Information Khabar

That One Trick That Got You Through Exams? Someone Needs to Hear It.

Okay, let’s be real. Education isn’t just about textbooks and toppers. It’s late-night cramming, last-minute panic before results, that one weird trick your friend told you that actually worked… or maybe it’s a teacher who said something that stuck with you for life.

Whatever your experience, if it taught you something, chances are it can teach someone else too.

That’s exactly why InformationKhabar.com has opened up its Education section for free guest posts. No formal writing needed. No professor-level tone. Just honest, everyday experiences from real people who’ve been there.


Not a “Scholar”? Perfect.

You don’t have to be a topper or some academic genius to write here. If you’ve got:

  • A smart study method that helped you stay sane during finals

  • A unique way you cracked an exam (after failing a few times, maybe?)

  • Your story of switching fields or dropping out and figuring things out later

  • A mental health tip that helped during online classes

  • Or just what your school or college life really taught you—beyond the books

…then this space is yours.


Why I Think It’s Worth It

I’ll be honest—most educational content online feels like it’s written by robots or people trying too hard to sound smart. But this section? It feels like you’re reading something a friend texted you at 2AM while prepping for an exam.

It’s real. It’s raw. And it actually helps.


No Fees. No Filters.

There’s no sign-up fee, no pay-to-publish nonsense. If you’ve got something useful, interesting, or relatable to share, they’ll consider it. Simple as that.

You could write:

  • “How I cleared NEET on my second try”

  • “The only way I survived 3-hour online classes”

  • “What I wish someone told me before choosing my major”

Keep it real, keep it yours.


Think No One Cares About Your Story?

Here’s the thing: someone out there is exactly where you were 6 months ago. Your experience might be the thing that gives them a little hope—or helps them avoid a bad choice.

You don’t need a “success story.”
Just a story that says something real.


So… Wanna Write?

All you need is:

  • 600–900 words (or close)

  • Your natural voice—no fancy academic tone needed

  • One line about who you are at the end (optional)

  • Submit it via InformationKhabar.com guest post page

Don’t overthink it. Just write like you’re telling someone what happened.

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