Preparation Strategy for Civil Services (Preliminary) Exam in the Last 30 Days | 13 Aug 2018
Vishnu Mahajan (AIR 70, UPSC 2015)
Dear Aspirants,
Civil Services Preliminary Exam is the first phase of the Civil Services Exam but not necessarily the simplest. There is a wide difference between the syllabi of the Preliminary and Main Exam, the nature of questions and consequently the preparation strategy needs to be well thought out. I would like to share my experience and learning over the last 2-3 years and hope that it might be helpful to other aspiring students.
However, at the very outset, I would also like to say that there is no fixed, deterministic path to success in this highly subjective, uncertain exam. What follows is my subjective experience which might work for some and might not work for someone else.
With CSAT (a major stabilizing factor, at least for someone with a basic understanding of 10th standard Maths) made a qualifying exam, GS assumes prime importance. This means that the total time spent dedicatedly on Prelims prep must be sufficient to allow multiple revisions and retention of GS topics since one cannot rely on CSAT to pull one through. For the last year’s Prelims (2015), I spent a good 2.5 months (June, July and half of August) studying only for Prelims without giving any time to Optional or Mains GS. For the 2014 Prelims, I had only spent around 1.5 months and relied heavily on CSAT. The strategy paid off and I comfortably cleared the Prelims with 140 marks in GS compared to 102 in 2014. The cutoffs might be even higher this year and Prelims must not be taken lightly.
The last 30 days should be a time of intensive revision in a planned and organized manner. With so many subjects and topics, the Civil Services Exam syllabus has an extremely low retention span as you juggle between history, culture, environment, polity every day. It means that without
In case you have covered the syllabus once as of now, you should strive for 2 cycles of revision before the exam with special focus on topics you don’t feel comfortable with. In case you have not covered the syllabus once, you should prioritize and study in that order.
Prioritizing
Questions on conventional topics like History, Polity, Economy, Geography are for them fairly straightforward and NCERTs with a basic conceptual understanding should suffice. For Polity, do read Laxmikanth’s book from cover to cover. The book is fairly comprehensive and from an exam point of view, very well written and organized.
Covering the above topics is a must as these are the ones with least uncertainty, straight-forward questions
It is also instructive to keep in mind the massive competition that you are up against. More than 4 lakh students actually sit in the exam. Many of them prepare as if their life depended on it, many would be veterans taking the exam for the fifth or sixth time. Unless you cover these safe topics well, it would be extremely difficult to have an edge over the lakhs of other applicants.
Only after these safe topics are covered, should you venture deep into topics like Science and Tech, Environment, Culture which are vast and have an undefined scope with endless study
Take Mock Tests with a Pinch of Salt
I tried some mock tests for prelims with one or two coaching
Past year tests
The most reliable source of practice is past year test papers. Even here, some questions would be based on
CSAT
While CSAT is now a qualifying exam, some amount of practice would definitely help
Final Week Before The Exam
In the last week, try to remain calm and not fret about any topics you have not covered. It is helpful to focus on topics which are fact heavy and where memorization is required e.g. UNESCO sites, Ramsar sites, National Parks, Rivers, etc. You might not be able to make much of a marginal difference in conceptual topics like Economy in the final days and hence can rely on prior knowledge for such topics.
Topic Wise Books
Detailed out below is a topic-wise list of books and sources I followed for the Prelims Exam. While there is a copious amount of study material available in Delhi markets and on the internet, I tried to limit myself to 1-2 sources for each topic. This helps in revision, retention and keeping the study manageable. I would not advise to further complicate the already complex syllabus by referring to multiple books and then not being able to revise them. Revision is the key and will define how much of what you study you can actually recollect and remember in the exam. For example, a number of books are available
Topics |
Sources I Followed |
History (Ancient) |
RS Sharma Ancient History old NCERT |
History (Medieval) |
Romila Thapar 7th or 8th class NCERT and selected sections (only culture part) of Satish Chandra’s 11th class NCERT. |
History (Modern) |
Bipan Chandra XII NCERT + Spectrum |
Art & Culture |
Apart from above history NCERTs, Fine Arts NCERT, CCRT website (topics like Dance, Drama not covered in books), NIOS notes on Science (e.g. Ancient and Medieval era science), UNESCO sites from Wikipedia. |
Polity (Static and Current) |
Laxmikanth, Indian Constitution at Work NCERT, Newspapers (Hindu/Indian Exp.) |
Economy (Static and Current) |
Day to Day Economics by Satish Deodhar, Indian Economic Development NCERT, XII Macroeconomics NCERT, Newspaper, a few chapters from Ramesh Singh (e.g. Banking is nice) |
Science and Tech (Static and Current) |
Class 9 and 10 NCERT, Biotech topics in +2 Bio NCERT, Newspaper, Rajya Sabha TV show “Science Monitor”, random Google search on current topics not covered well in newspapers |
Environment (Static and Current) |
GK today booklet, Science NCERTs have chapters on Environment, Some Mrunal articles and videos about international treaties were good, Wikipedia for national parks, Ramsar sites |
Geography – World |
XI NCERTs, 2nd half of GC Leong (Biomes) |
Geography – India (Physical + India) |
XI NCERTs |
Important Current National and International Events |
Newspapers (Hindu/Indian Express) – kept notes and revised them |
Schemes & Policies |
Not much. Made a list of schemes regularly appearing in news and read about them on government websites. |
Other Internet or offline sources followed |
Did not follow anything regularly. Rather, searched for an issue/topic I did not feel comfortable with and read as much as possible whether PIB (Features section), PRS, IDSA’s ‘ask an expert’, Foreign Ministry’s ‘In Focus’, Rajya Sabha TV’s ‘Big Picture’, ‘Science Monitor’, ‘State of the Economy’, ‘India’s World’ are good sources. |
Wishing all the very best to all aspiring students.