|HOW TO CHOOSE OPTIONAL FOR UPSC 2020 WISELY|
Nothing else more aptly
describes the importance of selecting an optional subject for the Civil
Services (Mains) Examination. Let me walk you through what I suggest to
aspirants at my institute, Officer’s IAS Academy, and elsewhere while choosing
their optional subject.
Importance of optional:-
- Optional papers (Paper
VI and Paper VII) of the Mains Examination carry 500 marks together which is
almost 25% of the total marks (2025) of the written and personality tests put
together. So, with so much weightage, the optional can be a deal maker or a
deal breaker.
- If you’d have analysed
the General Studies marks of a particular year’s topper and the person who’d
scored the 100th rank, the range of their marks will not be at much variance.
Toppers become toppers through their Optional subject and the Essay paper. These
are the most controllable parts of the written Test. So to say, if you perform
very well in these two areas, the chances of you becoming a topper are very
high, if you fairly perform well in the General Studies part.
- Marks in the Optional
paper decide whether or not you’ll get your Interview call, your dream service
and your dream cadre.
Now having stressed upon
the importance of Optional let me first tell you “How not to choose an
optional” before suggesting how to choose one.
|HOW TO CHOOSE
OPTIONAL FOR UPSC 2020 WISELY|
1. Believing in the myth
of the ‘Trend’
- People in civil service circles
often say “This optional is trending now with UPSC. You better pick it up for
you to be able to score good marks.”
- Some others say, “This
optional is being taken up by too many people now. Don’t take it. The
possibility of you scoring a good mark is less”
- Both these propositions
are unscientific at best.
- In any given year if
UPSC were to ‘favour’ one optional over the other, most of the toppers that
year would have been people who picked that particular optional. This is
clearly not the case. Even if coincidentally this were to happen, it is not
because UPSC is ‘favouring’ one optional over the other.
- In any case, the
knowledge that many of the toppers had picked the same optional subject is
gained only after the exam results are finally published. This so called
‘trend’ changes from year to year, so what’s the use in going with it when you
don’t know whether it will be ‘favoured’ again?
- The same logic applies
to the negative trend of not picking an optional picked up by many aspirants.
- So never believe in the
myth of the ‘trend’. It will get you nowhere.
2. Going with the flow
- Some people ‘go with
flow’ i.e they choose their optional because their friend has chosen the same
optional. Just for the ‘company’ they say.
- Some people go along the
flow directed by the institutes they study in. Just ‘more convenient’ they say.
- Optional subject is like
your spouse. You, personally have to adore, love, respect and be able to be
with it for a long time (1 year minimum). ‘Arranged’ marriages don’t work here.
It has to be a marriage of love. Your love.
The above two are the
major criteria on which optional subject ‘should not be picked'. There are
other myths to be busted regarding selection of optional subject. I’ll take it
up some other day.
|HOW TO CHOOSE OPTIONAL FOR UPSC 2020 WISELY|
|HOW TO CHOOSE OPTIONAL FOR UPSC 2020 WISELY|(Step by step guide)
1. I’ve told you how
important choosing an optional is and how it’s like your spouse. So before
deciding upon your Optional subject you must be prepared to give at least 15
days.
2. Download the latest
Civil Services Examination notification from UPSC’s website and take a print
out of it.
3. Find the optional list
in the notification. There is a list of 26 optional subjects.
4. Start by striking out
the subjects you definitely know that you cannot take up. For example, if you
are a Mechanical Engineering graduate there’s a high possibility that you may
want to strike out Medical Science or Commerce and Accountancy.
5. While striking off
subjects you should also consider your own aptitude for a particular subject.
For example, if you are someone with a humanities background such as
Philosophy, you may want to strike off a science based subject such as Physics
or Chemistry
6. In any case, take a
look at the detailed syllabus of the subject provided in the notification
before striking off a particular subject.
7. As the choices become
lesser, eliminate subjects with more care. Eliminate a subject only after being
100% sure that you cannot pick it up.
8. At the end of the above
iterative process you should ideally be left with 2-3 optional subjects.
Ideally, one of the subjects out of the three should be the subject you
graduated in. For example if you have graduated as a doctor, then there is
already enough reason for you to pick Medical Science as your optional subject.
But for some reason if you don’t like the subject, you can pick allied subjects
like Psychology or Zoology. I recommend that you pick a subject you graduated
in, unless you have strong reasons to not do so.
9. It is also good to pick
subjects which have more spread over other General Studies papers. That way
your preparation can be holistic and will take lesser time. For example picking
Geography, History or Political Science will help you in other papers.
10. Carefully consider the
options by repeatedly going through the syllabus because all the 3 have an
equal chance to be selected by you.
11. Next, make sure good
source materials are available for the subjects selected. If any of the three
falls short on this count, then that optional can be eliminated. Having good
sources for the selected optional is a very important criterion. You do not
want to be left scrambling for credible sources after zeroing upon an optional.
For example literature of Dogri may or may not have sufficient sources.
12. The next important
criterion to consider is whether the optional subject can be studied through
self-preparation or requires additional guidance. If additional guidance is
required, you need to check if there are any good mentors/teachers/institutes
online or offline from whom/where you can seek guidance. If there is only
offline guidance available, the question that you should ask yourself is
whether it is accessible from / near by the place where you live. For example
if you live in Chennai and good guidance is available offline only in Delhi,
you might not want to consider selecting that optional.
|HOW TO CHOOSE OPTIONAL FOR UPSC 2020 WISELY|
13. Finally, go through
previous years question papers of UPSC for the selected optional and make sure
that the questions asked can be tackled through the sources/guidance that you
have. If you think that the questions asked do not conform with your resources,
either change the resources or consider a different optional.
14. After zeroing upon an
optional, read the basic source book for the respective subject for at least a
week. In a week’s time you’ll be able to clearly analyse your aptitude for the
subject and whether or not you’ll be able to study it for a long time and
repeatedly. If you are not comfortable with the subject please change it. Just
because you’ve zeroed in upon it, you are under no compulsion to stay with it.
You can move on to the other optional and follow the same process with it.
14. This is what I’ve been
suggesting to my students and others and it has worked for them well. Hope it
does so to you too!!
Choose wisely.
MUST SHARE IF YOU FOUND IT
HELPFUL
All the Best!
0 Comments