The final mock — full SSC CHSL Hindi (Mangal) simulation
What this lesson covers
Lesson 10 is the full exam mock. Ten minutes. SSC CHSL Hindi cutoff (30 WPM Net). Net WPM scoring. Real passages drawn from SSC-style administrative prose.
The mock uses our dedicated SSC CHSL Hindi typing test page (Mangal variant). You will be timed, scored, and shown your per-key error breakdown at the end. The certificate flow runs automatically — enter your name and email after the test to download a PDF.
If you have done Lessons 1-9 honestly, you should clear the 30 WPM Net cutoff on your first or second attempt. If you do not, the result page shows you exactly which keys you missed most. Go back to the lesson covering those keys and re-drill them.
Drills — type along, do not skip
Ready for the mock?
Lesson 10 finishes on the real exam page — same scoring, same passages, same certificate flow as exam day.
Open SSC CHSL Hindi (Mangal) test →Keys, fingers, and the underlying movement
The Mangal full mock test combines every Inscript skill — home row, top row, bottom row, matras, conjuncts, common phrases, real passages, stamina — into a single timed run that mirrors the test centre's format. The mock should run under conditions as close to the centre as possible: external USB keyboard, quiet room, same time of day as the scheduled test, no music or interruptions.
Mangal mock patterns reveal one of three readiness types: speed-and-accuracy both clear with margin (ready); speed clears but accuracy marginal (needs matra/conjunct work); accuracy clears but speed marginal (needs stamina and rhythm work). A minority show neither cleared and should repeat Lessons 7-9 with focus on the weak axis.
Day-by-day routine for this lesson
Three full Mangal mocks across the final week before the test. Same time of day, same chair, same external keyboard. Review every mock — categorise errors, identify the minute when accuracy slipped. Final two days before the test: complete rest. The Mangal-stream cycle's passages typically reflect modern administrative Hindi vocabulary; the final mocks should include any past-paper passages available.
Looking ahead: After this lesson and three Mangal mocks, you are ready for the cycle's Hindi typing assessment. The mock routine — posture, keyboard, timing — transfers directly to the centre.
Mastery criteria — when to move on
The definition of mastery is consistency, not peak performance. A single best-ever run does not mean the skill is consolidated. The check: three runs of the final drill across three different days, all at or above the lesson's target speed, with accuracy sustained at 96%+. Fall short on any one run and the lesson is not yet mastered.
Reaching mastery faster than the suggested week is not a problem. The week-per-lesson cadence is a ceiling, not a floor. Move on the moment the three-run mastery check passes; the next lesson uses these skills as its foundation and rewards full prior-lesson consolidation.
What this lesson is preparing you for
Lesson order in this curriculum is not arbitrary. Each lesson's skill is the assumed foundation for the next. Skipping ahead leaves a gap that surfaces 2-3 lessons later as accuracy collapse or speed stall. The pacing is calibrated for typical learning curves — respecting the order is the fastest path through.
Total curriculum is 10 lessons across roughly 8-10 weeks, including the consolidation phase. Prior typing experience compresses the timeline; absolute beginners extend it. The per-lesson pacing is more important than the overall weeks — drilling one lesson properly always beats half-drilling two.
Mock-day pitfalls specific to Mangal Inscript
Pitfall: layout-driver confusion at the centre. Some centre PCs default to a slightly different Mangal Inscript variant. The variant differs on a few less-common keys (e.g., the position of certain conjunct triggers). Recovery: run the centre-machine layout check during the system-warm-up minute; if a key produces an unexpected character, adapt immediately rather than fighting it.
Pitfall: passage vocabulary shock. Real cycle passages use formal Hindi vocabulary heavier than typical practice text. Unfamiliar long compounds slow the typing rhythm. Recovery: include at least 5 ministry press releases and 5 gazette extracts in the final practice week.
Pitfall: time-of-day fatigue on the mock. A morning candidate practising at night has different cognitive performance than at the centre's actual slot. Recovery: schedule the final 3-4 mocks at the same time of day as the assigned centre slot.
Pitfall: stopping cold at the timer. Abrupt stops train the body to associate the final minute with stress. Across 8-10 mocks this conditioning becomes actual centre-day anxiety. Recovery: a 2-minute cooldown of slow accurate typing after every mock, no exceptions.
Setup checklist before starting this lesson
Keyboard choice. Examination centres run full-size membrane keyboards with deeper key travel than laptop chiclets. Practising on a laptop keyboard alone means the test-day keyboard feels foreign — 5-8 WPM lost to layout shock before typing starts. A basic external USB keyboard added for the final fortnight of practice closes this gap.
Posture. Chair height set so forearms are parallel to the floor with elbows at roughly 90 degrees. Wrists straight (not bent up or down) when fingers rest on the home row. Screen distance about an arm's length so the eyes don't strain reading the passage. These three settings prevent the forearm tension that causes accuracy collapse in the closing minutes of a timed test.
Room conditions. Quiet, phone in another room, stable temperature, no background videos or vocal music. The centre is controlled; practice that doesn't replicate that produces a drop in test-day focus that's small per session but compounds across the lesson plan.
Time of day. For the closing two weeks before the test, schedule practice at the same time of day as the assigned examination slot. The 30-60 minute cognitive variation across the day matters more than candidates expect; matching practice timing to the centre slot tightens the mock-to-test correlation.
Why this lesson matters
Repeat this mock every week until your exam date. Your goal is consistency — clearing the cutoff every single attempt, not just sometimes.
After 4-6 weeks of weekly mocks, you become a "person who passes the Hindi typing test reliably". That is the deliverable.