UPSC
π Structure of UPSC Prelims
The Prelims has two papers, both are objective type (MCQs) and conducted on the same day.
1. General Studies Paper-I (GS-I)
- Marks: 200
- Duration: 2 hours
- No. of Questions: 100
- Negative Marking: Yes (β of the marks deducted for each wrong answer)
- Qualifying Criteria: Marks counted for merit/ranking in prelims.
Syllabus:
- Current events of national and international importance
- History of India and Indian National Movement
- Indian and World Geography (Physical, Social, Economic)
- Indian Polity and Governance (Constitution, Political System, Panchayati Raj, Rights Issues, Public Policy)
- Economic and Social Development (Sustainable Development, Poverty, Inclusion, Demographics, Social Sector Initiatives)
- General issues on Environmental Ecology, Biodiversity and Climate Change
- General Science
2. General Studies Paper-II (CSAT)
- Marks: 200
- Duration: 2 hours
- No. of Questions: 80
- Negative Marking: Yes (β negative marking)
- Qualifying Criteria: Only qualifying β candidate must score 33% (66 marks) to clear.
Syllabus:
- Comprehension
- Interpersonal skills including communication skills
- Logical reasoning and analytical ability
- Decision-making and problem-solving
- General mental ability
- Basic numeracy (Class X level)
- Data interpretation
π Important Points
- Both papers are objective type, conducted on the same day, morning and afternoon session.
- Only the score in Paper-I counts towards selection for Mains.
- Paper-II (CSAT) is qualifying, but you must clear it.
- Prelims is only a screening stage β marks are not counted in final ranking.
π Do you want me to also give you a strategy + booklist for UPSC Prelims preparation (GS-I & CSAT)?
The Prelims has two papers, both are objective type (MCQs) and conducted on the same day.
1. General Studies Paper-I (GS-I)
- Marks: 200
- Duration: 2 hours
- No. of Questions: 100
- Negative Marking: Yes (β of the marks deducted for each wrong answer)
- Qualifying Criteria: Marks counted for merit/ranking in prelims.
Syllabus:
- Current events of national and international importance
- History of India and Indian National Movement
- Indian and World Geography (Physical, Social, Economic)
- Indian Polity and Governance (Constitution, Political System, Panchayati Raj, Rights Issues, Public Policy)
- Economic and Social Development (Sustainable Development, Poverty, Inclusion, Demographics, Social Sector Initiatives)
- General issues on Environmental Ecology, Biodiversity and Climate Change
- General Science
2. General Studies Paper-II (CSAT)
- Marks: 200
- Duration: 2 hours
- No. of Questions: 80
- Negative Marking: Yes (β negative marking)
- Qualifying Criteria: Only qualifying β candidate must score 33% (66 marks) to clear.
Syllabus:
- Comprehension
- Interpersonal skills including communication skills
- Logical reasoning and analytical ability
- Decision-making and problem-solving
- General mental ability
- Basic numeracy (Class X level)
- Data interpretation
π Important Points
- Both papers are objective type, conducted on the same day, morning and afternoon session.
- Only the score in Paper-I counts towards selection for Mains.
- Paper-II (CSAT) is qualifying, but you must clear it.
- Prelims is only a screening stage β marks are not counted in final ranking.
π UPSC Prelims Strategy
Step 1: Understand the Syllabus Thoroughly
- Print out the UPSC syllabus and keep it with you while studying.
- This avoids wasting time on irrelevant topics.
Step 2: Build Strong Foundation
- Start with NCERTs (Class 6β12) for History, Geography, Polity, Economy, and Science.
- Make short notes (or highlight important points).
Step 3: Move to Standard Books
- After NCERTs, go for advanced books (listed below).
- Focus on conceptual clarity rather than mugging.
Step 4: Current Affairs
- Read The Hindu or Indian Express daily.
- Refer to Monthly Current Affairs Compilations (Vision IAS / Insights IAS / ForumIAS).
- Revise monthly magazines, donβt try to read too many sources.
Step 5: Practice & Revision
- Practice Previous Year Question Papers (PYQs) (last 10 years).
- Attempt mock tests (at least 40β50 before Prelims).
- Revise multiple times (at least 3 rounds).
Step 6: CSAT Preparation
- Donβt ignore CSAT β many fail here.
- Practice comprehension, reasoning, and basic maths (10th standard level).
- Do at least 10β15 CSAT papers before exam.
π Booklist for UPSC Prelims
1. History
- Ancient & Medieval: Old NCERTs by R.S. Sharma & Satish Chandra
- Modern History: Indiaβs Struggle for Independence β Bipan Chandra
- *Spectrum β Rajiv Ahir (Concise Modern History)
- Art & Culture: Nitin Singhaniaβs Indian Art and Culture
2. Geography
- NCERTs (Class 6β12)
- Certificate Physical and Human Geography β G.C. Leong
- Oxford School Atlas (Latest Edition)
3. Polity
- Indian Polity β M. Laxmikanth (Bible for UPSC Polity)
4. Economy
- NCERTs (Class 9β12 Economics)
- Indian Economy β Ramesh Singh
- Budget & Economic Survey (Summary β Vision/Insights notes)
5. Environment & Ecology
- NCERTs (Class 11β12 Biology basics)
- Environment β Shankar IAS Book
- Government reports (MoEFCC updates, IPCC summaries)
6. Science & Technology
- NCERTs (Class 6β10 Science)
- Current Affairs (focus on ISRO, DRDO, Space, Biotechnology, AI, Cyber Security, etc.)
7. Current Affairs
- Newspaper: The Hindu / Indian Express
- Monthly Magazines: Vision IAS / Insights IAS / ForumIAS
- Yearly: PT 365 (Vision IAS) for revision
8. CSAT (Paper-II)
- CSAT Manual β Tata McGraw Hill OR Arun Sharma (Quantitative Aptitude)
- Previous Year CSAT Papers
- Practice comprehension passages daily
π 5 Golden Rules
- Revise, Revise, Revise β more important than new reading.
- Solve 10 yearsβ PYQs β UPSC repeats patterns.
- Mock tests β learn time management + elimination technique.
- Limit sources β Multiple revisions of few books > reading too many.
- Stay consistent β 6β8 hrs daily for 1 year is enough.
