CF India Portal to get started with IAS
preparation you should first have some idea about the service itself. This will
ensure your IAS preparation efforts are channelized in the right direction. The
Indian Administrative Service (IAS) is a career nonpareil – one that cannot be
compared to other jobs or services. True, it doesn’t offer the best salary;
still the salary of an IAS officer is nothing to laugh at.
But people aspire to IAS for reasons much more than just remuneration. For instance, the IAS is a
means to perform noble deeds like serving the nation and humanity at large. Now
how many jobs or careers provide this opportunity? Along the way, there are
attractive privileges, perks and career goals that you can achieve. In fact,
the IAS is the perfect harmony of social and personal good, an opportunity,
that only few can careers can provide. Be inspired.
But to aspire for this
golden service you need to prepare for IAS smartly, persistently, and patiently. The 3 golden tips for IAS preparation. You may have heard a
thousand and one times from friends, IAS exam veterans, mentors and assorted
coaching institutes that you require smart hard work to crack the IAS. But
exactly is smart hard work?
CF India portal Preparation Tip
#1 – Work Smart Not Just Hard
Most of us are used to working hard. Our education system is
such that unless we cram tens of books each year, whether or not we understand
what’s inside the book is immaterial, we cannot progress to the higher level.
So most of us are accustomed to working hard which in the context of IAS preparation refers to studying 10 hours or more, every day. So much for hard
work.
Now comes the smart part. Smartness could mean different things
to different readers. It could mean reading selectively but reading well,
reading many books selectively, mixing books and notes, making micro notes,
proper time management, taking mock tests and so on.
Smart work is all this and more. In fact smartness is the approach you adopt in a particular situation. To prepare for IAS smartly requires you to be
flexible as opposed to rigid, to experiment as opposed to sticking with the
familiar, to plan ahead as opposed to the short term only.
Let’s say you plan to appear for the 2013 Prelims. The right
approach would be to start preparing for the IAS prelims at least 10 months in
advance. 10 months’ time is just right to crack the prelims. Neither too much
nor too less. With too much time in hand, just like other things in excess, we
tend to waste it. In fact, we should always have a little less time in hand to
feel some sense of urgency to get things done. Most people tend to work best
under reasonable pressure. Neither too much nor too less.
The next step when starting your IAS preparation is to get
familiar with the Prelims syllabus. Doing this you will know exactly what you
need to cover within this time frame to crack the prelims. The good part about
the new
CSAT syllabus is that optional
subjects have been done away with. So you can just concentrate on General
Studies. And if you’re like me then studying GS is like listening to music;
there’s no hard work involved. Just pure fun. Preparing for IAS need not
necessarily mean monotony. The more you enjoy preparing GS the easier the Prelims
goal will become. That’s smart.
Once you know the syllabus get started with the actual preparation.
Obviously everyone can’t prepare for 10 hours, particularly working
people. But even working people can crack the IAS. The exact time is
not important here. Some can achieve in 6 hours what others can in 10 hours. It
depends on you. If you’re just starting out I’d suggest you start with 4-5
hours and scale up gradually.
CF India Portal Preparation Tip
#2 – Try Single-tasking it’s more efficient than Multi-tasking
Yes I know you need to prepare history, geography, current
affairs, mental ability etc. Only thing is don’t prepare all at once. Chunk it
down. Pick one subject, let’s say Polity and combine it with current affairs
which you should cover for some time everyday. Current affairs preparation
consists of reading the newspaper, a good current events magazine and a year
book.
You can read
a good newspaper like The Hindu, magazine
like Civil Services Chronicle or Pratyogita Darpan and the Manorama Year Book.
Schedule a particular time for newspaper reading, but in any case, don’t read
the newspaper for more than an hour. It’s not required.
Next, you can continue with the year book or start off with
Indian polity. Whichever topic you choose get the right books only. Don’t refer
more books than are absolutely essential. You don’t want a PhD in General
Studies, just need to clear it.
But before you start with the topic get the past 5 year’s solved
question papers and combine it with the syllabus as the question papers and
syllabus are your best guide
for IAS preparation.
Once you have started with polity or any other topic see it
through completion. Don’t try to multi-task. Mixing polity with history and
geography will lead to loss of concentration and lower your output. Besides it
will make your progress lower. On other other once you’ve covered a topic in
full you will gain confidence as you’ve pocketed x number of marks beforehand.
CF India Portal Preparation Tip
#3 – Adopt the Just in Time Approach
The JiT (Just in Time) Approach says we should seek information
only when required at that moment. In this hyper-connected world there is an
overdose of information and if you seek to acquire all information and
knowledge before starting a task, you can never get started as you will lose
yourself in the information maze.
Applied to IAS preparation what this implies is don’t try to
cover all the books referred by your friends on a given topic, say GK. Since GK
is so vast and constantly expanding you can never hope to “master” it. Rather,
refer a good book like Manorama Year Book and a magazine along with the daily
newspaper to build up your knowledge base.
If, while referring the past Prelims papers, you come across a
new topic you can quickly refer the reference books at hand or head over to the
library or internet and find out more. This way you retain the information for
a much longer time rather than by trying to read everything at one go.
CF India Portal Preparation Tip
#4 – Test Yourself Constantly
Taking the above JiT approach further let’s apply this to
evaluating yourself. Instead of waiting till the last few days to take mock
tests you should evaluate yourself right after completing a particular section
in a topic. For instance refer the previous year’s question papers before
starting Quit India Movement in Modern Indian History and after completing it.
I’ve already written about the benefits of this approach so I need not repeat it here.
Adopting this JiT approach you know exactly where you stand,
which topics have been covered well and which require more consideration. But
more importantly it removes the uncertainty and anxiety to a certain level, if
not completely. Before entering the examination hall you know what kind of
questions to expect and this will boost your confidence and calm your nerves so
you perform better than expected.
CF India Portal Prepare for IAS
Tip #5 – Make Micro Notes
Notes help us to revise quickly before the Prelims; the last 15
days that can determine whether or not you will appear for the mains that year.
These micro notes can be on current affairs, GK, as well as other GS and
optional topics. In fact I’ve already shown how
to make notes for IAS exam preparation.
Learn from it and profit.
CF India Portal Preparation Tip
#6 – Shoot then Aim
Most IAS aspirants prefer to wait till the end moment to take
mock tests or prepare for 2-3 years before making their first attempt waiting
for the perfect preparation level. Unfortunately your preparation can never be
perfect no matter how hard you try. The latest syllabus is such that questions
will always be unpredictable. Gone are the days when you could rely on certain
number of questions from a particular topic.
So instead of preparing for 2-3 years during which time the
pattern (not the syllabus) could change so many times prepare for a year and
jump into the fray. You can improvise along the way.
This also holds true for taking practice tests. I suggested
constantly evaluating yourself after going through every topic rather than
waiting till the end hoping to finish the entire syllabus before going through
the question papers.
Guess what, we are never able to finish the syllabus completely.
There’s always something left in the end, some topics that we wish we should
have prepared differently. So shoot first then aim.
CF India Portal Smart Preparation
Tip #7 – Read only what’s absolutely essential
Your friend tells you to refer THM GS manual because that’s the
best one around, another refers Unique, while a third one suggests XYZ classes
notes. And you unwittingly jump from book to book hoping to cover every source
that’s considered important for that subject. Stop taking this information
overload that you will never be able to process within the limited time at your
disposal.
Refer the standard books and supplement the missing information
from other book for notes. Instead of reading three books for polity stick to
one for detailed explanation and one for the bare acts. Similarly, I suggest
just NCERTs for Ancient and Medieval Indian History. No need for epic titles.
Whether
it’s books for prelims , or public administration, sociology, political science or geography books stick to the above strategy.
You’ll discover you can extract so much more by re-reading limited
number of books than running after the next shiny book just launched.
IAS Study Material by CF India Portal :-
No guide for IAS preparation can be complete unless you know
important sources for finding information online.
These are some of the main resources for IAS exam:
Get all NCERT Books from our
website.
The latest Economic Survey
Free IAS study material
Build up your GK base
Want to Know more call us on 7738364800 or visit on www.cfindiaportal.com
Want to Know more call us on 7738364800 or visit on www.cfindiaportal.com
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