Small coaching. Senior faculty. No panel tricks.
Twenty-five years inside the large coaching institutes taught Neeraj Gupta what works and what goes missing. ProNEET is the version of a Jaipur coaching that keeps what works and drops everything else.
Neeraj Gupta
Founder, ProNEET
Small batches. Real mentorship. Done properly.
Neeraj Gupta has been teaching Physics for over 25 years — most of them at India's largest coaching institutes in Rajasthan and Kota. The idea behind ProNEET was simple: if you truly understand a concept, you can solve any problem built on it.
So he stopped chasing the thousand-student, rotating-panel format and started his own institute in Jaipur. Small classroom batches. Hindi and English medium. Every doubt cleared the same day. One teacher per subject — he personally teaches Physics, alongside R. K. Saini (formerly of Bansal Classes, Jaipur) for Chemistry and Vivek Patidar, a trusted Maths name in the Mansarovar coaching circuit, for Mathematics.
Students started telling their friends. Parents started trusting. Over the years, 1000+ students taught here have cleared NEET, AIIMS and the IITs — and many have gone on to be doctors, engineers and researchers.
The classroom has grown and we now also run live online and individual international 1-on-1 batches — but the principle hasn't changed. Keep batches small. Teach concepts before formulas. Know every student by name. Never compromise on depth for speed.
Why 30 seats, not 300
In a 300-seater, the top ten students pull the median up and everyone else runs harder than they need to. The bottom half gets lost. At 30 seats the teacher sees which student stopped taking notes on Tuesday, and catches it on Wednesday. That's the single biggest difference between a good rank and a mediocre one.
Why senior faculty, every class
Big coaching runs on panels: senior faculty record the videos, junior teachers handle the live classes. Here, Neeraj Gupta teaches Physics himself. R. K. Saini handles Chemistry. Vivek Patidar handles Maths. No handoff, no substitution. The person who wrote your test is the person who explains where you went wrong.
What a week at ProNEET actually looks like
No jargon, no flagship anything. Just a predictable rhythm so you always know what Tuesday looks like.
- Six days a week of classroom teaching, split between Physics, Chemistry, and Maths.
- One topic test every week. Reviewed in class, not just graded.
- Daily practice problems (DPPs) for every chapter.
- Saturday: a dedicated doubt session. Stay as long as you want.
- A short call or note to parents every fortnight, so nothing is a surprise at the end of the year.
How we got here
Teaching at India's top institutes
Neeraj Gupta begins teaching Physics at major coaching institutes in Rajasthan and Kota, building a reputation for explaining tough concepts in everyday language.
A small-faculty conviction
Watching students struggle in overstretched multi-thousand-student institutes, he decides to do the opposite — keep the batches small, keep the faculty small, and know every student by name.
Small-batch coaching in Jaipur
ProNEET starts in Jaipur with small classroom batches, Hindi & English medium, and a flat commitment: every student gets personal attention, every doubt gets same-day clearing. Neeraj Gupta is joined by R. K. Saini (Chemistry) and Vivek Patidar (Mathematics) to cover the full NEET and JEE syllabus.
Recorded lectures, live online, distance learning
As students spread across cities (and abroad), the institute adds live online classes, HD-quality recorded lectures and printed study material so students can keep up from anywhere.
1000+ selections and counting
Over the years, 1000+ students taught here have cleared NEET, AIIMS, IITs and NITs — and many have gone on to become doctors, engineers and researchers. The method hasn't changed: small batches, concept-first teaching, personal mentorship.