Sunday, October 7, 2012

Caution for persons giving civils interview in Telugu

Some of the aspirants who had given civils interview in Telugu have faced below problems:

1. Some times, the translater is not able to convey exactct meaning expressed by candidate. He either summarized the views or missed some points.

2. Most of the time is wasted in translation.

If you notice similar thing happening to you, pls switch to english. The board doesn't mind if your english is bad, and you save your time. But, you decide based on situation.

How to tackle Civil Service Aptitude Test CSAT


With simple maths questions and very few decision making questions, CSAT has practically become test of reading comprehension/ test of english language.



Here are some tips to overcome this before UPSC takes some steps to address this:



1. Try to finish maths, logical reasoning and decision making questions(which don't have -ve mark) first. You have to quickly go through paper and find where they are. Don't commit mistake while filling the right answer in answer sheet.



2. The passages seem to be too technical(scientific/finance terms) or philosophical(thought streams). Hence read at least one passage of scientific, financial, or philosophical per week from The Hindu or Yojana. This will be useful for your essay or GS.



3. [Important- While writing exam] There are so many small passages with technical terms, and for each passage only 2-3 questions are asked. The questions are not direct that you can pick a work or a sentence and answer. They ask for gist or thought flow to test your grasping power. The strategy to be followed is:



a. Don't waste time in reading and re-reading the passage. You may end up not even attempting many questions.

b. Quickly read questions first, without reading four options. Then go back to passage and read it only for once. Now read the question again and tick the answer. Believe in your self. Jump back to passage only if you think that is needed. But remember, don't do this too many times.



4. Attempt as many questions as possible, because no one can be 100% sure about answers. If you have attempted 50% of the paper, there are more chances that you will fail. But if you attempt 80-90% your chances of clearing will increase.



5. Attempt a question even if your are less than 50% sure. You decide when to attempt, and believe in yourself.



6. Try to join some institute where reading comprehension is taught and improve your vocabulary. keep a dictionary always with you and refer to it whenever you come across new word.



perlis of taking civil service coaching along with intermediate

Whether one has to take civils coaching at early age(while doing intermediate i.e. 10+2)?




Ansewer is NO.



[These are my personal views]



Recently, some coaching centres have started giving coaching for civils(IAS, IPS etc.) at 10+2 stage itself. Though parents may find it interesting, below are disadvantages of that:



1. The age is not ripe for preparation. Civils is related to society and i don't think a person will be in a position to think about problems of society at that age. We should not condition a person's thinking and narrow down his/her career options. This is like giving IIT coaching from fifth class. What if the person wants to become a doctor/lawyer/teacher/businessman after finishing 10th class.



2. This is unnecessary burden on children. Let them read leisurely the prescribed syllabus for inter/degree along with EAMCET coaching. Once they finish their, they have ample opportunities like in bank jobs, state and central civil services (SSC, Group-I , II), in Public Sector Undertakings like LIC, etc. But they have to take proper coaching and study well for 1-2 years. This is the time parents should invest good money.



3. The career options will become limited. For eg. for civils coaching, a student may be forced to take art subjects. Instead, had he taken some BCom he would have become charted accountant(after giving CA exam), had he taken engineering he has multiple job opportunities in (Soft ware, etc) if he takes civil engineering, electrical/electronics etc. he may get govt jobs as well(irrigation dept, Indian Engineering services, Public works dept etc.), if he is interested in politics/law he may do LLB, and many more. Similarly, science and art subject students have their own career opportunities say in Media, scientific research, etc.



4. The syllabus of civils exam keeps changing. You prepare for General studies, Public administration today, and after five years you may have paper on mental ability, aptitude, Law, Science. The optionals (like public admin) may be removed.



5. Instead, I would suggest below simple things for those interested in civil services at age of 17+.

a. Improve your english skills.

b. Read NCERT books(similar to your school text books).

c. Follow news from All India Radio website/Doordarsan.

d. Improve some reasoning skills, arithmetic skills.

e. Read general books of your interest(Autobiographies, science, stories..). Read to entertain yourself.

After graduation, to preapere for civils, pls refer to my other articles on coaching, preperation, books etc.

I'll add more to this. Pls add your comments.



Srujan Nakidi, IRS

All India Radio News

Those who are preparing for comptetive exams and those who want to improve their english skills,
pls listen to news from below AIR site. These are crisp and good. There is daily news analysis "spotlight" which will be helpful.

http://www.newsonair.nic.in/

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Other useful information for Civils preparation

CSAT + Civil service guidance and tips
 http://www.itcsa.blogspot.in/2012/09/some-tips-to-overcome-csat-language.html 

Civils for Telugu Medium students

Essay and other useful blogs

Optional wise analysis of achievers:

Sridhars blog for GS

Anay dwivedis blog for PubAd, Psychology, and essay
anaydwivedi.wordpress.com

Interviews

Simple advice: Spending more time on internet will widen your knowledge, but it'll also waste your time. So, use internet judiciously.

Some useful tips for civils mains

[Some of these suggestions are given by subrahmanyam, osmania university, IRS-IT, 2010 batch]

 These are not hard and fast rules, pls feel free to modify them to suit your needs.

1.     While preparing for mains, try to cover as many topics as possible. For this keep syllabus with you always, and underline what you have read. You can rely on any material – Delhi notes etc, but don’t clutter your preparation with redundant material. Practice answer writing for previous question papers, starting with 2011 and working backwards.

In exam:
2.     Attempt as many questions as possible. If you are running out of time, try to answer partially, but attempt maximum as required.
Illustration:
Case 1:You write three Q’s perfectly and you may get 35+35+35.
Case 2:You write 3 Q’s normally 2 Q’s better.
            You may get 20+25+25+30+30.

3.     Try to limit your answers in such a way that you’ll write 1 page(one side of paper) for 10 marks. Generally, this amounts to 100 words. Don’t spill one or 2 lines into next page. This will save lot of your time (you can attempt more questions), makes your answers precise and comforts the evaluator (and you score well!). Similarly, you should keep checking that you are able to finish around 60 marks in half an hour. Remaining half an hour is buffer time, which you will any way may be to go through question paper etc.

4.     Give simple examples or your observations, to enrich your answers.

Eg: broadcasting of gram sabha meeting in cable tv.[good governance]
How e-seva  made bill payment etc. easy .
‘irctc’ railway booking etc.
How RTI helped in transparency, fairness etc.

5.     For optional, always apply subject concepts to general questions asked.
Write to the point. To understand what is asked in question, to get the tone of question, spend 1 minute.

6.     Communication is complete only if it is understood by receiver. Hence use simple language to present your powerful ideas and analysis. Quality of analysis is important.  Hi sounding words, flowery language doesn’t help. Structure your points well so that – 1. There is logical flow; 2. Important and relevant points come first in the answer.

7.     Choose 1-2 answers you can answer very well and start your exam paper with them.

8.     Answer by touching all aspects asked in question.

Eg. Q) Evolution and relevance of parliamentary standing committees/ Election Commission/Judicial review?
You have to touch on both evolution(history) and relevance(current impact).

Q)Is culture influenced by cinema, or cinema influenced by culture?
If you want to argue both ways, cover both aspects 50-50%.

9.     In essay/long questions, try to include diverse points.
Eg. Q) Is india becoming global power?
You should not limit to political(democratic) leadership but include economic, cultural, strategic(military), socio etc. (No clue aa? Just think of contents in GS syllabus)
Q)Agriculture improvement? Dont limit your self to production and green revolution but think about complete supply chain. [Inputs – fertilizers(+subsidies), seeds, credit(bank loans) ; Production – sustainable agriculture, organic farming, high yield varieties; using outputs: transport to markets, market availablility(+Minimum Support Price), storage facilities etc.], import/export policy etc.

But this may be very time consuming, so try to do it quickly. Again, if question is small you can limit yourself.

10.  For optional like telugu literature paper-II, try to read as much from original text as possible. This way you can answer a question asked from any angle and you can quote lines directly from book. This will save lot of time while revising.

Srujan Nakidi, IRS-CCE

Pls add to this list by writing a comment.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Some tips for interview

1. Keep your bio-data infront of you(esp. summary sheet generated at time of filling mains form) and prepare all possible questions out of it-- birth place, dist, state, education, work experience.

2. Revise some fundamentals of ur education. You can't give excuses like i forget because it was long time back.. etc.

3. While answering don't be generic. Eg. if they ask you what will you do if you become collector of your dist. etc. dont say - i'll remove corruption, increase efficiency etc. Mention few problems faced by your district, your ideas to overcome them or potential areas of development in your district. Answer keeping the condition of your district in mind.

4. First things first. If you have to say multiple things, mention important ones first. They may always interrupt you in between and you'll land up in trouble if you mention least important ones first. (Eg. why did you leave your soft ware job.. etc. don't start with -ve aspects)

5. Attend few mock interviews and take their suggestions.

6. Prepare on cuurent affairs and science and technology very well. Prepare well about your optionals.

7. you'll have medical test on next working day of interview. so, book tickets accordingly.

Some tips for prelims

First thing(Disclaimer)-- device your own strategy in exam hall based on your strengths. Below suggestions are to give some idea, and should not be followed strictly.


1. Attempt as many questions as possible. It's difficult to qualify if we attempt less than 50% because most of them will go wrong.
2. Attempt a question even if you are less than 50% sure. have confidence in self.
3. Check time so that you are finishing questions as per time. (30% questions finished by completion of 25% time)
4. Marking with black pen.-- Quickly read instructions to get idea of num. of questions and marking method. Once time starts, quickly see different q's to understand the toughness. It's better to mark on OMR sheet as we read than to postpone the questions, except for 4-5. We may not get time later.
5. Quesions are mostly conceptual and general in nature. So, don't worry if you are not able to mugup few things or have not covered few things. You can answer many by recalling from some vague memories.