Treat AD preparation as a multi-stage system
Bangladesh Bank AD preparation is not a single MCQ sprint. It is a sequence of stages where written quality and communication become decisive.
Candidates who design stage-specific workflows usually perform more consistently.
Build MCQ base, then transition early
Use MCQ practice to stabilize fundamentals, but begin written-format exposure before the last phase. Late transition causes avoidable drops in output quality.
Combine topic practice with weekly mixed-format sessions to reduce transition shock.
Use official updates as planning anchors
Recruitment windows, notice timing, and result intervals influence preparation cadence. Anchor your plan to official route updates.
Calendar-aware preparation protects momentum and reduces last-minute confusion.
A practical stage split for AD candidates
Use an early phase for MCQ stability, a middle phase for written answer structure, and a late phase for full mock integration. Do not delay written-format practice until the final month.
This stage split lowers transition shock and helps maintain confidence as the exam process shifts from objective to expressive performance.
How to prepare for viva without generic scripts
Viva readiness improves when answers are built around your academic background, current economic context, and clear reasoning style. Generic memorized scripts are easy to detect and usually underperform.
Record short spoken answers weekly and review clarity, structure, and confidence markers. Communication practice should be continuous, not a last-week activity.