The civil services examination conducted by the UPSC is arguably the toughest exam in India. While hundreds of thousands sit for the paper, only 1000 candidates clear the multi-level competition. The selected candidates are then allotted IAS, IPS, IFS and other allied services as per the ranks. It is a three-level exam consisting of pre, mains and interviews.
To pass the UPSC exam, it is necessary to be aware of the syllabus, exam pattern and a few other things. So today we have brought some easy tips to boost your UPSC preparations.
Essential Qualifications
The applicant must be a graduate in any discipline to appear for the civil services examination. The students who have completed their bachelor’s degree in any stream can apply.
Age limit
The minimum age of candidates for the UPSC exam is 21 years, the general category applicants can appear for 6 times to a maximum age of 32 years, the age limit for the OBC category has been fixed from 21 to 35 years and candidates of this category can appear 9 times. The age limit for the SC-ST category is 21 years to 37 years and with no limit for attempts. Also, the age limit for physically disabled candidates has been fixed from 21 to 42 years.
UPSC exam subjects
The candidate has to choose a subject from a total of 25 subjects. It includes Agriculture, Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Science, Anthropology, Botany, Chemistry, Civil Engineering, Commerce and Accountancy, Economics, Electrical Engineering, Geography, Geology, History, Law, Management, Mechanical Engineering, Medical Science, Philosophy, Physics, Political Science and International Relations, Psychology, Public Administration, Sociology, Statistics, Zoology and Languages , Assamese, Bengali, Bodo, Dogri, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Kashmiri, Konkani, Maithili, Malayalam, Manipuri, Santhali, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu, Urdu and English can be chosen as an optional subject.
UPSC Prelims Exam
In the UPSC prelims exam, candidates have to take 2 papers of two hours each. The first paper is subject-related while the second paper is CSAT and it is necessary to get 33 percent marks.
UPSC Mains Exam
There are a total of 9 papers in the UPSC mains exam. Of these, two are for qualifying (A and B) and seven others are for merit. Both the language-based qualifying papers are of 3 hours each. Apart from this, there are 4 papers of General Studies for which 3 hours each are available. There is the optional paper too, in which there are two exams and the subject is chosen by the candidates themselves. The selected candidates in this exam are then called for the final interview round.
UPSC Interview
A candidate, who passes the UPSC mains, then fills a Detail Application Form (DAF), based on which a personality test is conducted. Based on the information filled in the form, questions are asked during the interview. Following this, the merit list is prepared by adding the marks obtained in the interview and based on this, the All India Ranking is given to the candidates.
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( News Source :Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Rashtra News staff and is published from a www.news18.com feed.)
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