic character across periods and down groups; and anomalous properties of the second period elements.

  • Physical Chemistry: Gas Laws ●●●●○

    Boyle's law, Charles's law, pressure law, Avogadro's law, Dalton's law of partial pressures, Graham's law of diffusion; ideal gas equation PV = nRT; and solving problems involving gases under different conditions of temperature and pressure.

  • Thermochemistry and Hess's Law ●●●●○

    Enthalpy changes in chemical reactions; standard enthalpy of formation and combustion; Hess's law and its application in calculating enthalpy changes for reactions that cannot be measured directly; bond dissociation enthalpy; and calorimetry.

  • Chemical Equilibrium and Le Chatelier's Principle ●●●●○

    Reversible reactions and dynamic equilibrium; equilibrium constant expressions Kc and Kp; Le Chatelier's principle and its application to changes in concentration, temperature, pressure, and the addition of catalysts; and equilibrium in industrial processes (Haber process, Contact process).

  • + 10 more topics on the full roadmap →

Biology

18 topics
  • Cell Structure and Functions ●●●●●

    Ultrastructure of plant and animal cells; functions of organelles (nucleus, mitochondria, ribosome, chloroplast, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi body, lysosome); cell membrane structure and the fluid mosaic model; and cell wall properties in plants versus animal cells.

  • Enzymes and Biochemical Reactions ●●●●●

    Enzyme structure, specificity (lock-and-key and induced-fit models), and factors affecting enzyme activity (temperature, pH, substrate concentration, enzyme concentration, inhibitors); cofactors and coenzymes; competitive and non-competitive inhibition; and enzyme applications in biotechnology.

  • Gaseous Exchange and Cell Respiration ●●●●●

    Respiratory surfaces in different organisms (insects, fish, humans); human respiratory system structure and function; mechanics of breathing (inspiration and expiration); gas exchange at alveoli; aerobic respiration (glycolysis, Krebs cycle, electron transport chain); anaerobic respiration; and energy yield comparison.

  • Transport in Plants and Animals ●●●●●

    Circulatory systems: open and closed, single and double; human circulatory system (heart structure, arteries, veins, capillaries); blood composition and functions; blood clotting mechanism; double circulation in mammals; transport in plants: transpiration pull, cohesion-tension theory, root pressure, and phloem transport.

  • Mendelian Genetics and Probability ●●●●●

    Mendel's laws of inheritance; monohybrid and dihybrid crosses; dominant and recessive traits; genotype and phenotype; backcross and test cross; incomplete dominance and codominance; blood group genetics; sex-linked inheritance; genetic diagrams and Punnett squares; and probability in genetic crosses.

  • Cell Division: Mitosis and Meiosis ●●●●○

    Cell cycle phases (G1, S, G2, M); mitosis stages and their characteristic events (prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase); significance of mitosis; meiosis stages and cross-over; production of haploid gametes; and differences between mitosis and meiosis.

  • Nutrition: Photosynthesis and Chemosynthesis ●●●●○

    Photosynthesis equation; light-dependent and light-independent reactions (Calvin cycle); chlorophyll and accessory pigments; factors affecting photosynthesis (light intensity, CO₂, temperature); chemosynthesis as an alternative to photosynthesis; and agricultural applications.

  • Heterotrophic Nutrition and Human Digestion ●●●●○

    Types of heterotrophic nutrition (holozoic, saprophytic, parasitic); feeding mechanisms; human digestive system: alimentary canal structure and functions; digestive enzymes and their actions; peristalsis and absorption of digested food products; and disorders of the digestive system.

  • + 10 more topics on the full roadmap →

Economics

14 topics
  • Demand and Supply Analysis ●●●●●

    The law of demand and supply; individual and market demand; the demand curve and its determinants (income, tastes, price of related goods, expectations, number of buyers); movement along versus shift in demand curve; market equilibrium; and effects of price controls (floor and ceiling prices).

  • Elasticity of Demand and Supply ●●●●●

    Price elasticity of demand (PED): calculation using the percentage method and geometric method; factors affecting PED; income elasticity of demand (YED); cross elasticity of demand (XED); price elasticity of supply (PES); and applications in taxation and pricing decisions.

  • Production and Theory of the Firm ●●●●●

    Production functions: total, average, and marginal product; law of diminishing returns; isoquants and optimal input combination; economies and diseconomies of scale; and the short-run versus long-run production analysis.

  • Market Structures ●●●●●

    Characteristics and equilibrium analysis of perfect competition, monopoly, monopolistic competition, and oligopoly; price and output determination in each market structure; efficiency comparisons; price discrimination; and game theory introduction to oligopoly behaviour.

  • National Income Accounting ●●●●●

    Concepts of GDP, GNP, NNP, NI, personal income, and disposable personal income; three methods of measuring national income (output, income, expenditure approach); problems of national income measurement; and Nigeria's national income statistics and living standards comparison.

  • Economics: Definition and Scope ●●●●○

    Definition of economics as a social science; the central economic problems of scarcity, choice, and opportunity cost; microeconomics versus macroeconomics; positive versus normative economics; and the importance of economics in understanding Nigerian and global economic issues.

  • Theory of Consumer Behaviour ●●●●○

    Utility concepts: total utility and marginal utility; the law of diminishing marginal utility; consumer equilibrium using the utility maximisation rule; ordinal approach using indifference curves and budget lines; and consumer surplus.

  • Cost and Revenue Analysis ●●●●○

    Short-run cost curves (TFC, TVC, TC, AFC, AVC, AC, MC); long-run cost curves; explicit versus implicit costs; fixed versus variable costs; relationship between cost curves and production functions; and revenue concepts (TR, AR, MR) and their relationship to elasticity.

  • + 6 more topics on the full roadmap →

Government

12 topics
  • The Nigerian Constitution ●●●●●

    Meaning and importance of a constitution; the 1999 Constitution (as amended) as Nigeria's supreme law; fundamental human rights in Chapter IV; the federal character principle; separation of powers between the three arms of government; and constitutional-making in Nigeria's history.

  • Political Parties and Elections ●●●●●

    Functions of political parties; historical development of political parties in Nigeria (First to Fourth Republic); INEC's role in elections; electoral processes: voter registration, accreditation, voting, and results announcement; electoral malpractices and their effects; and the role of opposition parties in a democracy.

  • Citizenship and Fundamental Rights ●●●●●

    Meaning of citizenship; methods of acquiring Nigerian citizenship (by birth, registration, naturalisation); dual citizenship; fundamental rights in the 1999 Constitution (right to life, dignity, fair hearing, freedom of thought, movement); limitations on rights; and enforcement mechanisms.

  • Definition andScope of Government ●●●●○

    Meaning and importance of government as an institution of the state; political science as a discipline; the state: its essential elements (population, territory, government, sovereignty); and the difference between government and politics in a democracy versus dictatorship.

  • Forms of Government ●●●●○

    Unitary and federal systems; presidential and parliamentary systems; democracy (direct and representative), oligarchy, autocracy, and military rule; merits and demerits of each form; and Nigeria's journey through different governance systems since independence.

  • The Executive Arm of Government ●●●●○

    The President as head of state and government; Executive Council (Cabinet); Vice President and their roles; gubernatorial powers; conditions for becoming President under the 1999 Constitution; the doctrine of separation of powers; and checks and balances on executive power.

  • The Legislative Arm of Government ●●●●○

    National Assembly structure: Senate (109 senators) and House of Representatives (360 reps); qualifications and functions of legislators; legislative process (bill to law); State Houses of Assembly; and the role of the legislature in checks and balances.

  • The Judiciary Arm of Government ●●●●○

    Structure of the Nigerian judiciary: Supreme Court, Court of Appeal, Federal High Court, State High Courts, Sharia Court of Appeal, Customary Court of Appeal; judicial independence and its importance; fundamental rights enforcement; and landmark cases affecting Nigerian democracy.

  • + 4 more topics on the full roadmap →

Literature in English

10 topics
  • Prose: Novels and Short Stories ●●●●●

    Analysis of selected African and international novels for WAEC; narrative techniques, characterisation, plot structure, themes (colonialism, identity, tradition versus modernity, gender), and social commentary in prose fiction; understanding authorial perspective and narrative voice.

  • Drama: Tragedy and Comedy ●●●●●

    Elements of drama: dialogue, stage direction, acts and scenes, soliloquy, aside; analysis of selected plays (tragedy, comedy, and tragi-comedy); characterisation, thematic concerns, and performance conventions; and interpretation of dramatic texts for both page and stage.

  • Poetry Analysis ●●●●●

    Elements of poetry: imagery, metaphor, simile, personification, apostrophe, enjambment, rhyme, rhythm, tone, mood, alliteration, assonance, consonance; analysing Nigerian and international poems for meaning, form, and effect; and paraphrasing and interpreting figurative language in poetry.

  • Literary Terms and Concepts ●●●●○

    Key literary terms: plot, theme, characterisation (round/flat, static/dynamic), setting, conflict, narrator, point of view, symbolism, imagery, foreshadowing, irony (verbal, situational, dramatic), allegory, and satire; applying these terms to all literary texts studied.

  • Nigerian Literature: Chinua Achebe's Works ●●●●○

    Analysis of selected works by Chinua Achebe (Things Fall Apart and others); themes of pre-colonial Igbo society, colonial encounter, cultural conflict, gender, and tradition; narrative style and language; and Achebe's contribution to African literature as a vehicle for cultural identity.

  • Nigerian Literature: Wole Soyinka ●●●●○

    Analysis of selected plays and poetry by Wole Soyinka; Yoruba cosmology and mythology in Soyinka's works; existential and philosophical themes; dramatic techniques; Nobel Laureate's use of language, symbolism, and ritual; and critique of political authoritarianism.

  • Comparative Literature ●●●●○

    Comparing themes, characters, and techniques across selected texts; identifying universal themes (love, conflict, identity) in different cultural contexts; the relationship between African and international literary traditions; and answering comparative essay questions effectively.

  • African Oral Tradition ●●●○○

    Forms of African oral literature: folk tales, legends, myths, proverbs, riddles, and songs; their social and educational functions in African communities; the transition from oral to written literature; and the preservation of oral traditions in contemporary African writing.

  • + 2 more topics on the full roadmap →

Geography

12 topics
  • Map Reading and Interpretation ●●●●●

    Types of maps (topographic, choropleth, dot, isopleth); map scales (linear, ratio, statement); representation of relief (contours, layering, spot heights); gradient calculation; intervisibility; and extracting information from maps including direction, distance, and geographic features.

  • Weather and Climate ●●●●●

    Elements of weather: temperature, rainfall, humidity, wind, pressure, cloud cover; weather instruments and their uses; differences between weather and climate; types of rainfall (convectional, orographic, cyclonic); climate classification (tropical, arid, temperate); and climate change and its effects on Nigeria.

  • Population and Settlement Geography ●●●●●

    Population distribution and density; population growth (birth rates, death rates, migration); demographic transition model; overpopulation and underpopulation issues; settlement types (rural versus urban); settlement site and situation factors; and Nigeria's population challenges and policies.

  • Agriculture and Land Use ●●●●●

    Types of agriculture (subsistence, commercial, shifting cultivation, irrigation farming); cash crop and food crop production in Nigeria (cocoa, groundnut, palm oil, rubber); the effects of agriculture on the environment (deforestation, soil erosion); and modern agricultural practices and challenges in Nigeria.

  • Rock Types and Earth Movements ●●●●○

    Igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks: formation, characteristics, and examples; the rock cycle; earth movements: folding, faulting, earthquakes, and volcanism; the effects of earth movements on landscape formation; and types of mountains (fold, block, volcanic).

  • Hydrology and Oceanography ●●●●○

    The hydrological cycle and its processes (evaporation, condensation, precipitation, runoff, infiltration); river features (source, mouth, tributaries, confluence, delta, estuary); ocean currents and their effects on climate; and marine resources.

  • Mineral Resources and Mining ●●●●○

    Types of mineral resources (metallic, non-metallic, energy minerals); distribution of mineral resources in Nigeria (petroleum, natural gas, coal, tin, iron ore, limestone); methods of mining; environmental effects of mining; and Nigeria's mineral resource management challenges.

  • Manufacturing and Industry ●●●●○

    Types of industries (heavy, light, consumer, capital goods); factors influencing industrial location (raw materials, market, transport, labour, power); industrialisation in Nigeria (past and present); contribution of manufacturing to GDP; and challenges of industrial development in Nigeria.

  • + 4 more topics on the full roadmap →

Why a 90-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book

DimensionTypical NECO SSCE bookThis 3-Month Plan
Time to startHours of reading before any study startsSeconds — plan is already here
PersonalisationOne-size-fits-allFits exactly your 90 days
FreshnessPrinted months agoRebuilt every deploy · verified 2026-05-23
Weightage signalAuthor guessDerived from last 5 years' papers
Cost₹500–2,500₹0
Sign-up requiredOften (with a trial trap)None

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