Thursday, July 9, 2020

IAS- Changing trend

Most aspirants felt comfortable with the paper in that it brought justice to their year-long effort and a general consensus emerged that UPSC papers are now going to be even more balanced.

UPSC toppers routinely advised that if one strengthened the core portions of the syllabus  with a good enough command on current affairs, one could easily sail through Prelims.

The ‘ideal’ UPSC paper was one which consisted of a balanced weightage of all sections of syllabus sprinkled with some national and international current affairs and containing very few surprising bouncers.
This year perhaps served the biggest blow to the notion of ‘idealism’ in the paper, and aspirants finally seemed to understand that one cannot rely on a consistency in the pattern of the paper.
UPSC papers have become very unbalanced in their sectional weightages; you can expect a question from any topic under the sky and perhaps UPSC’s zeal for surprising students is only increasing every year.


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