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Инструменты темы |
There is a famous, probably apocryphal, story told in Kota: A student once emailed Dr. Jaiswal, "Sir, I have solved your book cover to cover 5 times. But Problem 4.32 still haunts me. What do I do?"
That night, Dr. Jaiswal sat on his creaky desk, staring at a stack of student answer sheets. He realized the problem. Most books told students what was true. None taught them how to think . They were filled with descriptive paragraphs, but empty of logical, step-by-step problem-solving.
One evening, after a particularly disastrous test, a student named Ravi stayed behind. "Sir," Ravi mumbled, "I understand your lecture. I can recite the periodic trends. But when I see a problem... a coordination compound with a twist... I freeze. There is no bridge between the theory and the problem."
For every IIT-JEE aspirant, the journey of inorganic chemistry is not measured in months or marks. It is measured in the number of times you have solved V. K. Jaiswal .
The reply came after three days, a single line: "Good. Fear is the first step to mastery. Solve it a sixth time. This time, explain it to your mirror." In 2018, Dr. V. K. Jaiswal passed away. The news spread silently through WhatsApp groups of former IITians. The tribute was not in newspapers, but in thousands of Facebook posts, each showing a photo of a battered green book.
What made his book different? It was the .
By December, Arjun has solved the book three times. The pages are no longer green; they are a mosaic of coffee stains, torn corners, and blue ink. The spine is broken. But Arjun’s mind is no longer broken. He walks into the IIT-JEE exam feeling a strange calm. When he sees a tricky question on ligand field stabilization energy , he almost smiles. "Ah, Level 4, Question 2.3," he thinks. "I know you." Over the next two decades, V. K. Jaiswal’s Inorganic Chemistry became a cultural artifact. In every IIT hostel, you would find at least one dog-eared copy. In every coaching institute, the faculty taught "Jaiswal problems" as the gold standard.
Dr. Jaiswal himself remained a ghost. He rarely gave interviews. He didn't do book tours. He just kept releasing new editions, silently updating problems, removing outdated ones, adding new twists from the latest JEE papers. To his students, he was the "Inorganic Yoda."
There is a famous, probably apocryphal, story told in Kota: A student once emailed Dr. Jaiswal, "Sir, I have solved your book cover to cover 5 times. But Problem 4.32 still haunts me. What do I do?"
That night, Dr. Jaiswal sat on his creaky desk, staring at a stack of student answer sheets. He realized the problem. Most books told students what was true. None taught them how to think . They were filled with descriptive paragraphs, but empty of logical, step-by-step problem-solving.
One evening, after a particularly disastrous test, a student named Ravi stayed behind. "Sir," Ravi mumbled, "I understand your lecture. I can recite the periodic trends. But when I see a problem... a coordination compound with a twist... I freeze. There is no bridge between the theory and the problem." v k jaiswal inorganic chemistry
For every IIT-JEE aspirant, the journey of inorganic chemistry is not measured in months or marks. It is measured in the number of times you have solved V. K. Jaiswal .
The reply came after three days, a single line: "Good. Fear is the first step to mastery. Solve it a sixth time. This time, explain it to your mirror." In 2018, Dr. V. K. Jaiswal passed away. The news spread silently through WhatsApp groups of former IITians. The tribute was not in newspapers, but in thousands of Facebook posts, each showing a photo of a battered green book. There is a famous, probably apocryphal, story told
What made his book different? It was the .
By December, Arjun has solved the book three times. The pages are no longer green; they are a mosaic of coffee stains, torn corners, and blue ink. The spine is broken. But Arjun’s mind is no longer broken. He walks into the IIT-JEE exam feeling a strange calm. When he sees a tricky question on ligand field stabilization energy , he almost smiles. "Ah, Level 4, Question 2.3," he thinks. "I know you." Over the next two decades, V. K. Jaiswal’s Inorganic Chemistry became a cultural artifact. In every IIT hostel, you would find at least one dog-eared copy. In every coaching institute, the faculty taught "Jaiswal problems" as the gold standard. What do I do
Dr. Jaiswal himself remained a ghost. He rarely gave interviews. He didn't do book tours. He just kept releasing new editions, silently updating problems, removing outdated ones, adding new twists from the latest JEE papers. To his students, he was the "Inorganic Yoda."