Wednesday, 17 March 2021
UPSC Civil Services Exam 2021: How IAS Aspirants Can Prepare Current Affairs In A Short Time
A major challenge in front of the civil services aspirants, as well as the
candidates appearing for other exams like IBPS, SBI PO etc. is preparing the
current affairs.
The challenges of current affairs preparation include, first,
the syllabus is ever increasing and changing; second, there is no set pattern in
which the questions come, the focus of the paper can completely change from one
year to the next; third, preparing current affairs with high effectiveness can
take a lot of time, and cost other subjects. In this piece, we shall try to
cover some tips and tricks to address these challenges. First, the candidates
should try to prepare a schedule and stick to it consistently.
In the beginning,there will be miscalculations and learnings, which should be used to make the
timetable better. Be flexible, yet sincere and consistent. While preparing the
timetable, the first thing to keep in mind is to keep it realistic. If one sets
targets too high, hoping that he would achieve more that way, often the person
becomes okay with not achieving it, driving the whole point of timetable to the
dustbin. Therefore, it is necessary to make a realistic timetable with
achievable goals, and stick to it.
This timetable should have a set time for
current affairs.
Candidates should finish current affairs each day rather than
trying to gobble up compilations of the same in one go. These has two benefits,
one, it will be easier; two; this way, one will have the time to look at the
subject matter in more detail and get a better understanding. Compilations etc.
can be used for revision. Daily current affair compilations can be done daily,
on the phone, even while taking a walk etc. UPSC examination paper lately has
been becoming shortcut-proof. Therefore, candidates should read the newspaper
everyday. If done correctly, newspaper with notes-making will take one hour of
the candidate. This can be done early in the morning. Similarly, candidates
should read daily current affairs, and do daily quizzes etc. In combination with
the monthly compilations, the hand-written notes from the newspaper will be more
than enough for the revision close to the exam. Candidates should remember to
keep revision/off days in the timetable. When they can finish-off something
left-out and revise. Sunday can be kept for these tasks. Another trend is
noticeable in recent years that current affairs not just from the last 12
months, but from last two-three years are asked. The candidates don’t need to
lose sleep over the outliers, and instead solidify their preparation of the core
content.
The current affairs of the last 12 months is, therefore, extremely
important. For the mains exam too, daily current affairs is extremely important.
Candidates should try to practice answer writing for some questions daily. One
can start with 2 and then gradually increase it to 10 per day or more. While
reading the material, practice the recall technique. First, read a topic
mindfully. Based on your reading of previous year questions, imagine what kind
of question could be asked from that topic, and pay more attention to such
details. Often, a topic is described in a lengthy and complicated manner in such
compilations. They mostly lift the sentences as it is from the original news
source. You need not give energy into building skills for complicated
prose-writing. Instead, you need to focus on the crux of the matter. So, after
reading each topic, close your eyes and give one minute to summarise the topic
in your head - what it’s about and what details are worth remembering. Another
good way of revision is question-solving. Different compilations of questions
are available for current affairs. The candidates can pick one, and solve the
questions. It is important to not just solve the questions, but also pay
attention to the answers, and any details of the topics you might have
missed/forgotten.
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