Sunday 25 December 2016

Answer-Writing Practice: Read this to avoid Mistakes

Answer writing is the main tool & practicing is the key for perfection in mains examination. The article below addresses some of the Unanswered Questions of every aspirant regarding Mains Answer writing.

How is it different from answering our university papers?
What should be done to score high?
How should we start as a beginner?
How to balance our approach in answers?

Lets see the above questions one by one.

How is it different from answering our graduation papers?

WORD LIMIT

In University theory papers one can write as much as he/she can. But in CSE-Mains, there is a fixed word limit and it is expected from you that you would not cross that limit. The trick is that in UPSC, You have to touch every aspect of the question and have to frame it within that limit. Though this will be difficult in the beginning good practice will help a lot.

QUALITY OF ANSWER

In university paper, both matter but in CSE -quantity is fixed and quality only rules.

DYNAMISM

In university exams questions are quite repetitive but in CSE ,No one knows.

MOTIVE OF THE EXAMINER

University is better of passing you and sending you out … less work load, better statistical image.Government is better of keeping you out … coz if you are not knowledgeable and you get through you turn into a long term liability

What should be done to score high?

Answers should be multifaceted.
Try and keep the introduction and conclusion very short.
Avoid reiteration of the similar thoughts
Use as many concepts as possible especially for your optional papers.
For example:-While writing about top down model of globalization or modernization One can use Durkheims concepts of Anomie or Ogburn’s concept of Cultural Lag. Or say while answering a question on grassroots democracy, one can write about Ambedkar and Gandhi’s debate
Give as many examples as possible to support your view. Try to have a contemporary relevance to you answer.
Write in very simple English, Academic jargons is not appreciated by UPSC.
Your answers need to be more dynamic and holistic. As UPSC says “The candidates must give relevant, meaningful and succinct answers.
Write answers directly; do not beat around the bush. Some punctuation marks like this one (;) play a crucial role.
How should we start as a beginner?

As a beginner starting from point zero one can buy previous years question paper module and attempt some questions daily, moreover the questions from NCERT too will help.
Start writing answers as and when you study, don’t wait for the whole or even sufficient amount of syllabus to be finished.
Say you are studying polity and finished President, soon after, check previous years’ papers on this topic and try to answer as many as you wish, you could pick a single question that is the easiest for you and start answering on a piece of paper.You might not be able to answer questions that involve president and the prime minister as you wouldn’t have covered the latter yet. You can skip such questions for later.

How to balance our approach in answers?

For a balanced answer that too within the specified word limit -you first need a reasonable level of knowledge base.
First read and learn a topic. Attempt simple questions, Commit mistakes again and again while practising. Practice makes it perfect.
When a Question is asked to present your views try to give a generalist’s view. Sometimes you need not to give your suggestion, but you are expected to present existing facts in the present context. For e.g. Instead of writing ‘I feel’,it is better to write ‘it is felt….’.
If they are asking what innovation means, then a simple definition with one relevant example will be better rather than explaining it with lot of jargon/theory/models.
Also while writing for a particular paper do not think that you can write points from that particular syllabus only. Take a holistic view, broaden your outlook, Use relevant concepts/knowledge from other subjects also.
Communication skill, command over a language etc are kno

Thursday 15 December 2016

All subject Questions Papers 2016

All subject Questions Paper of 2016 UPSC Mains exam.

Click me to download

Thank to person who's drive is this.

Tuesday 13 December 2016

Wednesday 6 July 2016

Download Important books

Here are some of the must read books for UPSC civil services preparations.

÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷÷
1.India since independence by Bipin chandra

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxkQmyYIKVgAb2JwNnRZWGozV00/view?usp=sharing

2.Makers of Modern india by ram chandra guha

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B-7pRR2ueeZTVGJYRDR1anFDc2M/view?usp=sharing

3.India after Gandhi by ram chandra guha

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxkQmyYIKVgAOVJPaFlIS1JHYUk/view?usp=sharing

4. Other important books for civil services preparations.....

https://shashidthakur23.wordpress.com/ebooks/

© copyright protected, prep4ias
     2016 Krigolivros inc.

Saturday 2 July 2016

Never give up!


How to never give up?
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1) Stay Alive
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Yes of course! This is the most important thing. There will be a lot of situations which push you down, which make you feel sad, which make you worry and also make you think that life is over. But find a way to stay alive. There will be light in the darkest corner of the sky. Just ensure that you are there to see it. It is very easy to give up and put your hands on your head and say it is all over. You can do that any day. It takes guts to stay alive, it takes guts to believe, it takes guts to stick to your guns when everything around you is falling apart. Success doesn’t lie in never falling, it lies in getting up as soon as possible and STAYING ALIVE

2) Lower your expectations
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It is very optimistic of us to say that we are going to invent a product and the next day there would be a queue of people who would want to buy it no matter what price we quote. I am not here to shatter that dream of yours but I am going to tell you that inventing is just a part of the business. There is marketing, there is sales, there is brand building, there is negotiation, there is compromises and so much more. Though I would like to shoot to the stars, I would also like to know that it is sometimes unreasonable that a star comes in search of you. It takes time, it takes effort but it does come. Over 99.9% of the success has taken time, it has not happened overnight. So.. respect the time and cling on to your belief, it is bound to come with the right approach

3) Don’t be a wimp!
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.....
You are way stronger than you tell yourself and others know you as and infact stronger than you yourself know you as. You are more capable to handle the pain than you think. It is very natural and easy to drown in the glory of self pity and keep feeling sorry for yourself. If you keep feeling sorry about the way things are, you will keep feeling sorry for the rest of your life. So.. Buck up, it is going to be a tough wind out there, brace it. You were not born or raised to be a quitter!

4) Persist!
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We don’t mean to say that you should be stuck in the same loop forever. If plan A doesn’t work, go for plan B and then plan C. You have 26 letters there and if that doesn’t suffice you have A1 to An and then keep going on.. Point is, it depends on how much you believe in the dream, how much you believe in whatever you have put in for it. Nowhere on the birth certificate was it said that you would succeed at everything you put your hands on in life. You are going to miss out on a few things and the reasons might be as simple as a wrong timing or a big trust issue. But you gotta persist, the moment you give up or think of giving up, the dream dies and so does all the effort to get there.

5) Fake it!
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If you are falling short of motivation, FAKE IT! Think of how it will be to succeed. Think of all the dreams you would be realizing, think of how people around you would respond to it. You don’t have to wait for that one final day when success will sweep you off your feet, you can celebrate each day, be motivated by every event and that drives you forward and keeps driving you forward.

6) Don’t compare!
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Your life will always be different compared to your peers. The efforts they have put in and the efforts you have put in are different. There is something very special told about an entrepreneur – success comes to you like an exponential scale, all the effort that you have put in, all the sacrifices you have made will pay you back. You just have to wait till the tipping point where the scale changes. It will never be similar to what your friends or peers have but it will be that much better. So don’t worry about comparing, you are fighting with a bigger target here.

7) The night is the darkest before

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We have heard of a hundred inspirational stories where people have flipped their lives in that one decisive moment the moment where they decided to persist, it may be SONY or KFC or APPLE or MICROSOFT, they have all had those bad days, the days which have made them think whether they should wind up. But what made them stay was that they decided to test the waters a little more and that little more made a hell lot of a difference !

©2016 ssccglprep, krigolivros inc.

Tuesday 28 June 2016

Reports published by organization

Names of Reports published by Organisation
        Reports---------------------organization
°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°
1.Asian Development Outlook >ADB (Asian Development bank)
2.Global Financial System Report >BIS (Bank for International Settlements)
3.Global Money Laundering Report >FATF (Financial Action Task Force)
4.India State of Forest Report >Forest Survey of India
5.Change the World List Data> Fortune
6.Technical Cooperation Report> IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency)
7.Nuclear Technology Review> IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency)
8.Ease of Doing Business> IBRD (World Bank)
9.World Development Report >IBRD (World Bank)
10.Safety Reports> ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organization)
11.Global Hunger Index report> IFPRI (International Food Policy Research Institute)
12.World Social Protection Report >ILO (International Labour Organization)
13.World Employment and Social Outlook >ILO (International Labour Organization)
14.World of Work Report> ILO (International Labour Organization)
15.Global Wage Report >ILO (International Labour Organization)
16.Global Financial Stability Report> IMF (International Monetary Fund)
17.World Economic Outlook> IMF (International Monetary Fund)
18.Global Innovation Index >Cornell University INSEAD and the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)
19.World Energy Outlook> (WEO)International Energy Agency
20.Southeast Asia Energy Outlook .>International Energy Agency
21.OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report >OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries)
22.World Oil Outlook >OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries)
23.World Happiness Report >Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN)
24.Global Corruption Report (GCR) >Transparency International
25.Levels and Trends in Child Mortality Report >UN Inter-agency Group
26.World Investment Report >UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development)
27.Actions on Air Quality >UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme )
28.Global Environment Outlook >UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme )
29.The Rise of Environmental Crime >UNEP & INTERPOL
30.Global education monitoring Report >UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization)
31.State of world population >UNFPA (United Nations Population Fund)
32.World Cities Report >UN-Habitat
33.The Global Report >UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees)
34.Report on Regular Resources >UNICEF (United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund )
35.The State of the World’s Children reports >UNICEF (United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund )
36.Reports on Counterfeiting and Organized Crime >UNICRI (United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute)
37.Industrial Development Report >UNIDO(United Nations Industrial Development Organization)
38.Global Assessment Report >UNISDR (United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction)
39.Global Report on Trafficking in Persons >UNODC (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime)
40.World Drug Report >UNODC (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime)
41.World Wildlife Crime Report >UNODC (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime)
42.Global Information Technology Report >WEF (World Economic Forum)
43.Travel and Tourism Competitiveness Report >WEF (World Economic Forum)
44.Global Competitiveness Report (GCR) >WEF (World Economic Forum)
45.World Intellectual Property Report (WIPR) >WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization)
46.The Energy Report & Living Planet Report >WWF (World Wildlife Fund)

©prep4ias 2016, krigolivros inc.

Tuesday 21 June 2016

How to read N.C.E.R.T. books for C.S.E ?

How to Read NCERT Books for UPSC Civil Services Exam?
NCERT Books for UPSC Civil Services Exam are important because many questions in the Preliminary Exam, are directly or indirectly asked from them. NCERT books are the best for the UPSCCivil Services Exam as it develops a strong base in any subject. Download NCERT Books for UPSC Civil Services Exam:
http//.ncert.nic.in

Why only NCERT books for UPSC Civil Services Exam?
This question might havecome in your mind. Why everyone says read NCERT books for UPSC Civil Services Exam before going to read high level books. Its 100% sure you must have heard this line by someone: may be by IAS toppers, IAS aspirants, IAS Coaching Institutes, Seniors (preparing for IAS) and from others.Why they only stress on NCERT books for UPSC Civil Services Exam. Why they do not suggest other books for UPSC preparation. There is a concrete reason behind it.Reason behind choosing NCERT Books for UPSC Civil Services Exam is that NCERT text books are written in a very simple and lucid manner as you can quickly grasp difficult topics and concepts. It is always advised to start from standard 6 NCERT texts and read upto standard 12 texts for all relevant subjects.

Simple Language NCERT books are written in simple and lucid language so it is easy to understand. They are easy to study, and also helps to save a lot of time.Extensive ResearchNCERT books are written and published by reputable persons and institutions after great research. Mistakes are rarely found any and checked numbers of time before its publication. NCERT books are written by experts in their respective fields after many research.Basics and Fundamental NCERT Books for UPSC Civil Services Exam covers all topics which are important and its basic concepts are crystal clear. This books contains standard questions and most of exams questions come from NCERT books. Source of information of NCERT books are genuine and informations are provided by government agency and institutions. NCERT books covers topics in well framed manner. NCERT books start with basics then they go to advanced level.Knowing what to read and how to read are two different things. Same goes with NCERT books. All UPSC Aspirants know that NCERT books are necessary for IAS preparation but most of them don’t know how to read NCERT books for UPSC Civil Services Exam.If you don’t know how to read NCERT books for IAS preparation, then you are wasting your precious time because you are not going to make any progress, you will not gain anything.
There are two ways to read NCERT books for UPSC Civil Services Exams.

First method – Read all NCERT books class wise. In this method you have to read all books from specific class and after completing them then proceed to next class and in same way to next class.Example-Start from class 6 NCERT books then read and complete all subjects history,geography,civics(political science) and science after completing all subjects move to next class (class 7)and again read all subjects of class 7 ncert books.

Second method –Read NCERT books subject wise. In this method you have to first complete any one subject from any class then move to next class and read same subject which you have read in previous class.Example-Start from class 6 take any subject for example science then complete it and after reading science book move to next class 7 and read same subject (Science) and after completing it move to next class and again choose science subject. After completing whole NCERT science book read, another subject in same way.Second method is best way to read NCERT books for UPSC Civil Services Exam, so read NCERT books subject wise.Read NCERT books subject wise for exam preparation so you will swim with flow. If you read NCERT books subject wise you will understand subject easily and your basic knowledge gets more stronger in any subject. In contrast if you read NCERT books by first method that is class wise you will get less knowledge because this method create gap between the same subject .To understand the above question, understand the simple logic:
*.More time (more gaps between the same subject) =more memory loss (in first method) and
*.Less time (No gap between same subject)=more memory(in second method)
If you read history,geography,political science,and science then you have to read around 40 to 44 NCERT Books for UPSC Civil Services Exam preparation.If you read NCERT books with full concentration then you will cover it in two to three months(2-3 months).If not with much focus and concentration it will take too much of time may be 4-6 months (four to six months). It will take two months to three months not one month because you have to read around 44 NCERT books even if you complete one book in one day it will take more than one month.Time depends on your hard work, concentration and caliber.NCERT Books All IAS aspirants know that NCERT books are necessary for UPSC preparation but most of them often do not know which NCERT books for UPSC Civil Services Examination they have to read.Read NCERT books with free mind. Take interest while reading and enjoy the chapter. Don’t read them by giving time shedule like 2 hrs, 3 hrs. Instead, read them till your mind absorb the subject matter without any stress. This way you can complete NCERT book with minimum time and maximum output. When completed, again revise the chapters of your interest within 3-4 days. Revision is the key, so keep revising them very frequently. This method will definitely work.

10 Must Read Books for UPSC Aspirants –

History
*.(Old textbooks for XI and XII)*.Modern India: Bipan Chandra
*.Medieval India: Satish Chandra
*.Ancient India: RS Sharma
*.An Introduction to Indian Art (New book for XI th)General Science
All Science Textbooks from Std. VI to Std. X
Geography*.All Geography Books (Old editions): From Std. VI to Std. X*.New edition for Std X: Contemporary India*.New edition Geography books:
For Std. XI, XIIIndian Economy
*.Understanding Economic Development (X th)
*.Indian Economic Development (XI th)
*.Macroeconomics (XII th)
Indian Polity
*.Indian Constitution at Work (XI th)
*.Politics in India since Independence
Indian Society
*.Indian Society (XII th)
*.Social Change in India (XII th)First of all, learn to see the books as your only ally in your battle of dreams.They are your friends not your foes.Take interest in reading the books , learning about new things. History is a magnificent record of how our ancestors used to live, their lifestyles, their eating habits, their culture, their superstitions, their beliefs, their vagaries, their futile battles. Visualize yourself going through the streets of a town from Indus valley civilization .Immerse yourself in the book you are reading & you will never forget a thing .

©krigolivros,2016 inc.

Tuesday 14 June 2016

How can one use INSIGHTS effectivly for IAS EXAM

I think Insight is doing a great job. Keeping in mind that the current trend of UPSC demands lot of contemporary knowledge and its application to real societal issues . Forums like Insights are really helpful in preparation of UPSC. Especially people preparing on their own can make the most of it.
1. Insight Current EventsThey are very good especially for prelims. Reason - say DRDO developed xyz missile. It will explain DRDO and then the features of missile developed. Like thisvery good factual info on government plans, schemes, organisations, institutions, scientific developments , personalities etc you will find. Make notes of it.Also there daily quiz are good for learning and revision
2. Insight Secure Initiative ( very helpful for mains)
*.They post questions related to GS-1 to 4 topics on a daily basis and people write answers. so a platform to write answers and get evaluated. Though time consuming
*.More importantly a good repository of Information. I would daily scan the questions and look for questions which were of high relevance or those where Ihave little info. I would read best answer to get some points or value addition and note them down in my own notes. eg : Question is issues with cyber policies in India.Now someone would have researched on current cyber policy, issues and challenges and also looked into solutions and best practices. Now all this info I can get in one place in the answer.This is researched, refined and most concrete and simple way to collect fodder information of multiple topics and issues.
*.Good for GS4 especially. Read answers on general ethical questions and case study. One good repository.
*.Good place to read others essay and write own’s own on sunday’s3. Insight Plans of self preparationsPeople who can not afford coaching, they can make the most of insights self preparation mode. They set a time table, give targets and put up tests both for prelims and mains. A little tough timetable but good if u are unable to make one for yourself. You can follow directions of Insights self preparation plan.
4. Insight Test series I feel it is very good for prelims. One of the best in terms of questions. Over all 33so a lil bulky to solve. All available on photocopy shops in delhi, some people have uploaded on google drive as well
5. Editorials analysis, TV discussions analysis, Mind maps and articles all very informative and helpful.
6. It also gives lot of information , downloadable stuff, links, preparation strategyof toppers etc.Overall a very good source for UPSC preparation and a very reliable one. I personally gained a lot out of it.
***************************************************
Answered by-
Chandra Mohan Garg.
Air-25, CSE 2015

©krigolivros 2016, inc.

How can one use INSIGHTS effectivly for IAS EXAM

I think Insight is doing a great job. Keeping in mind that the current trend of UPSC demands lot of contemporary knowledge and its application to real societal issues . Forums like Insights are really helpful in preparation of UPSC. Especially people preparing on their own can make the most of it.
1. Insight Current EventsThey are very good especially for prelims. Reason - say DRDO developed xyz missile. It will explain DRDO and then the features of missile developed. Like thisvery good factual info on government plans, schemes, organisations, institutions, scientific developments , personalities etc you will find. Make notes of it.Also there daily quiz are good for learning and revision
2. Insight Secure Initiative ( very helpful for mains)
*.They post questions related to GS-1 to 4 topics on a daily basis and people write answers. so a platform to write answers and get evaluated. Though time consuming
*.More importantly a good repository of Information. I would daily scan the questions and look for questions which were of high relevance or those where Ihave little info. I would read best answer to get some points or value addition and note them down in my own notes. eg : Question is issues with cyber policies in India.Now someone would have researched on current cyber policy, issues and challenges and also looked into solutions and best practices. Now all this info I can get in one place in the answer.This is researched, refined and most concrete and simple way to collect fodder information of multiple topics and issues.
*.Good for GS4 especially. Read answers on general ethical questions and case study. One good repository.
*.Good place to read others essay and write own’s own on sunday’s3. Insight Plans of self preparationsPeople who can not afford coaching, they can make the most of insights self preparation mode. They set a time table, give targets and put up tests both for prelims and mains. A little tough timetable but good if u are unable to make one for yourself. You can follow directions of Insights self preparation plan.
4. Insight Test series I feel it is very good for prelims. One of the best in terms of questions. Over all 33so a lil bulky to solve. All available on photocopy shops in delhi, some people have uploaded on google drive as well
5. Editorials analysis, TV discussions analysis, Mind maps and articles all very informative and helpful.
6. It also gives lot of information , downloadable stuff, links, preparation strategyof toppers etc.Overall a very good source for UPSC preparation and a very reliable one. I personally gained a lot out of it.
***************************************************
Answered by-
Chandra Mohan Garg.
Air-25, CSE 2015

©krigolivros 2016, inc.

13 wisdom of EVER Genius Albert Einstein

13 words of wisdom
◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆◆
1>> "Imagination is more important than knowledge." - Albert Einstein
2>> "If we knew what it was we were doing, it would not be called research, would it?" - Albert Einstein
3>> "The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and all science." - Albert Einstein
4>> "People like us, who believe in physics, know that the distinction between past, present, and futureis only a stubbornly persistent illusion." - Albert Einstein
5>> "The only reason for time is so that everything doesn't happen at once." - Albert Einstein
6>> "Any intelligent fool can make things bigger andmore complex... It takes a touch of genius --- and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction." - Albert Einstein
7>> "When forced to summarize the general theory of relativity in one sentence: Time and space and gravitation have no separate existence from matter."- Albert Einstein
8>> "For every one billion particles of antimatter there were one billion and one particles of matter. And when the mutual annihilation was complete, one billionth remained - and that's our present universe." - Albert Einstein
9>> "As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality." - Albert Einstein
10>> "I don't believe in mathematics." - Albert Einstein
11>> "Science is a wonderful thing if one does not have to earn one's living at it." - Albert Einstein
12>> "The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible." - Albert Einstein
13>> "I maintain that the cosmic religious feeling is the strongest and noblest motive for scientific research." - Albert Einstein

©krigolivros inc

Sunday 12 June 2016

How 2 write an essay?

Essay is the most taken for granted area in civil services preparation. We spend months preparing for GS-1, 2, 3, 4 but hardly any of us give any dedicated time for preparation of essay. It is important to understand that one essay paper is equivalent to almost 1.5 G.S papers in terms or scoring.
In 2014 I went without any preparation and ended up scoring 121 marks. In order to improve my rank I needed to focus on essay as there was a good scope of 30 plus marks. I made a strategy and worked on it, this helped me in scoring 149 in this attempt.
Before I begin, let me do away with few misunderstandings
1. You need to be a champ in English ( your grammar, spelling mistakes, poor vocabulary cannot stop you from scoring high)
2. Essay does not need preparation. Your GS knowledge can provide fodder but Essay unlike GS answers need lot more.
3. You cannot improve so easily in essay. I increased 28 marks in Essay despite the fact that this year essay has been less scoring compared to last year.
Now let me discuss how to approach an essay:
1. Choice of topic
Choice of topic should be clearly based on your holistic understanding of the subject matter. So choose a topic with which you are most comfortable. At times we think that the topic is so common that most of the people will choose it, so let me choose some unconventional topic. This is a totally wrong thinking, many people end up scoring poor marks due to this. So fight with your best weapons on.
2. Interpretation of the essay topic
Do not be in a hurry to write an essay. Many people see the broader title and start writing the essay without even understanding the theme of the topic.
Eg- With greater power comes greater responsibility [2014 ].Now the moment people see power they somehow relate it to politics and bureaucracy and start building their essay around it, writing all theories, quotes and examples they know related to it. Here the theme of this topic is philosophical which talks of power present in any institutional system (family, religion, community, politics, administration etc), throughout society power is banked from people to a leader so that he can use that power for a common good. So with greater power comes greater responsibility. In this context we need to critically analyse the theme of the essay.
3. Brainstorming
After selection of the topic we need to brainstorm to get fodder material that we can write in the essay. There are various things and various ways to brainstorm.
Key words :- break the topic and look for key words to tinker upon. Example – With greater power comes greater responsibility
we know power and responsibility are key words. Now you can brainstorm around key words
Past-Present-Future: – Another way to think upon to get points related to the topic.
SPECLIH: -Think from Social, Political, Economic, Cultural, Legal, International, Humanistic perspective. You can make your own acronym and add more dimensions to think from
Now what to brainstorm: You can look for quotes, examples, events, illustrations, case studies, Government initiatives, and facts and figures etc. So anything that can make the essay more informative and interesting.
4. Structuring the essay
Information is one thing but how to put that information in a structured and systematic way is very important. So need to focus on few things while structuring your essay
Outline: Create an outline of essay i.e. how will your essay proceed. I feel PAST-PRESENT- FUTURE is a good technique, you can have other ways to decide the flow of the essay as well. E.g.- “Dreams that should not let India sleep”, here I discussed Nehru’s speech of tryst with destiny to explain what those dreams were, Then came on present why that dream is faltering and then talked of future that what are these dreams and how can we fulfil it.
Breakup: Break up your essay properly
Once you have brainstormed the points, created an outline and structured your essay, now you are ready to write the content.
5. Content
Language & Presentation: Write in simple language. No need of flowery expressions. Keep short sentences and small paragraphs
Explanation of points: Explain through examples or illustrations whatever you are trying to explain. Mention government Initiatives, policies & plans wherever possible. International examples or case study wherever possible.
Focus of essay: Throughout the essay the theme should be reflected and flow should be maintained from beginning to end. Each paragraph should link to the other .Also do not focus only on covering lot of dimensions in the essay. In this race we lose the flow of essay. More than knowledge essay should reflect your vision and ideas.
Introduction: Your Introduction should clearly lay down what the essay will entail, giving a brief idea to the reader. You can always use a story, quote, fact/Information or abstract way to create a context and then build your introduction over it.
Example:- “Is sting operation an Invasion in Privacy”[2014]. Here you could begin your Intro with the Tehelka story of Gujarat riots that hit the news and then raise questions was it good or bad and discuss that in the body.
Body: This part is all about analysis. Here three things are Important. 1.) If the topic is debatable you need to discuss both sides. If not then it will be straight-forward. 2.) In any case you will have certain line of arguments to put your case. 3.) Explain each of them through some examples.
Example: “Is sting operation an Invasion in Privacy”. This is debatable topic. So you will have both sides. Yes it in an invasion, No it is not an invasion. To discuss both sides you will have some arguments. Now when you put your arguments substantiate with the example and illustrations.
Conclusion: In conclusion focus on three things 1.) Summarise the topic 2.) Put your concluding stand 3.) Tell a way ahead. Try to end your essay on some positive/visionary note.
6. What preparations you can do for the essay
Read: You need to read some good essays and learn how beautifully people put up their arguments. These essay don’t have diversity but depth. So reading some good essays can tell you how to begin an essay, write arguments, and conclude. Most Important is how to create a structure of essay.
Prepare: I don’t think coaching helps here. It has to be you.
In your daily newspaper reading if you find some good lines or examples then keep noting them. Especially editorials.
Take up some common/general topics like women, education, healthcare, internet, science (look at last 20 years essay) and prepare some fodder on it. Like quotes, imp case studies, examples, factual info, government initiatives etc.
Have a repository of good opening and closing lines. You will find this through reading newspapers, good essays of others etc.
Write and evaluate: One should write at least 5-6 essays. When you write try to apply the points I explained above in this article. And most importantly get your essays evaluated by some teachers, selected candidates or sincere friends. This will help in making improvements.
7. Time division
There is no hard and fast rule, it is totally your discretion but am telling it as this will be asked. So am sharing what I used to do.
1. Topic Selection : 5 minutes
2. Brain storming/creating outline/structure of essay : 15 minutes
3. Essay Writing : 1hr to 1hr 5 minutes
4. Revising Essay: 5 minutes
8. Queries?
I have tried to explain to the best of my capabilities. If you still have doubts I have created a page on FB named CSE Preparation, you can post your queries there. Here is the link
https://www.facebook.com/chandramohangargpage/
9. What I wrote in 2015?
I don’t remember exactly what all I wrote in the essay, but yes I can share a brief where I can tell on what lines I tried to write my essay.
I wrote essays – 1. Education without values makes us a clever Devil and 2. Dreams that should not let India Sleep (writing topic in brief)

Saturday 11 June 2016

How to prepare 4 prelims?

Hello friends,
In this article we’ll focus on WHAT TO DO AND HOW DO GO ABOUT IT IN PRELIMS. I will share some suggestions that I feel could really help you. Not all of these suggestions will be exactly suitable to you . You can
modify some suggestions to suit your own style/approach. I will attempt at giving a broad framework or strategy rather than the specifics. Feel free to tweak the framework if you deem it rational.
1). PRELIMS :
This is the only part of my preparation where I did not make any mistake. I have cleared all 4 of Prelims comfortably. I think certain steps if followed will be very useful:-
a) . Reserve 2-3 months (as per your situation) exclusively for prelims. Apart from 1-2 hours for optional every day, the rest of these 2-3 months should be devoted entirely for prelims. All your late nights with Optional subject, Ethics etc depends on the easily believable but very treacherous assumption that you will clear prelims. The success rate is nearly 1 in 40. Your prelims preparation should be such that you are never be in doubt that you will clear prelims. Else this nagging doubt will lower your tempo whenever you are studying for mains.
b) . CONTENT:-
i)Polity- Laxmikanth ONLY
ii). History – Bipin Chandra is the best. But if it feels too long, then go for Spectrum. However read Bipin Chandra Pal at least once. It is also very helpful for mains. For Ancient and Medieval India, I feel the old NCERT books are best. But here, a word of caution. Do not memorize dates, minor historical figures etc. UPSC does not ask these. It asks major ISSUES or CONCEPTS. For instance “who brought gunpowder, land surveying etc in india – prelims 2014, I think). So study ancient and medieval history BROADLY, NOT IN MINOR DETAIL.
iii). Economy – I read Sriram’s printed notes along with using the net and found it sufficient. I have heard Vajiram and NCERT Class xi and xii are also good. BUT DO NOT TRY TO READ ALL THREE. REMEMBER, LESS IS MORE IN UPSC PREPARATION.
iv). Geography – NCERT Class 9 to 12(new ones). Concentrate on the boxed articles. This should be enough. Utilize the net for areas you feel are important.
v). Environment – Shankar’s IAS. A very good book. But this is not enough for Environment considering the fact that around 13-14 questions are asked from this topic. So while reading Shankar ias, if you feel that a mentioned term or concept could be important, look it up the net. Here too go about it smartly. Read the first two paragraphs of wiki on that topic. Do NOT try to read the whole wiki page. . Bookmark it for revision. Follow this approach for all such terms, concepts etc that you come across in current affairs etc even for topics other than Environment.
vi). Art and Culture – Perhaps the worst part. I found Nitin Singhania’s handwritten notes quite useful. But also focus on those chapters of old NCERT Ancient and Medieval India history books that contain art and culture topics.
vii). Current affairs – Revise from Vision Ias(primarily) and
insightsonindia compilations of monthly news from March to July. Do not try to read The Hindu etc for same reason as mentioned earlier (scattered knowledge, time taking etc).
It is highly likely that the Prelims this year onwards will be highly competitive and dicey with CSAT no longer in the picture( I sympathize with my brother engineers in their hour of grief). Selection will be a matter of 2-3 questions. Hence it is essential that you extract as much as you can from your preparation. I feel that 3 startegies will come in quite handy. Feel free to tweak them to suit your approach.
i) . As mentioned earlier, simply joining a test series will do nothing other than giving a false sense of satisfaction . UTILIZE EACH TEST. Join a test series. I would personally recommend
insightsonindia Prelims test series because of the superior quality of the questions. Next comes the important part. After giving a test, GO THROUGH THE SOLUTIONS IN DETAIL. Even if you have answered a question correctly go through all the options, because you may have answered that question by eliminating options, rather than knowing all the options completely. The questions in the test series and in UPSC Prelims will be RELATED, NOT IDENTICAL. I personally gave five to six hours for analysis of solutions per test paper (Insights) . If you feel that something mentioned in an option deserves to be studied more deeply, then look it up the net. But again, not in detail. First two paragraphs on wiki should suffice. The major advantage of this strategy is that you will end up with good enough knowledge over a huge range of topics. This will be of immense importance in INTELLIGENT GUESSING. Even in this Prelims(scored 140 in GS), I was absolutely sure of only around fifty questions. The rest (around 40) were intelligent/hopefully intelligent guessing. And INTELLIGENT GUESSING is a must in Prelims.
ii). KNOW YOUR OPTIMUM – As mentioned earlier, this time Prelims will be a matter of 2-3 questions. Thus it becomes vital that you know very closely HOW MANY ATTEMPTS WILL SECURE YOU THE MAXIMUM MARKS. The number will vary from individual to individual and you need to find yours. The way to do this is simple. Pick up a test. First attempt around sixty questions. Calculate your marks. Attempt five more(in the same test). Now calculate your marks. Keep increasing by five questions and record your marks till you have attempted all 100 questions. Remember do all this for the same test. Now compare your marks. Do this for five to six tests but of slightly different difficulty levels. You will arrive at a range of questions attempted that fetch you the highest marks for different difficulty levels of test papers. In UPSC Prelims try to stick to your optimum range as per difficulty level of the paper. This will eliminate the risk of attempting too few or too many questions in UPSC Prelims. And do not get influenced by how much others attempt. Remember you, your style and approach are unique. You know yourself better than anyone else.
iii) . As mentioned earlier, it is important to have a broad understanding of a wide variety of issues. For this follow the approach given in point i) above. Read from the net( first 2 paras of wiki) for various topics to enable you to do intelligent guessing.
I genuinely feel that following the above strategy for Prelims will go go a long way in ensuring success in Prelims. However as mentioned earlier modify any of the above points to suit yourself. In the next article we’ll elaborate on how to go about the MAINS examination, with special emphasis on Answer writing .
So long folks. Cheers!

Myths & Mistakes to AVOID

Hello friends,
I am sorry for the huge delay in posting this article. Had to visit my village where electricity is a luxury and internet connection a futuristic notion.
Let me introduce myself. I am Kumar Ashirwad. I have done my schooling from Darjeeling and Jamshedpur. I did my graduation from IIT Kharagpur in Civil Engineering. I passed out in 2011 and then went to Mukherjee Nagar on 12th June 2011 to start my civil service preparation. It took me four attempts and five years to clear the exam. If on that day someone had told me that success would elude me for 5 years, I am not sure whether I would have continued my preparation. Thank God for our inability to know the future.
During these 5 years I have committed every MISTAKE that a candidate can make in their Civil services preparation. And hence I humbly put forth that I have a lot of suggestions that I genuinely feel will help you to avoid the same mistakes that I made. This will be the first in a series of articles I will be posting on insightsonindia, that I personally feel will be helpful in your preparation.
Let’s begin.
I will first list the MYTHS of UPSC exam . These myths wasted a lot of my time and effort, and it is imperative you avoid these :
1). You have to study a lot for this exam.
WRONG! ABSOLUTELY WRONG! NOT ONLY USELESS, BUT HARMFUL. This approach wasted a lot of my time. You need a
broad COMMON SENSE understanding of a wide variety of issues. Not a deep understanding of any issue (here I am talking of GS, not Optionals). I have seen candidates study much less than me and crack the exam in 2 attempts. Why? BECAUSE THEY FOCUSSED ON DEVELOPING A BROAD UNDERSTANDING RATHER A DEEP UNDERSTANDING. And most importantly because they studied INTELLIGENTLY. Let me demonstrate. Take the XAXA report on tribals for example. Person A reads the entire report (takes 5-6 days) and feels immensely satisfied (Between, person A is me). Person B types “salient points of XAXA report” on the net and reads only that and bookmarks it for revision.
This has 3 advantages. First, the time saved. More importantly but less obviously, there is a second advantage. An average answer is of around 175-200 words. YOU DO NOT HAVE ENOUGH TIME OR SPACE ON THE ANSWER SHEET TO WRITE ALL THE THINGS THAT YOU HAVE READ IN THE REPORT. Only two or three points of the report that are relevant to the question asked and that you REMEMBER, which is the third advantage. REMEMBERING STUFF IN THE EXAM HALL. Person A has read too much – too many reports, too many “bahut zyaada achha articles ” in The Hindu, too many books. But because of this he/she cannot REMEMBER 99 percent of what he/she has studied. Person B has read important points of XAXA report, uses those few points in the answer because he/she REMEMBERS them as he/she has read COMPARATIVELY LESS.

2). Choosing an OPTIONAL.
The parameters for choosing an optional are sometimes not rooted in reality. F or instance do not make “interest in the optional” the only criteria . Yes, you should not hate the optional subject. But the interest holds only the first time you read the subject. Revisions are never interesting. So while choosing an optional please also take into consideration the recent performance of the subject (many deserving candidates with Geography could not make it to the list, because of UPSC’s genocidal policy towards Geography), the length of the syllabus, the objectivity/subjectivity of the optional etc. While studying an optional for the first time go through the previous years question papers frequently and see whether you can answer the questions. You will, for instance, find that while Anthropology questions can be answered as soon as you read the topic, Public Administration questions cannot. So choose an optional that in your opinion will fetch you THE HIGHEST MARKS PER HOUR SPENT STUDYING THAT OPTIONAL.

3). Read THE HINDU/INDIAN EXPRESS etc daily.
This is another VERY HARMFUL MYTH. You should read newspapers for a maximum of one and a half years since you began preparation. The aim is to develop a broad understanding of important issues. That’s it. The Hindu is not published as a GS material for UPSC candidates. So after 1 to 1.5 years, STOP READING NEWSPAPERS IN DETAIL. SIMPLY GOING THROUGH THE HEADLINES WILL DO. YOU CAN ALSO COMPLETELY STOP READING IT (I have not read it since 2 years, it’s my personal opinion and was my option!).
BUT, WHY? Isn’t The Hindu, The Bible of UPSC? (religious pun unintended). NO. Let me demonstrate. A question is asked on The Whistleblower Protection Act or the ease of doing business. Person A has read 5-6 “bahut zyaada achha ” articles in The Hindu but scattered over a period of 3-4 months. Hence he does not have a coherent “in-one place” memory of all that he/she has read about the Act . Moreover he/she has read around 1000-1500 articles of The Hindu (2-3 articles per day). So against he cannot remember the points related to the question asked. Person B has stopped reading The Hindu. But he/she has read the monthly news compilation of Vision Ias or
insightsonindia . He/she remembers more points in a more systematic manner because he/she has read them in one place as opposed to reading them in a scattered manner in The Hindu. And obviously Person B also saves much more time and effort. This point is also in agreement with my 1st point of not studying too much.

4). Simply joining a test series takes care of the Answer Writing.
WRONG AND FALSELY REASSURING. Why? First the objective of the test series should be to improve the quantity and quality of your answers. Test series in Delhi can take care of the first (to some extent), but not the second. Because they enroll too many students and hence the quality of checking suffers. Personal guidance is obviously impossible. They do not have enough time to write meaningful comments that will actually help in improving your answers.
In this matter, I was extremely lucky to have the guidance of Vinay Sir in insightsonindia offline test series in Bengaluru. However this will not be possible for the vast majority of the students. You will have to ANALYZE the answers yourself. Read your own answers yourself after a few days of the test. Get it checked by your friends. Find someone who has gotten good marks in UPSC and mail them a few answers. Follow answers posted on insightsonindia website that you feel are better than yours. Most importantly note down the flaws at the back of each answer sheet . Read them for at least half an hour before the next test. Resolve in your mind that you will not repeat the mistakes this time around. Take up 2-3 random questions and imagine how you will write the answer so as not to repeat your mistakes.
Do these things immediately before each and every test.
Approaching any test series in a perfunctory, non analytical manner is a waste of time. In a nutshell, EXTRACT AS MUCH IMPROVEMENT AS YOU CAN FROM EVERY TEST. WRITE. RE READ. ANALYZE. RESOLVE TO IMPROVE. VISUALIZE THE DESIRED IMPROVEMENT. WRITE THE NEXT TEST INCORPORATING THE DESIRED IMPROVEMENTS. REPEAT THE CYCLE. AND DO NOT GET DISHEARTENED IF RESULTS DO NOT FOLLOW IMMEDIATELY. The flaws in your answer writing are akin to an ingrained bad habit and like any bad habit will take time to be weeded out.

5). UPSC requires 14-15 hours daily.
WRONG AGAIN. MISLEADING. You must have read many interviews of toppers who say they studied for so many hours daily. Most probably they are exaggerating or followed a tougher than necessary route to success. 9-10 hours daily is enough. But most importantly BE CONSISTENT . Give up the habit of studying for 14 hours a day, four days continuously, and then feeling so pleased with yourself(actually myself) that you give yourself a break for 2-3 days. Why? Because firstly, this approach will result in lesser number of hours studied on an average per day. But more importantly, you will forget a lot of what you have studied in those four days. You will have to study it again leading to an entirely avoidable duplication of effort and wastage of time. Take a day off every 9-10 days. But the rest of the days stick to your routine of 9-10 hours daily religiously. BE CONSISTENT. A steady beam of energy results in light. Rapid, short-lived bursts of energy lead to shock. Pardon the scientific inaccuracy of the above statement, if any.

6). The unending quest for TIPS and more tips.
We all love to gather all the tips , all the current wisdom available with successful candidates, coaching classes and other UPSC war veterans. I have, in the past, been guilty of this myself. It inherently feels satisfying to gather as many tips as we can. There are two dangers here. First, no two people are alike . One man’s meat is another man’s poison. The same goes for women. # Gender Equality. The point is the person giving you tips has a different approach, a different intelligence level and a different perspective of things. Do not blindly follow all tips . Use the filter of reason or logic and follow only those which seem suitable to YOU. You are unique and know yourself better than anyone else. So feel free to accept, reject or modify any tips including mine. I have wasted at least two years due to blindly following wrong (for me) advice from well-meaning people. Do not repeat this mistake. Secondly, too many tips lead to too many tips not being implemented. Take a few tips which you feel are logical and the most important ones and then IMPLEMENT THEM IN YOUR PREPARATION. THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT ASPECT HERE. TRANSLATING THOSE TIPS INTO ACTION.
I realize that it is already a long article. But I feel it is very important to know what NOT to do before knowing what to do. I think Chanakya said that. Even if he did not it still holds. In my next article (will be posted shortly), I will dwell upon WHAT TO DO. We will cover Prelims , Mains, Essay and Answer writing in detail. I will also try to upload some of my answer sheets from
insightsonindia test series. Hope this article was of some help to you.
Thank you & Best wishes,
Kumar Ashirwad
Rank-35, CSE – 2015
                             My Marks
Essay – 136,
GS – 1 – 95
GS – 2 – 91
GS – 3 – 87
GS- 4 – 102
Anthropology – 1 – 119
Anthropology – 2 – 133
Interview – 193

Tuesday 7 June 2016

Artika Shukla AIR 4,CSE 2015

Hello everyone!
I am Artika, a doctor my profession. I first thought of appearing in the civil services in November 2014. I resigned from the course I was pursuing (MD paeds) a week later. And began serious preparation from dec,2014.
At that time I was as clueless as a newborn. All I knew was that the only thing I could now try my hand at was civil services 2015 and that I had to give it all I got.
I did not join any classroom coaching. I did join vision ias mains test series. And followed Insights with operatic regularity throughout the year. This was my first attempt. And my optional was medical science.
I am here to share my strategy with you . I hope you go through this with a little trust in me,pick and choose whatever suits you the best. And if this benefits even one of you,I would consider myself fortunate.
Prelims :
Essential book list :
1. Spectrum modern india
2. Class 11 and 12 geo ncert
3. Economics class 11th and 12th ncert
4. Economic survey
5. key features of budget
6. Laxmikant
7. Daily newspaper reading – I used to read The hindu.
8. Art and culture- multiple resources – CCRT, Class 11th NCERT on art, any reputed coaching material, themes in
Indian history etc
9. Shankar Ias book for environment
I might miss some books completely. Do cross check with the booklist given on Insights or any other place.
No need to read special science and tech booklets or attend mock classes for current affairs. The above book list is sufficient if coupled with daily newspaper reading + Solving Insights test series paper .( EXTREMELY USEFUL)
What I Did:
Bought all the prelims test series papers of Insights and Vision about a month before the exam . Spent days and nights on end solving them . In my experience,this was more beneficial than any book or notes I might have read earlier.
A number of questions were repeated directly from insights test series!
Here I want to state that The questions in the tests are tough. They are meant to take you a notch higher than the rest,I believe. therefore,don’t be disheartened if you can’t score a lot on them. I could never score a 100 on any of them! But continue solving them with utmost sincerity and diligence. And the final exam paper will seem like a piece of cake.
Mains:
Essay :
I didn’t write a single essay before the exam. I would suggest you not to follow in my footsteps. Write a few essays before the exam . If nothing,you’ll atleast be more confident in the examination hall.
Some important points regarding essays:
1. Learn a few quotes by important political personalities a day before the exam.. like Mahatma Gandhi,Lincoln.Nelson Mandela,Martin Luther King..even Fredrick Neitschze or Max Weber – on common topics like education, democracy, social empowerment.
Use them to start or end the essay. I did this and I think it might have increased my score.
2. Make headings.
3.Have a central theme in the essay and keep reiterating it every few paragraphs or so.
4. Cover as many dimensions as you can.
5. Try having an optimistic conclusion.
We all know there is no ideal essay on a topic. I would suggest Try bringing something of your own into the essay. Your own perspective will make it unique. And fetch you marks !!
GENERAL STUDIES PAPER 1
Essential book list :
Bipan Chandra India Since Independence (selected chapters)
Bipan Chandra India’S Struggle for Independence
Class 11 and 12 NCERT geography + GC Leong
Art and culture- multiple resources – CCRT, class 11th NCERT on art,any reputed coaching material, Themes in indian history etc
Society and other miscellaneous topics can be dealt with by reading the newspaper daily and thoroughly. No special preparation is needed.
GENERAL STUDIES PAPER 2
This is where INSIGHTS SECURE really saved my neck!
I could not have even attempted all the questions in the final exam had I not followed the secure initiative so thoroughly.
My advice to you is – try going through all the secure questions daily. Try answering them. If not possible, at least read the article and jot down the main points included in it in a notebook. If even this is not possible, at least go through the compilations which come out in the end.
This is an exercise whose importance I cannot emphasize enough. Reading 10 articles everyday on topics of relevance helps you gain perspective, increase your knowledge as well as teaches how to write answers comprehensively.
If there’s one thing in this entire write up that you wish to follow, let it be this. Trust me, you will not realize how much it helps you until the day of your result.
Other resources for paper 2:
Laxmikant
PRS
PIB
Various sites of the ministry
Vision current affair notes
What I did:
At the end of October, I made a notebook for paper 2. And I used to write one topic on one page – really concise and to the point. For ex- the juvenile justice bill. Make arrows and write about what it was, what it is now, main points about the bill, the pros, the cons, what prompted an amendment and the Way forward.
Insights initiative called MINDMAPS helped me in this a lot!!
This is how you should tackle a topic – inside out. So that once you’re done with it, you are able to answer almost anything related to it.
Make such a notebook at the end of the Oct/Nov and fill it up with 40-50 topics that were relevant the entire year and revise it in the week before the exam.
Will do wonders!!
GENERAL STUDIES PAPER 3
Similar strategy as above. Follow Insights Secure!!
2 new additions : Economic Survey : EXTREMELY IMPORTANT
key features of budget.
ARC for disaster.
GENERAL STUDIES PAPER 4
I would specifically say that this paper requires no preparation. It is a test of your analytical and decision making abilities as well as common sense. The best you can do is get 2 or 3 papers of a decent test series. Read and understand how to approach case studies and give one or two tests of ethics so as to understand the kind of questions asked.
Try not going for the extremes in the answers that demand a stand.
Express yourself well and try to finish the paper on time.
That’s all!
Personality Test :
The interview guidance write up on Insights was extremely useful to me. It gave me a direction at a point where I was clueless. I also gave 2 mocks each at Vaji and Samkalp.
The only useful piece of advice I can give you about PT is that more than the content of your answers, your conviction and your confidence matters.
Try building them up.
General tips :
1. Do not spend more than 2 months exclusively in the preparation of prelims . It is a qualifying exam. Instead use the time to increase your grip over your optional/GS mains.
2. Choose an optional you’re comfortable with. Something you enjoy reading and writing about. Optional marks can make or break your result. IT is the most crucial part of the preparation.
3. Answer writing practice has two parts to it :
One is the ability to finish a paper within 30 mins, to improve your speed and to have a good handwriting.
The other is to build your content from diverse sources, collect and present the information in an organized manner.
Both are required. Keep practicing until you’re good at both.
4. In the final exam, always write an introduction.. the content if possible in points followed by an optimistic conclusion. Train yourself to write answers in this manner quickly.
5. Personality Test is the most whimsical part of the entire process. Try not to depend on it at all . The Mains Exam is what gets you in the final list. Give it your best shot!!
Motivation:
This is an exam not only of knowledge but also of strength,patience and focus. Work hard. Be ambitious and do not be afraid to start. Start where you are. Start with fear, with doubt, with pain. Start with voice shaking and hands trembling.
Start where you are, with what you have. You can. You should.
And if you’re brave enough to start, you will succeed one day.

Abishek j jain, AIR-304

About ME :
ABHISHEK J JAIN
RANK 304
Graduation: IIT (BHU), Varanasi (2014)
Home Town: Delhi
Marksheet: (CSE-2015)
Prelims: GS (Paper-I): 115.34
Mains
General Bol Bachchan
There is a general jibe in India that “one decides what to do in life after joining the engineering college” . And I take no shy in accepting that I’m no exception to this. I’m not the one who had thought of clearing UPSC since childhood. Like many others, after getting into engineering I enjoyed as much and sooner it was final year that I have to decide of what to do in Life!!
After I returned from Internship from Taiwan, I got an opportunity to interact with a serving IRS officer during my final year who motivated me and ushered my path to take this challenge. The usual chemical engineering job didn’t fascinate me either. So, I decided not to sit in campus placement and instead started with Class 6 NCERT!!! (Career graph is going in reverse :D)
First Phase LEARNING
Initially everything seems to go haphazard, there was too much of everything and need to start from clean slate. I didn’t have habit of completing my newspapers. It took 2 hours to complete “THE” The Hindu. Like many others I picked up an optional which is most popular Public Administration, to which I agree was not well thought off. Just read class notes and standard book (Prasad & Prasad/Rajni Goyal) and thought I am ready to go. Rather than understanding and analyzing, I ran for Covering every bit notes available and mug them up. As & when I came across any topper’s strategy/notes, I rush forward to gather it. I had leap of Xerox notes/ summary of ARC’s/ Gists of Hindu, Yojana etc piled up in my room. (Aap notes ke peeche, notes aap ke peeche: too much fun). Instead of focusing on NCERTs I kept on speeding to Standard books. This strategy cost me a lot.
The most important thing that I learnt & corrected was to restrict to QUALITY not Quantity. Set small targets and move forward in
piecemeal approach.
The turn around-3 common problem & how to deal with them
PROCRASTINATION is the biggest enemy one has to face in this preparation that pushes even the brightest and calmest of minds into hells of negativity. Piles of unread The Hindu editorials kept staring at me with innocent look + remaining portion of optional revision pulls me other way round + in between my mind picks up Lakshmikant in-hand for prelim preparation. (There were days when my mother used to mock me that yesterday’s The Hindu was not even opened and seems fresh as new.) Unstable psyche chooses to avoid all this. (Till date ghost of procrastination keeps on haunting my mind palace).
My way-“DON’T WORRY TOO MUCH ABOUT THE PAST. IF YOU DO MORE NOW, THE PAST WILL SLOWLY MELT AWAY.”
Pick up the subject that you like the most. In my case it was Polity & Modern India (Gandhian Phase). Read from the Basic source (NCERT/Notes). Pick up General Studies Reference Manual (TMH/Pearson etc). It contains 400-500 Qns topic wise segment wise per subject. ATTEMPT. I challenged myself to score 90% in that. After that move to part tests of different institutes & build upon then after to full ones. Can form a group to push oneself or monitor your performance through tests.
FEAR – The yearlong process of preparation is like a sinusoidal wave, with moments of low and high takeover your capabilities. There came instances where I scored so low in my exams and felt so low that I even questioned myself whether I had taken right decision to jump in this Rat Race. (कहाँ ओखली में सिर दे दिया) Life would have been simpler if I had picked up a job instead. On the top of it the hysteria created in market, relatives & society as you enter in the field raises the negativity. (Walking across that “Bada Bazaar Marg” in Old Rajinder Nagar gives shiver of pessimism and chill ran across the spine).
For that take positive energy. Sources of Positivity – Parents/ Siblings/ Family/ Mentor/ Teacher/ Friends/ Qualified Aspirants/ Yoga & Sports (sweat out negativity)/ Introspection / Almighty (if not atheist). In my case my parents, my elder Brother Aman Bhaiya & twin brother Abhinav and some close friends have played vital role. Talking to them help me feeling rejuvenated especially when exams are approaching and test series give you reality check.
INDISCIPLINE -TO be frank, I’m not the one who can study 12-14 hours a day, 7 days a week straight. Though my planning has always been over 14 hours daily, but my hit ratio has never been 100%, it hovered around 60-70%. The plan that I made was always so good on paper, that could have even brought Planning Commission to shame. (Good that Hon’ble PM shut it off. :D:D). But these plans never saw the light of the sun in reality, in totality.
To overcome-“SUFFER THE PAIN OF DISCIPLINE OR SUFFER THE PAIN OF REGRET”
To set things straight, Discipline does not mean rise up 5 AM in morning and study straight till midnight on that study table having food there itself, taking newspaper on the way to class/or to the loo to capitalize those 5-10 minutes, or listening to AIR Spotlight while having dinner or listening to Mrunal lectures while going for a walk in Park. I did all this & realized it is only fooling my cognitive brain by my weak mind. This fooling has huge burden of ‘regret of failure’ as reward.
Later I realized that preparing for UPSC doesn’t mean you have to be robot/mechanical. I realized that UPSC is not Assembly line production of Wild Donkeys, running coaching door to door, instead it is race of Smart Ass). If I don’t feel like studying, I took the day off. Do what cheers one. (I like watching TBBT). BUT Discipline means sticking to basics and revising them again. Don’t rush here and there for Xerox notes/Gists/Shortcut materials. There is no dearth of information in this era of IT EXPLOSION. Shed away information overload. Focus on QUALITY. Revisiting one’s Notes + NCERTs 3 times is more important than rushing for 3 new sources for same topic from the market.
(I still find new things in NCERT Bipan Chandra after 3-4 times than that bulky blue cover book. e.g. in my 3rd reading I found that Mazhar-ul-Haq who accompanied Gandhiji in Champaran Satyagrha alonwith Acharyaji/Dr. Prasad/Mahadev Desai was same person who also resigned from Central Legislative Council membership alongwith Pt.MMM/Jinnah against Rowlatt Act). That’s why there’s ONLY one set of book to read cover to cover i.e. NCERT. Studying them religiously-repeatedly-rightly with clarity of Syllabus is for me, Discipline.
ART OF DECODING THE QUESTION
MAINS:
Prep Strategy – “3P” Model – Perseverance/Practice/Positive Mindset [प्रयास / परीक्षा / प्रार्थना]
Secret of scoring marks in MAINS lies in “ART OF DECODING THE QUESTION” (something I coined & learnt in my preparation phase in 2015 which is imperative for success in PubAd and gaining importance in GS as well).
Role of Practice: form a group of 2-3(maximum) and write answers. Writing TLP Not only helps in covering current affairs but also helps in gaining momentum of WRITING .
Practice: Be it prelims or mains, solving multiple MCQs and answer writing is a MUST. As Former President of India Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam said “Excellence is a continuous process and not an accident. Climbing to the top demand strength, whether it is to the top of Mount Everest or the top of your career” .
Learn and engrave syllabus in your memory. This will help in interlinking concepts. Reading 20 concepts and interlinking with other aspects to give output to 60 more odd areas is more important than reading 50 concepts without internalizing. Here IASBABA, came to rescue. It helped in gaining momentum and​​ learnt the concept of interlinking and answering through​​ MINDMAPS​ (which was very helpful in handling Questions like on Satyam Scandal by interlinking concepts of governance, transparency and accountability from GS-2 + Companies Act (2013) from GS-3 + Corporate governance from GS-4)
I want to pay my sincere obligation to IASBaba Team as a secret admirer. Their answer writing strategy in ESSAY and ETHICS is impeccable as it helped me a lot esp in case study understanding.​ I want to thank for their selfless effort in ​​TLP initiative . It took 7 days of continuous posting my answers on the website to get my first answer evaluated by B​abaji, in which I was awarded 5/10, that worked as self-reality check​.
It is because of this platform that I gained momentum and learnt the concept of interlinking and answering through MINDMAPS
(which was very helpful in handling Question on Satyam Scandal by interlinking concepts of governance, transparency and accountability from GS-2 + Companies Act (2013) from GS-3 +Corporate governance from GS-4. )
BETTER TO SWEAT IN PRACTICE RATHER BLEED IN WAR”
Though I was not regular in posting my answers as I was
attending test series for GS & Optional​ in person but I make sure to write answers on questions given on IASBABA platform at my level​ diligently​​.​ It gave me clearer picture of understanding and sticking to the core of the question.​​
Eg – YOU MUST NOT blabber out everything you know about about Article 44 just only ‘Uniform Civil Code’ word is mentioned in question. If I would have attempted same question in 2014 than I would not have thought about what the demand of question is/ how many parts are there in question/ Have I substantiated my stand with suitable examples/ Can one think of factors beyond Politics to social, economic, Governance & administration feasibility angle/ Are there any Historical learnings (hint-Hindu Code Bill which was studied in Paper 1 Post independence India).
Write the answers/ solve previous year question, even if you are 100% sure that you have not covered 100% of your syllabus. Earlier I always postponed the idea of writing till I “FINISH” my syllabus. That Situation never arrived, and will never arrive. ‘Leaving no stone unturned’ might land one on the same side of the fence as by the time (s)he engage in un-turning every stone, other colleagues (vanars) would have formed (Ram-) setu with the limited stones available at their disposal. In my opinion Hanuman Strategy of taking a giant leap might work for some extra-ordinary minds, but for a common mind setting the things in motion and moving forward requires gradual piecemeal approach.
For eg- “The ancient civilization in Indian sub-continent differed from those of Egypt, Mesopotamia and Greece in that its culture and traditions have been preserved without a breakdown to the present day. Comment. ” (UPSC GS-1 2015 Ques 1)
This statement is verbatim picked up from AL BASHAM “The Wonder that was India” (Chapter 1 Page 4). A Maximizing mind would now read 700 page book to satisfy the quench neglecting core books and without analyzing cost:benefit ratio, but a satisficing mind will try to link the existing base of knowledge gathered from NCERT/Notes to form an acceptable 200 words answer by collating aspects of deep unchanging social aspects in India (like Varna System), ancient civilizations importance in today’s religious understanding (like Vedic Hymns), India taking more pride in its ancestoral roots (like Freedom fighters referring back to rich history), contribution of Historical studies/inscriptions, European excavations etc.
I didn’t go for reading books like Governance in GS2/Ramesh Singh in GS3/Subba Rao or Ramesh Arora in GS4 cover to cover. I guess I developed laziness on that part to pick fresh books. This limitation of limited reading forced me to think and interconnect dots from available minimum knowledge in me. The capacity to assemble and interlink aspects is imperative in Essay and Ethics as one don’t expect bookish/factual/Ritualistic answer in these areas. Capacity to innovate and collate multiple-dimensions of a single problem with examples proves handy in Essay & Ethics.
Leave the question blank if you don’t know anything about it instead of filling the pages. THIS IS NOT UNIVERSITY EXAM. You are not expected to be PhD in each topic and will not be awarded if you paint the sheet blue. I left one question in each GS-1/2/3 paper.
PubAd – I attempted religiously Test series in Lukmaan and followed up on feedback of Ansari Sir. Important to address all parts of question and understand core demand of the question. For e.g. –Do you agree with the view that the charismatic approach of the mid-1970s is a “new version” of the Classical Trait Theory of Leadership? Give reasons.
In 2014 I would have just put in words all I know about Classical Trait theory & charismatic theory. I would have put lots of technical jargons/thinkers name.
But instead now I realized, that it is important not only to compare and analyse their similarities but also explain “newness” by describing differences taking into account the ecology of the era in which the theories were developed with suitable examples. Take clear stand with due substance in the end weighing both sides of the coin.
I’ve deliberately tried to avoid going in internal dynamics of which chapter of which book to study for which part of mains, for that matter I believe there are enough IAS gurus and Matas in the market. One can follow either and stick to it. My target is to give you an insight on how to reap from existing sources by interlinking and bringing together, through Practice (3P Model). I am available at abhishekjjain2@gmail.com
IASbaba
Guys, we would like to bring to your notice a very important point. Abhishek is one such candidate who has scored amazingly well learning from his mistakes and it is evident from 2014 (575 Marks) to 2015 (759 Marks). Can you see the great leap?

Tuesday 31 May 2016

Value Added Materials

VISIONIAS VALUE ADDED MATERIAL'S HUGE COMPILATION

Link

https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B7YJIXHJzDESRUd5VFI0Uno2bUU&usp=drive_web

Saturday 28 May 2016

Now or Never !

Failures & Toppers

Overcome Failures and Try to become a Topper
Failures, small or big, affect us all. They dent confidence. They derail our routine. They create self-doubts. They instill fear. Well, that’s negative part.On the other hand, they make us strong. They teach us valuable lessons for life. Failures make us realisethat there are better ways to do things and helps us open our eyes to new avenues in life. You know stories of lots of great people who failed and then became great. If you choose to let failures affect you negatively, you will be injured for life. If you learn from failures and start chasing your dreams with renewed vigour, chances are more that you will succeed.When you started preparing for this exam, you knew the challenges. Most people around you, even parents might have doubted your abilities. Some might have stared at you with that indifferent look and told you that this exam is the toughest and you better be happy with what you already have, or aim for something smaller. Even some might have sympathised with you for wasting precious time of your life chasing the impossible.Yet, you made the decision and started this journey. Will you quit just because you failed in one of the stages of this exam?At present you must belong to either one of the following categories: Gave interview but didn’t see your name in the final list; Have given multiple attempts including Mains and now worrying about how to succeed in 2016; A beginner ardently readingtopper’s interviews here and there and trying to be one of them next year; Have failed prelims 2-3 times or more and depressed thinking what’s going wrong in your preparation; A beneficiary of extra attempts and trying to win the battle at any cost as you know that both age and attempts are not on your side; Or aperson who got rank but not at all satisfied with what you have got, and wants to figure in Top 50 next year.The common desire is to get a top rank. You might have already dreamt multiple times about getting first rank and becoming a national celebrity. But somewhere in your preparation journey, this dream of getting a top rank wanes and waxes – with your level of commitment to the goal you have chosen and with the number of failures that you have faced.Every failure that you have faced is a lesson. For some of you who never failed in life, these failure may be shocking and overwhelming. For some of you who have seen so many failures, this one more failure in this exam might be unbearable. Will you quit the race?Some quit. They see no point in struggling for too long when they have some other opportunities in their life. For some, IAS or IPS might be just another good job and their interest in them will not last long. But for you, what’s the motivation to get into IAS/IPS/IFS?Give it a serious thought. If your desire to get into these services is very strong, then have no self-doubt, even if you fail many times, you can still go for it and achieve it. Right attitude matters when you are after something that’s very dear to you. You know that you have that desire and determination to get a good rank in this exam, yet self-doubt keeps lingering in your head. Am I movingin right direction? Am I studying right materials? Am I following right strategy? Will I be able to score sucha high Marks as scored by Tina  Dhabi and Ira Singhal? What if I don’t clear prelims? What if I don’t get good marks in my optional? What if I fail? Do I have ability in me to clear UPSC civil services exam?Almost everyone gets these doubts. Topper will not know he/she would become topper. But, they will for sure know that they will get a good rank. They become better by working hard. Once they come out of exam hall, they know that they have given their best shot. They will know that their name will figure in the final list. This confidence stems from strong self belief, which in turn comes from very good preparation.Every day you have a chance to follow the right thing. You have an opportunity to correct past mistakes and push yourself towards your goal. If you think you lack ability, work hard and harder. You will gain the ability. If you think you are weak in optional, put more hours into optional preparation. You will master it. However  you work hard,  you will still get self doubts – especially while preparing for UPSC Civil Services Exam. But have faith and keep working hard. Gradually, self doubts get defeated by your consistency in your hard work. There are many who fought many odds and got top ranks despite spending so many years into UPSC civil services exam preparation. What distinguishes them from others who can’t make it finally?It’s ability to overcome failures and making course correction at right time. Don’t experiment all the time. Stick to the plan that’s giving you confidence and push yourself to improve efficiency and productivity.To give an example, we have seen students who used to complain that it used to take 4-5 hours to answer 2-3Securequestions. We told them that in the beginning it will consume lots of time, but if they push themselves and stick to writing for 15-20 days, they will get better at it. Some quit. But some who didn’t quit are today writing answers toallSecurequestions injust 2 hours.Shed cynicism. It’s a very dangerous attitude. Someone might tell you – he/she was the best and tried their best in this exam, yet failed. This might discourage you. But, you are not he/she. You are you. You should know what’s your weaknesses and strengths. Work hard to overcome your weaknesses.Try to improve your strengths. Follow one strategy that worked for most toppers, or that’s working for you, and no matter what people tell you, stick to the strategy.Don’t get lured by overwhelming amount of sources that are released in the market both online and offline. Everything seems important. But, can you digest everything? Whatever you see in market are just different shades of same colour (You will get current events and other stuff from so many sources, followany1-2 sources only). Go with the one you like and trust most.There is nothing wrong in aiming for a top rank.  To get there, you must be a ‘Serious Aspirant’. Most people mistake serious aspirant for the guy/girl who spends more hours ‘reading’ all kinds of books; or the one who appears very serious, always  roams around with 2-3 books in his/her hand; or the one who pretends to know everything.Appearances and attitudes can be deceptive. Don’t get disheartened by looking at thousands of ‘SeriousAspirants’ around you. A serious aspirant is the one who is determined as hell to win this battle at any cost. They are people of actions – they write whole year, they revise at regular intervals, they know their strengths and weaknesses, they know that with eachpassing day, they are getting closer to their goal. They are least worried about failures. They not just dream of becoming topper, they work towards achieving this goal. And their number is very less.There are very few serious aspirants around you. Their number may be less than 5000. Be one of them. You can be one of them. It doesn’t matter where you stand now in terms of preparation. You can still push, push and push yourself harder and inch closer to achieving your dream. You don’t know what are your limits unless you try to push them. Everyday push your limits. Youwill go on gaining confidence, and one day after writing mains, you will say – yes, I will see my name in the list even if I get 130 in interview!Yes, there are uncertainties in this exam. Even after giving your best, you might still not get a good rank. Will you quit? Unless we try our best again and again, we will neverknow what the future holds for us. This year you might have missed a rank by 1 mark, or failed prelims by fraction of a mark. Who knows, you can be a topper next time. So, never rest or quit. Neither complain nor protest. Silently work hard. Even though there are just no days to prelims, believe us – if you push limits, even if you start now, you can clear it. Gather all your strengths and go ahead. Right now, there are so many hopes on you by so many dear and near ones. Don’t disappoint them this time. Overcome inertia. Start again. If you rest, someone will take you rank. At the end of the day, it’s just competition. You have everything to win this competition. And you know what to do. Just do it.☺

Friday 27 May 2016

KIRTHI C, AIR 14

My UPSC Journey
I’m Kirthi Chekuri. I am fortunate enough to have cleared UPSC with 14thrank in my third attempt (CSE-2015). My ranks in previous attempts were 440in CSE-2013 and 512 in CSE-2014. I was preparing for the exam this time while undergoing the training in academy.I would try to tell what worked and what didn’t work for me. I hope at least someone would benefit from lessons of mistakes that I’ve committed and how I rectified them. These inputs I’m putting across were the ones I gathered over the course of 4 years from many friends and seniors in services. Thanks to all of them EssayI am a consistently low performer in Essay. I got 100marks in CSE-2013 and 86 marks in CSE-2014. I lost in my second attempt due to essay. The mistakes I committed in these attempts were not to practice essays, over looking the importance of essay, thinking content in essay would automatically give marks and ignorance of what to be and what not be included in essay.This year I got 125 which is again not a great score but it didn’t pull my rank and my chances down drastically as it happened last year. I brainstormed on many essay topics(introductions/conclusions and flow of ideas)and discussed it with my friends and asked for criticisms.
*.We should clearly mention our stand in the essay initially after the introduction
*.The essay should cover as many dimensions aspossible and should have one dominant idea perparagraph
*.The thought in the essay should be as simple aspossible. Kids must be able to understand your essay. I used to make essays complicated which never gave good marks
*.Choose the essay topic you’re most comfortablewith. Don’t select the essay based on the perception of most written or least written topic. All that matters is how well are you able to do justice to the topic you’ve chosen
*.Your essay should have justifications supporting your stand, also include some criticisms against your stand and end in a positive/hopeful way on how things can be bettered etc.
Prelims All of us tend to overestimate our potential and tend to neglect prelims thinking Prelims marks wouldn’t count for the exam. Neglecting prelims can prove to be a very costly mistake. Many toppers in the list cleared prelims with a margin of 1-3 marks. One can understand that 1-2 questions in Prelims can make or break your dreams.I cleared the Prelims in CSE-2013 by 4 marks. It was a close margin. I got very lucky. In CSE-2014 I cleared prelims with a comfortable margin. My reason for low performance in Prelims 2013 was minimal practice in Quant and playing safe in Paper-1. I knew 45 questions comfortably in paper-1 and I just guessed 10 more there by attempting just 55 questions. Luckily I cleared Prelims that year but after speaking to many successful people in Prelims,I realized it was a very dangerous strategy. In prelims, one should mark the questions in which oneis 100% percent sure in the first round. In the secondround, one should also try to attempt those questions in which one can eliminate two options. With this strategy, I comfortably cleared prelims in CSE 2014, but in this CSE 2015, I cleared prelims only by 3 marks (110)MainsIn my first two attempts, my mains marks were marginally above the cut-off(10 marks) I cleared both the attempts only because of my interview. However this attempt, there is a drastic improvement in my mains marks. Here are the few changes I made in my Mains answer writing approach and I think they helped me enormously.
*.Diagrams: I drew a lot of diagrams. India and World Maps for geography or International Relations. Also I prepared diagrams for Geo from NCERT books which I thought I would replicate in case Geo questions come in Paper-1.
*.Side headings: In my first two attempts, my answer was just a flow of paragraphs/points or a mix of both. I realized the importance of side headings for an answer in this attempt. I included side headings in almost all the answers for paper-1,2 and 3 of GS. In paper-2 and paper-3, I usedWay Forwardas the last sideheading for some of the answers.
*.Flow Charts: I drew flow charts in Paper-3. I got 113 marks in Paper-3 and I think flow charts have a role to play along with side headings. People who got good marks in paper-1 drew flowcharts for society questions
*.Breadth instead of Depth: Cover as many dimensions as possible in an answer rather than covering the issue in depth with quality analysis. UPSC prefers the no. of dimensions in an answer and I guess it penalizes an in-depth scholarly answer
*.Introduction:Take the key words of the questionand explain them. That becomes the introduction. Eg: An introduction for a question on Cooperative Federalism would mean explaining itThough I gathered some of these points here and there in my previous attempts, I didn’t internalize them in my preparation. I didn’t integrate them while preparing for a particular topic. This time whenever I read a topic or whenever I read a question fromInsightsonIndia(I have been following answer writing challenges regularly), I give more importance to the above mentioned points- what are the side-headings I can give, how can I draw flow chart for this question, maximizing the dimensions etc. This way, I internalized this way of answer writing during my preparation for GS or Current Affairs, so I didn’t have to think afresh on the day of exam. Due to training myself well before hand, I didn’t take much time on the day of exam to draw diagrams, flow charts, side-headings etc.One should try to attempt as many questions as you can in the GS. Unless you are absolutely clueless and can’t make an intelligent guess about what’s asked, you should not leave questions.Please go through the question paper in first 2-3 minutes and select the questions you are good at(around 10) and attempt them first. Only then go for the other questions on which you’ll have little idea where you have to guess. In the last attempt, I started attempting questions from the beginning without going through the whole question paper and I realized I was left with all the well-known International Relations Questions in the last minute to which I couldn’t do enough justice. Do some test exams and if you’re not able to finish paper in time, you’ll have to improve speed through giving more and more tests and practicing with time limits. Ethics paper was very lengthy and many were not able to finish the paper.

Wednesday 25 May 2016

STRATEGY FOR G.S PAPER 1

GS – Paper 1, which is of 250 marks, is one of the most scoring papers in the written examination. It also has the most static portion of all the four GS papers – once you read the standard books and understand the content, answering questions from this paper becomes easier.
Having said that, static portion in this paper, does not mean factual questions, nor does it mean repeated questions from previous years. (Of course, exceptions are always there). It only means that the syllabus won’t change with the current on-going events. Many opinion-based questions are a part of GS-1 as well, which are based on the static portion.
One brilliant example from the 2014 paper can be cited here.
The third battle of Panipat was fought in 1761. Why were so many empire-shaking battles fought at Panipat?
This is rooted in the static portion of History. Most of the students read the details about the First, Second and Third Battles of Panipat. Even though this question is “Static” in its true sense, it is not “factual”.
The student must “think” on the spot for a variety of factors, as to why Panipat was the chosen place for many battles. This has
geographical perspective, climatic, empire boundaries and many other such factors.
So, while attempting GS-1, even though it is rooted in static portion, one must not fail to “think”. While reading the static portion, one must always ask the questions “why” and “how”,
more than what.
The syllabus of General Studies- 1 can be broadly divided into
History, Sociology, Geography and a few topics related to Anthropology .
The article discusses about Preparation Strategy for General Studies-1. The strategy gives you
1. Topic-wise analysis
2. Book recommendations and
3. What to Read and How to read/Understand the subject.
Note: Before going through the strategy, click on Detailed Mind Maps for Syllabus . Mind Maps are only directive not exhaustive. It is done for a better understanding of the syllabus keeping in mind the requirements of a beginner
A. HISTORY:
It includes the following subtopics
Indian culture will cover the salient aspects of Art Forms, Literature and Architecture from ancient to modern times.
Modern Indian history from about the middle of the eighteenth century until the present significant events, personalities, issues.
The Freedom Struggle – its various stages and important contributors or contributions from different parts of the country.
Post-independence consolidation and reorganization within the country.
History of the world will include events from 18th century such as industrial revolution, world wars, redrawal of national boundaries, colonization, decolonization, political philosophies like communism, capitalism, socialism etc- their forms and effect on the society.
1. Indian Culture: Art Forms, Literature and Architecture from Ancient to Modern times.
Frankly speaking, this topic is one of the most irritating topics in the whole syllabus as per many aspirants. There are literally thousands of paintings, folk dances, festivals, literary books, architectural marvels, and many more to remember. Considering the weightage given and the number of questions based on this is never more than 3-4. Out of 250 marks, the
weightage given to this section is not more than 30 marks. So, the cost-benefit ratio of remembering so many names and information is a sheer wastage of time and memory space. Moreover, the questions asked are opinion-based and not factual.
We are not discouraging you to, not to study this section altogether. Rather based on input-output ratio, one most devote the time smartly. You should not panic! If you do so you will end up with a heap of resources. Hence, IASbaba intends to give you the best resources and approach that will not only save your quality time but also earn credit in generating quality answers. A
myth about this section is that, it is completely static and only factual data has to be prepared through books and notes. Ah, really??
No, not at all!! Here you will get to know that even this section, seemingly factual can be prepared from newspapers if you can
relate it smartly . In the dynamic section, we have explained this in detail.
Sources/books to follow
STATIC : CCRT Website and Tamil Nadu book- Class 11th
Read these resources as per your convenience.
Indian Performing Arts
Indian Visual Arts
Indian Literature through Ages
Old NCERT Class 11 – Fine Arts
Tamil Nadu- Class 11th book
DYNAMIC:
In The Hindu, a section named ‘Friday Review’ is dedicated for updates in Indian Culture. It comprises of Dance, Music, Faith, Art and History and Culture.
UPSC has asked many questions from this section in past years. You just need to have a thorough understanding of topics
mentioned in the syllabus. This will help you in picking up or
selecting the right articles from the newspaper related to culture. And will immensely help you both at the Prelims and Mains. Let us see, How?
For example,
This article – mentions about Thang-Ta , a ‘Manipuri Marshal Art of Sword and Shield’. This can be asked in Prelims.
If you go through books and other resources, you will end up with unlimited facts and figures that’s beyond human capability. This is not required for this exam. What we suggest is study smart– Keep your resources minimum and Revise again and again!!
Now coming back to the importance of the Newspaper – ‘while reading the newspaper keep an eye on the topics mentioned in the syllabus’. Newspaper gives you more information and dimensions that you seldom find in a book (or say miss in books).
For example,
Though not very useful from the point of view of a connected
political history of South India, the Sangam literature portrays the
social and economic conditions of its time with remarkable vividness. Comment (2013)
You might have read all the static part thoroughly, but still looking at this question makes you feel OMG!! Where the hell did UPSC come up with such a question?
The Answer to this is –
If you read static books then there is every possibility that you may not be able to answer it because there are infinite aspects in Literature section. Also, many of you will never prepare in such detail. So the Mantra should be ‘take the reference from newspapers and then prepare about that topic accordingly’.
Here is the reference for above question asked by UPSC in 2013.
Previous Year UPSC Questions:
Chola architecture represents a high watermark in the evolution of temple architecture. Discuss.(2013)
Here is the reference for this question
Reference 2
Discuss the Tandava dance as recorded in the early Indian inscriptions.(2013)
Here is the reference for this question
To what extent has the urban planning and culture of the Indus Valley Civilization provided inputs to the present day urbanization? Discuss. (2014)
Here is the reference for this question
Gandhara sculpture owed as much to the Romans as to the Greeks. Explain. (2014)
Reference: For quite a sometime in 2012 and 2013, Buddhist Sculptures were in news due to its safety issues and attacks by Taliban.
Taxila university was one of the oldest universities of the world with which were associated a number of renowned learned personalities of different disciplines. Its strategic location caused its fame to flourish, but unlike Nalanda, it is not considered as a university in the modern sense. Discuss. (2014)
Reference:
Recent opening of Nalanda University
Are you able to understand the intention behind these references and links?
So, do not read much into this topic. Just going through the
CCRT website or notes , NCERT’s, The Hindu-Friday Review or other links related to this topic and answer-writing for some model questions is more than enough.
Some tips to remember for Culture
Focus on retrospective study, once finished with the static portion. What we mean by “Retrospective study”- Make a note of terms, articles, which are in recent news from The Hindu or other sources and revise them.
Don’t fall under the trap of reading more books , this will only increase your anxiety and lower your confidence. After going through previous year’s UPSC questions and the strategy on how to prepare for Mains on IASbaba, you would have realized that even if you remember most of the things, there is no guarantee that one can answer such questions.
Do not even think of mugging up. It is Mission- impossible!!
Book references from fellow aspirants, coaching materials and books in the market will tempt you every now and then. But remember the Golden words of IASbaba –‘it is a sheer waste of time!!’ Instead study smartly – make your own plan, stick to a few resources, critically examine the issues from every possible angle and revise again and again .
The cost benefit of preparing this section as compared to other topics is very less. Even if you go for extensive coverage, you may not be able to produce it. But if you prepare smartly as discussed above, then there is every possibility for you to produce quality answers in the exam.
2. Modern Indian history from about the middle of the eighteenth century until the present significant events, personalities, issues and The Freedom Struggle – its various stages and important contributors or contributions from different parts of the country.
Indian National Movement and Indian Modern history is one of the most interesting and eventful topics, which gives a sense of
nationalistic feeling in us while reading it. So, this can be read from a plethora of books for self-satisfaction, or to know more about the epic struggle for independence.
Many people do read a lot of books on this topic, solely because the books are page-turners and written in the style of novels. They do give a very intriguing story, and reading stories are always entertaining. But for UPSC, this topic needs to be analyzed from a historiographical perspective (critically examination of sources) , so just blindly turning pages, understanding only the “events” is not enough. The book that we recommend for the wholesome understanding and the implications of this phase is –
STATIC:
Spectrum’ Comprehensive History of Modern India
This book deals with more of understanding the philosophy of the events, rather than just listing the events and giving a gripping narrative. It is more of a subject matter book, than a story-telling novel.One book is more than enough for this whole topic. Other books like ‘India’s Struggle for Independence’ by
Bipan Chandra OR ‘India After Gandhi’ by Ramachandra Guha , can be read if you have the time and energy.
Note: You may find NCERT’s useful too but for Mains; Spectrum Book will suffice your need as you must have finished NCERT’s for PRELIMS preparation.
In Dynamic section, we will refer to the aspects of Modern India and relate whether it can also be prepared from recent news or articles, or not?
DYNAMIC:
The Hindu: Referring to newspapers will increase your awareness on the topics and aspects that is important from any section mentioned in the syllabus. It is important to study from static sources or books but it is more important to know and smartly guess what topics are important for the respective year.
And this can best be done by following the news and articles coming in newspapers like The Hindu. We will show you how?
Note: In past years, most of the questions asked by UPSC from Modern India had appeared in some or the other form in newspapers of that year or preceding year. In 2013, almost all the questions asked by USPC had appeared in the news. Let us check to build credibility
Examples: Check these questions from 2013
Defying the barriers of age, gender and religion, the Indian women became the torch bearer during the struggle for freedom in India. Discuss .
Reference: This article that appeared in March 2013, should have formed a light for preparing the content for answering the above question. The article even mentions about the crux word,
‘The Torch Bearer’ . How easy it would become for aspirants if they prepare like this!!
Several foreigners made India their homeland and participated in various movements. Analyze their role in the Indian struggle for freedom.
Reference: This article that appeared in August 2013, could have acted as a building base for above question.
In many ways, Lord Dalhousie was the founder of modern India. Elaborate.
Reference:
Reference 2:
Why did UPSC ask this question?
Because Telegram service was stopped and when the telegraph service was first set up in India, part of Lord Dalhousie’s ambitious reforms , it was the symbol of an advancing modernity.
Discuss the contribution of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad to pre-and post-independent India.
Reference: Many articles appeared in The Hindu in the year 2013, mentioning about the contribution of Abdul Kalam Azad. Likewise such personalities are to be prepared in the Modern India section. You should prepare about all because UPSC is unpredictable but if you stick to smart study like this, your efforts will be maximized towards achieving success rather than wasting your time and energy.
Now check the questions from Mains-2014
Examine critically the various facets of economic policies of the British in India from mid-eighteenth century till independence.
Reference: Though it is an easy question and forms part of every static book in detail. But one can easily know that it may catch the attention of UPSC as it has appeared in the newspaper in some or the other form.
3. Post-independence consolidation and reorganization within the country.
Post-independence consolidation is much more interesting than Indian National Movement, because it has its effects on the present scenario too. Instead of reading a book, we would refer to watch a web-series on the same.
Sources/books
Pradhan Mantri on YouTube : This program has 24 episodes, which gives a detailed analysis of events right from 1947 to 2014. Each episode takes one phase and the anchor talks about the issues pertaining to those times. Ofcourse, there is some bias in the depiction, but ongoing politics is always embedded with media bias. A true civil service aspirant should aim to extract the required knowledge and should ignore the inherent media bias.
After this, any of the standard books can be read for a further in-depth understanding, like
Bipan Chandra’s India Since Independence
You can also refer to Modern India, Old NCERT book.
4. History of the world – From mid 18 th
Before reading such topics, always try to watch videos on that, to have a basic ground-level understanding. These topics consist of a bunch of sub-topics like World Wars, American Revolution, French Revolution, Russian Revolution, Industrial Revolution etc. Most of them are stand-alone topics, and can be understood within 10-15 minutes if you watch the right videos.
Sources/books
We would recommend Khan Academy’s series of lecture videos which can be accessed online. Salman Khan, who is financed by Google, has created hundreds of videos on such topics, and watching them would help one understand the topic really well.After which, any standard book can be taken to give a further in-depth reading like
Mastering Modern World History- Norman Lowe
History of the World from the Late Nineteenth to the Early Twenty-First Century
One very good book to refer is Contemporary World History by J.S.Rajput published by NCERT. But this is not available nowadays. It is available in the premises of the Holy Mukherjee Nagar as Xerox
B. SOCIOLOGY
Salient features of Indian Society, Diversity of India.
Role of women and women’s organization, population and associated issues, poverty and developmental issues, urbanization, their problems and their remedies.
Effects of globalization on Indian society.
Social empowerment, communalism, regionalism & secularism.
Note: Refer to Mind Maps for Sociology topics. It has various dimensions related to all these topics. Detailed Mind Maps
All the topics can be read from the NCERT Sociology text-book, class 11th and 12th, newspapers, online articles etc. Many of these issues have been discussed/addressed in websites such as QUORA.COM
Note: YOJANA published by Ministry of Information and Broadcasting should be your first preference for social issues .
Most of these topics are dynamic, rooted in the static portion. So, a separate study from standard books is not needed. Just a
general awareness along with original thinking is more than enough.
For eg., In 2013, a question on the implications of globalization on the old-age was asked. You cannot find such answers in a single “standard book”. What it requires is awareness and on-the-spot thinking. So, instead of reading books, reading the newspapers along with innovative discussions is what is necessary.
1. Salient features of Indian Society, Diversity of India.
Sources/books to refer
NCERT– Indian Society Class 12th – More than enough for basic understanding
You don’t need to read Ram Ahuja or any other book for this. Save your time and work efficiently. A basic understanding and general awareness is enough to answer UPSC questions and NCERT book will solve your purpose.
2. Role of women and women’s organization, population and associated issues, poverty and developmental issues, urbanization, their problems and their remedies.
As you can see these topics are dynamic in nature and enough content can be found from newspapers and YOJANA articles of previous months. Before jumping into sources to prepare, let us have a look at previous year’s questions asked by UPSC.
How does patriarchy impact the position of a middle class working woman in India? (2014)
Do you need to refer to any book to answer this question?
Not really. What you need is to quantify your knowledge base and analytical approach to such topics and the best ingredient available is Newspaper articles, debates and discussion on Rajya Sabha or social platforms etc.
Why do some of the most prosperous regions of India have an adverse sex ratio for women? Give your arguments. (2014)
Check these articles published in The Hindu in 2014 and introspect.
Reference 1
Reference 2
The life cycle of a joint family depends on economic factors rather than social values. Discuss (2014)
Check this article of The Indian Express published in 2014
Reference
Discuss the various economic and socio-cultural forces that are driving increasing feminization of agriculture in India. (2014)
Read this article, published by Live Mint in 2014
Reference
Sources/books to refer
NCERT- Sociology 12th
Human Development Report for Population and Poverty Issues
Do refer Economic Survey and India Year Book for data’s and facts.
Population and Issues- Read this
Urbanization Issues- 12th Five Year Plan
Newspapers- The Hindu, Economic Times and Business Standard
3. Effects of globalization on Indian society
This topic is a general one. You do not need to go through any book to prepare. Play smart and prepare the relevant stuffs from current affairs and news. Have a look at a question from 2013 Mains paper.
Critically examine the effects of globalization on the aged population in India. (2013)
Check this article published in Yojana, 2013
Reference
Sources/books to refer
No book as such because while studying from sociology, class 12th, economy and polity, you will generate enough content to understand this topic.
Articles from newspapers- A must
Yojana Magazine- Check for update
4. Social empowerment, communalism, regionalism & secularism.
All these topics do not require any scholar understanding. You just need a basic knowledge and analytical perspective to relate the basics into contemporary developments.
Note: Reading a whole book or several sources for these topics has many disadvantages. One of them is cost benefit ratio. Second is wastage of your precious time and energy. If one plays smart here, can substantially devote his/her energy for other important topics having more weightage.
One such example is from the question asked by UPSC on Secularism, in 2014.
How do the Indian debates on secularism differ from the debates in the West? (2014)
Reference:
In 2014, BJP Government came to power. There were questions raised on the secular fabrics of India by some religious fanatics that followed a huge debate and row over Indian Secularism. One article in The Hindu went on for an analysis of Indian versus Western Secularism. Hence UPSC came up with this question.
Refer to QUORA for having multidimensional views and opinion on social issues and topics related to this section.
Growing feeling of regionalism is an important factor in the generation of demand for a separate state. Discuss. (2013)
Reference- Telangana Formation
Sources/books to refer
No book to refer other than NCERT’s. While studying from NCERT’s, you will be able to gather enough content for these topics.
Newspaper Articles- For analytical aspect
Do browse the website of Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment and look for any important update on Social Empowerment.
C. GEOGRAPHY
It has following subtopics
Salient features of world’s physical geography.
Distribution of key natural resources across the world; factors responsible for the location of primary, secondary, and tertiary sector industries in various parts of the world (including India).
Important Geophysical phenomena such as earthquakes, Tsunami, Volcanic activity, cyclone etc., geographical features and their location – changes in critical geographical features (including waterbodies and ice-caps) and in flora and fauna and the effects of such changes.
1. Salient features of world’s physical geography.
Generally aspirants rush to cover geography in length and breadth from number of books be it NCERT’s, Majid Hussain or G.C.Leong. But the changing trend by UPSC says otherwise. We are not discouraging to study basic books like NCERT’s but do not end up in rote learning. Since the change in pattern, 2013, UPSC is asking more of analytical questions than static. However, one should not ignore basic books as it forms the base for developing analytical perspective.
Now let us check some of the questions asked by UPSC in 2013 to understand the strategy and way ahead.
What do you understand by the theory of continental drift? Discuss the prominent evidences in its support. (2013)
Though static in its true sense but this topic and many more can be prepared with more attention while preparing from newspaper. How?
Yes, the same year two articles came in The Hindu. Click on the references below
Reference 1
Reference 2
Note: The comparison is not to discourage anyone from reading basic books rather it is to make you understand the smart way of learning. One can memorize everything on earth but UPSC exam is not about this. If you slightly tweak your preparation towards smart study, success will follow in less time.
Geography becomes very interesting when you can visualize various phenomena, and the best books to help you with that are the standard ones which everyone must read atleast twice.
Sources/books to prepare
NCERT- Class 11th, Physical Geography
Goh Cheng Leong – Physical Geography
Newspapers- The Hindu and Business Line
Videos on Youtube
2. Distribution of key natural resources across the world; factors responsible for the location of primary, secondary, and tertiary sector industries in various parts of the world (including India).
Most of the topics can be prepared from static books but a reference can be found from newspapers.
Let us refer to previous years questions and check whether they were part of newspapers or not?
With growing scarcity of fossil fuels, the atomic energy is gaining more and more significance in India. Discuss the availability of raw material required for the generation of atomic energy in India and in the world. (2013)
This question is more of static portion and general awareness. India is shifting towards Nuclear and Solar power. Lots of initiatives and governments efforts are put to achieve efficient technological advancement. Many articles appeared in 2013 newspapers suggesting the need of Atomic Energy and Solar Energy. So this question was expected
Reference
It is said the India has substantial reserves of shale oil and gas, which can feed the needs of country for quarter century. However, tapping of the resources doesn’t appear to be high on the agenda. Discuss critically the availability and issues involved. (2013)
In September 2013, India gave way to Shale Gas Policy. Many articles in newspapers appeared suggesting the critical issues involved.
Reference 1
Reference 2
Critically evaluate the various resources of the oceans which can be harnessed to meet the resource crisis in the world. (2014)
Reference
How does India see its place in the economic space of rising natural resource rich Africa? (2014)
This question signifies the interconnection of paper 2 and 1. Various articles can be found in newspapers of 2014 that has direct mention on the theme of this question. Check the reference
Reference
Sources/books to refer
Old NCERT Geography- Land and People
New Geography- Class 12th– Human Geography and India-People and Economy
Newspapers- The Hindu and Business Line
3. Important Geophysical phenomena such as earthquakes, Tsunami, Volcanic activity, cyclone etc., geographical features and their location – changes in critical geographical features (including water bodies and ice-caps) and in flora and fauna and the effects of such changes.
These topics can best be prepared through newspapers because most of the changing phenomenon be it Earthquake, Cyclones, El-Nino, Tsunami etc are part of modern geographical changes due to climate change or Global Warming and finds mention in newspaper quite often.
Let us check previous year questions.
The recent cyclone on the east coast of India was called “Phailin”. How are the tropical cyclones named across the world? (2013)
The reference for this question can be found from this article of Business Line published in October 2013.
Reference
Bring out the causes for the formation of heat islands in the urban habitat of the world.
Urban Heat Island was in news for quite a long time and even now in news. Here are the references for this question that were published in The Hindu and Business Line ( 2013)
Reference 1
Reference 2
Bring out the causes for more frequent landslides in the Himalayas than in Western Ghats. (2013)
Uttarakhand Disaster was the reference here. But UPSC tweaked it and rather asked about the differences in the nature of Landslides for Himalayas and Western Ghats. One can find several articles at that time.
Reference
Most of the unusual climatic happenings are explained as an outcome of the El-Nino effect. Do you agree? (2014)
It was an expected question. 2014 was thought to be El-Nino year and several studies and reports were coming in support of the changing pattern of weather and climate.
Reference 1
Reference 2
Bring out the relationship between the shrinking Himalayan glaciers and the symptoms of climate change in the Indian sub-continent. (2014)
These articles published in 2014 will do the talks
Reference 1
Reference 2
Reference 3
Sources/books to refer
C. Leong
Newspaper articles- The Hindu, Business Line and Economic Times
Youtube Videos
Ending Note:
The given strategy tries to give the minimum number of books and sources to complete the portion, along with a dynamic study of the syllabus. But, before starting off with this strategy, a simple reading of all the NCERTs from 6th to 12th is mandatory, as it builds a basic foundation to start thinking in an objective and subjective matter.
The type of study for UPSC has changed totally. Just reading many standard books is of no use, because the number of questions that can be asked from such books which have been there for over 30 years is exhausted. So, a new, dynamic,
on-the-spot thinking innovative questions are being asked, and one needs to utilize their time by using the internet and various other fora judiciously.
Do not read and accumulate data. Revision is key to your success. Do as many revisions as you can.
Start writing practice after one reading of NCERT (Beginners)
You should never wait to finish off everything to start writing practice. It will serve no purpose. In recent pattern, the importance of writing has immensely increased.
When you write something the retention is much more than reading. So, start writing as soon as possible. You can follow
‘Think, Learn & Perform’ of IASbaba.com for preparing yourself for writing ability and concept building for Mains