CSAT Paper I (General Studies) 2012
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- Overall
 Breakup
- History
- Polity
- Environment
 & Biodiversity (enb)
- Geography
- Economy
- Science
 & Technology (S&T)
- Yearbook
 stuff
- Current
 Affairs vs Static
- 4TF
 type of question
- Authentic
 Answerkeys! (lolz)
- Make
 your own answerkey
- Why
 Cut-offs talk is useless
- Start
 preparing for mains
- Was
 the CSAT-paper Tough?
- Conclusion
Overall Breakup
In order to see the big picture, We must compare this data with the 
GS-papers of last two years. See how the topicwise-breakup has evolved.
Markwise Breakup (From 2010 to 2012)
| Topic | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 
| History | 20 | 12 | 15 | 
| Polity | 18 | 8 | 7 | 
| EnB | 23 | 21 | -- | 
| Geography | 11 | 11 | 30 | 
| Economy | 10 | 17 | 26 | 
| S&T | 9 | 18 | 30 | 
| Yearbook | 9 | 9 | 4 | 
| Total | 100 | Note1 | Note2 | 
- 
Note1: column will not add to 100, because I’ve not 
counted the international affairs etc. questions from 2011’s exam. 
However the total questions were 100.
- 
Note2: in 2010, GS paper had 150 questions, including 
Aptitude. Therefore column will not add to 100. Secondly, in 2010 they 
did not have separate EnB section.
This Situation calls for % table.
%wise Breakup (From 2010 to 2012)
For 2011 and 2012, the data will remain same (Because total 100 
Questions) but for 2010, I’m converting marks into approximate 
percentages using 150 as ‘total’.
| Topic | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 
| History | 20 | 12 | 10 | 
| Polity | 18 | 8 | 5 | 
| EnB | 23 | 21 | 0 | 
| Geography | 11 | 11 | 10 | 
| Economy | 10 | 17 | 17 | 
| S&T | 9 | 18 | 20 | 
| Yearbook | 9 | 9 | 3 | 
| Total | 100 | 100 | 100 | 
Charts and graphs
 
 
Data interpretation
- 
History has doubled in its importance from 2010 to 2012. Any sort of 
‘predictability’ helps the coaching classes and senior players, and UPSC
 hates both of them. Most of us would have thought: history will 
decrease and S&T will remain steady. So, UPSC does the reverse. 
Besides, it is my personal opinion, this year History + Polity given 
heavy emphasis to reverse the "Science and Engineer graduates-friendly" 
trends of last two years.
- 
Polity increased by more than double. 8% in 2011 and 18% in 2012. And 
curiously, as the number of questions increased, the difficulty level of
 each question decreased!
- 
Geography remained “steady” 11% of the paper for last two years.
- 
Economy declined.
- 
Science and technology declined: almost halved: From 18% in 2011 to 9% 
in 2012! - To make room for the increased number of History and Polity 
Questions
- 
Just like Geography, the Yearbook stuff also remained: Steady 9% of the 
paper, for last two years.
- 
You can do more data interpretation on your own.
Remaining chart

Now time to take a look at individual subjects under General Studies 
paper.
A.Ancient and Medieval
- 
Dhrupad, one of the major traditions of India that has been kept alive 
for centuries
- 
Distinguish between Kuchipudi and Bharatanatyam dances
- 
hand gesture called 'Bhumisparsha Mudra'. It symbolizes
- 
religion of early Vedic Aryans was
- 
Sufi mystics were known to pursue which of the following practices
- 
guilds (Shreni) of ancient India that played a very important role
- 
scientific progress of ancient India
- 
common to both Buddhism and Jainism?
- 
Nagara, the Dravida and the Vesara
Questions Mostly related to religion and culture.
They had asked about Jainism in 
2011’s paper as well.
Thankfully, No dates, places or name of kings though.
Modern India (Freedom Struggle)
  
     |  | 
Ryotwari settlement
Rowlatt act aimed at
Contribution made by dadabhai naoroji
Principal feature(s) of the government of india act, 1919
National social conference was formed. What was the reason for its 
formation?
Parties were established by dr. B. R. Ambedkar
Gandhi undertook fast unto death in 1932
Lahore session of the indian national congress (1929) is very important
Regarding brahmo samaj
Things introduced into india by the english
Congress ministries resigned in the seven provinces in 1939 | 
Even with the lousiest half-hearted preparation, one could solve 
question number 2, 4, 7, 8, 9, 11 from reading NCERTs, GS Manual and Bipin
 Chandra.
Polity
  
     | 
 
 | 
| 1 | Duty of the President of India to cause to be laid |  
| 2 | Deadlock between the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha calls |  
| 3 | Importance of the office of the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) |  
| 4 | Prime Minister of India, at the time of his/her appointment |  
| 5 | Delimitation Commission, consider the following statements : |  
| 6 | Distribution of powers between the Centre and the States |  
| 7 | Fundamental Duties of citizens |  
| 8 | Autonomy of the Supreme Court of India |  
| 9 | Special powers have been conferred on the Rajya Sabha |  
| 10 | Recommendations of the Thirteenth Finance Commission |  
| 11 | Parliamentary control over public finance in India |  
| 12 | Provisions of the Constitution of India have a bearing on Education |  
| 13 | Adjournment motion |  
| 14 | Directive Principles of State Policy |  
| 15 | Union Territories are not represented in the Rajya Sabha. |  
| 16 | Office of the Lok Sabha Speaker |  
| 17 | Original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court |  
| 18 | Panchayat (Extension to the Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 |  | 
- 
In my earlier article " 100
 Days 4 CSAT?" I had given the preparation strategy and study plan 
for Indian Polity and If you had thoroughly it, this Polity section was a
 walk in the park. Atleast 15 questions could be solved without any 
doubt.
- 
Most of these questions are so easy, seems like they framed them to 
insult the intelligence of a serious player!
Environment & Biodiversity (enb)
  
     | 
 
 
 | 
| 1 | National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) help |  
| 2 | National Green Tribunal Act, 2010 |  
| 3 | Biopesticides |  
| 4 | Biomass gasification |  
| 5 | Lead, ingested or inhaled, is a health hazard |  
| 6 | Chlorofluorocarbons, known as ozone-depleting substances |  
| 7 | Protected areas in India are local people not |  
| 8 | Pollinating agent/agents |  
| 9 | Carbon dioxide in the air is slowly raising the temperature |  
| 10 | Acidification of oceans is increasing. Why |  
| 11 | Category of endangered species |  
| 12 | Millennium Ecosystem Assessment |  
| 13 | Antelopes Oryx and Chiru |  
| 14 | Threats to the biodiversity of a geographical are |  
| 15 | Black-necked crane |  
| 16 | Carbon sequestration/storage in the soil |  
| 17 | Phytoplankton of an ocean is completely destroyed for some reason |  
| 18 | Vultures
 which used to be very common in Indian countryside |  
| 19 | Government of India encourages the cultivation of sea buckthorn |  
| 20 | Wetlands of India, consider the following statements |  
| 21 | Resistance to the introduction of Bt brinjal in India |  
| 22 | Prospects for which genetically engineered plants have been created |  
| 23 | Which of the above are Tiger Reserves |  | 
- 
Q. 7 on protected area, was directly discussed in my EnB article: In-situ and Ex-situ conservation.
- 
Q. 18 on Vulture question had been directly discussed
 in my EnB article: Types of Species.
- 
Q.14 Threats to biodiversity: the “alien species” were also discussed in
 above article (under title “Non-native species”.)
- 
Seems UPSC is making a habit of asking location of some odd wildlife 
animal every year. (Oryx, Chiru and Crane this year.)
- Almost 1/4th of the paper (25%) is EnB, because environment must be 
protected and candidates must be forced to prepare heavily for 
Environment topic as if they're going to actually 'implement' everything
 they read in the books, into their real lives!
- 
One interesting thing: about the “limits of current affairs”, This Sea buckthorn initiative happened in 2010 (according to
 MoEF public notification) and UPSC has asked this in 2012.
- 
Anyways most of the questions- not really tough, provided that you had 
been following
- 
The NOS study-material
- 
Science and Geography NCERTs
- 
The Hindu S&T
- 
Website of Ministry of Environment and Forest (www.moef.nic.in )
- 
General
 Studies Manual.
- 
My EnB series articles (vultures, Phytoplanktons)
Geography
  
     | 
 | 
| 1 | Polestar |  
| 2 | Duration of the monsoon |  
| 3 | Characteristic climate of the Tropical Savannah Region |  
| 4 | Stages of demographic transition associated with economic |  
| 5 | Chief characteristic of mixed farming |  
| 6 | Crop that is used as pulse, fodder and green manure |  
| 7 | Factors influence the ocean currents |  
| 8 | Predominantly rainfed crop/crops |  
| 9 | Travel in Himalayas, you will see the following |  
| 10 | Temperature decreases with the increase in |  
| 11 | Particular State in India has the following characteristics |  | 
Most of the it from
- 
NCERT Geography books Class 7 to 12.
- 
+General Studies manual.
- 
Curiously I’m not seeing anything from ‘world geography’ except the 
Tropical Savannah climate. (Ocean Current falls under Physical geography
 so not really a ‘world geography’ question)
- 
I forgot to write about Tropical Savannah climate under my  Africa Article
Economy
  
     | 
 | 
| 1 | RBI acts as a bankers' bank |  
| 2 | Capital gains' arise |  
| 3 | Increase in the money supply in the economy |  
| 4 | Foreign Direct Investment in India |  
| 5 | Price of any currency in international market is decided by |  
| 6 | Lead bank scheme |  
| 7 | Why does India import millions of tonnes of coal |  
| 8 | Rare earth metals |  
| 9 | Policy initiative(s) of Government of India to promote |  
| 10 | Index of Industrial Production, the Indices of Eight Core Industries |  | 
Science & Technology (S&T)
  
     |  | 
| 1 | Graphene |  
| 2 | UV radiation in the water purification systems |  
| 3 | Stem cells |  
| 4 | Anti-matter (anti-helium nucleus) |  
| 5 | Evidences for the continued expansion of universe? |  
| 6 | Electrically charged particles from space |  
| 7 | Capillarity |  
| 8 | Advantage does thorium hold over uranium |  
| 9 | Elements was primarily responsible for the origin of life on the Earth |  | 
- 
Graphene directly discussed in my Revision Note of Hindu S&T Part II.
- 
I forgot to write about water purifiers in the Odomos article
- 
S&T reduced by half: in 2011, they asked 18 questions, this time 
only 9 but if you look it from a hilltop (combined with heavy doze of 
Reading comprehension in Paper II) may be UPSC thought “since last two 
years, the Science and Engineering grads had been getting more 
advantage, so let us for a change, make a room for the Arts and commerce
 graduates – therefore increased importance to Polity +History this time
 and decreased importance of Science & tech.
- Besides, when you want to force everyone learn EnB and (assuming) 
that they'll implement climate saving habits in their real life, so how 
do you make a room? take the space out of Science and Tech - distribute 
it among EnB, Polity and History.
Yearbook stuff
  
     |  | I’m combining the “rights issue”, “Empowerment” and “Government scheme” 
in one category: 
 
| 1 | Jobs of 'ASHA', a trained community health worker? |  
| 2 | National Rural Livelihood Mission seek to improve livelihood options of 
rural poor |  
| 3 | Multi-dimensional Poverty Index developed by Oxford |  
| 4 | Social Security' coverage under Employees' State Insurance Scheme? |  
| 5 | Inclusive Governance |  
| 6 | Janani Suraksha Yojana' Programme is |  
| 7 | DRDAs help in the reduction of rural poverty in India? |  
| 8 | National Water Mission |  
| 9 | Consumers' rights/ privileges |  | 
- 
ASHA worker was discussed in my Yearbook article
- 
Seems UPSC is obsessed with National Rural Livelihood mission because in
 2011 Mains GS Paper, they had asked about it.
- 
If you had been following India Yearbook and Economic Survey 2012, again most of the question 
could be solved with ease.
Current Affairs vs Static
Static = from routine books, theory stuff. Majority of the questions 
this time, are from the static portion.
- 
Over last three years, UPSC has constantly reduced the importance of 
current affairs: my take, they’re doing it to give level playing field 
to small town & rural candidates, who’re unable to purchase lots of 
newspapers, current-affairs magazines, internet for following the 
current affairs.
- 
Indian Juntaa doesn’t care for sportsmen (Except cricketers), Authors 
(except those Indian authors who can only write novels about adultery 
and sex), Dancers (Except those who can do ‘item-song) or social 
activists (except those who get extensive media coverage).
- 
So over the years, UPSC was feeling sorry for the unknown celebrities 
and had been asking questions related to “persons in news” in 
preliminary exam to give them their due recognition.
- 
But finally UPSC has learned the lesson: There is no point in forcing 
candidates to mugup names of people in news, you can’t make someone love
 you by holding a gun on his face.
4TF type of question
- 
4TF= four (or two) statements are given, and you’re asked to identify 
the correct or incorrect statement.
- 
UPSC has increased the number of 4TF question in last two years.
- 
This time, There are approximately 20 normal question (i.e. pick up one 
from a/b/c/d, and remaining 80 questions are 4TF.
- 
4TF have their own advantages and disadvantages
- 
Good:  you can eliminate wrong answer choices and certain 
‘combinations’.
- 
Bad: requires thorough grip over the topic.
- 
Bad: Time consuming because you have to re-read entire question multiple
 times to eliminate the wrong choices.
 
- 
Seems they’re trying to frame difficult questions from easy topics. 
using the 4TF technique.
Authentic Answerkeys! (lolz)
- 
“Authentic answerkey” is an oxymoron just like “Honest Politician”.
- 
After prelims are over, everybody starts googling for “answerkeys and 
cut-offs”. So, in a haste to capture the audience (and to advertise 
their mains classes and study packages), the coaching classes and 
certain websites release faulty answerkeys without doing proper research
 and homework.
- 
UPSC gives you 2 hours to solve 100 questions in the exam hall, so If 
you manually check the reference book for each and every question, it 
ought to take you no less than 4-5 hours at home. Besides for certain 
questions there is no reliable source / book / website to confirm the 
answer! 
- 
Many candidates check their paper using multiple answerkeys and from 
whichever answerkey they get maximum score, they take it as their 
‘official score’ and start worrying about the cut-offs!
Make your own answerkey
- 
I suggest you look at each and every question individually and find its 
source.  
- 
For example, in this prelims, UPSC asked questions on green tribunal and
 13th Finance Commission. If you solve these from readymade 
answerkeys, you will only know the four statements given in the question
 itself. But if you manually solve every question, you’ll come across 10
 more points related to the topic, which you can use as fodder material 
for mains exam and interview. Who knows you might find some direct 
questions!
- 
Caution : donot merely type question phrases in Wikipedia, UPSC did not 
frame question after reading Wikipedia and Wikipedia is not the 
‘authentic’ source. You should first refer the standard reference books 
to solve these questions and use Wikipedia only as last source.
Why Cut-offs talk is useless
- 
As usual, I don’t involve myself in cut-off prediction or speculation.
- 
If India won 2011’s world cup by making 250 runs, does it mean India 
will win 2015’s world cup by making 250 runs? Then why are you trying 
“extrapolate” the RTI replies of previous cut-offs to speculate 2012’s 
cut-offs! Each year’s exam is a separate thing with separate difficulty 
and separate crowd.
- 
Second, in the online forums and facebook communities, people post their
 score based on the answerkey which gives them maximum marks! So you 
don’t get a standard data in the first place.
- 
Third, Mostly three types of people post their scores online:
A. those who performed exceptionally well.
B. those who performed terribly bad.
C. those who feel they are on ‘border line’ based on their own cut-off 
speculation.
- 
But even the combined number of above A+B+C category of people in all 
internet communities = no more than 2000. While there are no less than 
20,000 serious contenders. (Rest 1-2 lakhs are just JBPS, we are not 
bothered with their future.) You need a huge sample data to 
statistically predict the cut-offs.
- 
Fourth, In an RTI reply, they had said: cut-offs for 2011’s CSAT exam 
will be released only after the entire mains-interview process is over. 
Using the same logic, UPSC is not going to reveal the official cut-offs 
for CSAT-2012, before May 2013.
- ^Edit 22 May 2012 courtesy Mallikarjun: Indianexpress report :CIC tells UPSC to disclose 
cut-off for prelims before mains and interview
- So let UPSC come out with cut-off data, there is no point in you 
increasing your blood pressure over cut-off speculation.
- The exam finished in the Evening of Sunday, right now it is tuesday 
morning, so not even three days have passed, UPSC cannot even collect 
back all the answersheets from every exam centre across India India to 
Delhi in such short time, and yet some people are saying "they've 
confirmed it with reliable sources inside UPSC office that cut off will 
be *** for 2012." 
- ^How is it possible? The OMR bundles are not even opened yet, the 
answersheets are not even checked yet and you've came out with the 
cutoff data confirmed from UPSC itself! <--- This is absolutely 
ridiculous. Don't panic over such bogus rumors and claims made online.
Start preparing for mains
- 
Those of you have the mindset I'll prepare for mains based on 
cut-offs. If my chances look good, only then I prepare for mains.
- 
^ wrong mentality. You’re thinking like a stockbroker but Success in 
UPSC requires the dedication of a world class athlete and patience of a 
gardener. Prelims is over means you have to start preparing for mains. 
You don’t wait for the results until August 2012 or waste time in 
cut-offs speculation. If you wait until August, it will be impossible to
 cover the syllabus of GS + Two optional subjects.
- 
Your CSAT paper did not go “good” or “Bad”. You paper is only “over”.
- 
In school or board exams, you’ve a pre-set target: 90% or First class 
therefore you can predict your own chances “meraa paper acchaa gaya.
 / Mera paper kharaab gaya”
- 
But in UPSC CSAT or CAT or similar competitive exams, there is no 
pre-set target, you just have to tick as many questions as you can – 
accurately without doing guesswork.
- 
So don’t say  “meraa paper kharaab gaya.” Because 10 of your 
friends are claiming to have ticked more answers than you did, or just 
because x member of orkut, or y coaching sir came up with a magical 
cut-off figure.
- 
And don’t waste your time or bandwidth asking people online “My score is
 *** so What’re my chances?” = only God or UPSC can answer that 
question.
Was the CSAT-paper Tough?
- 
Paper is never ‘tough’ or ‘easy’. Paper is just a paper.
- 
You’re not expected to know answer of each and every question.
- 
You don’t have to tick 90 or 100 answers to crack the exam.
- 
All you had to do was study hard, tick answers accurately and leave the 
rest in the hands of God.
- 
IF you believe you had studied hard and you’ve ticked the answers 
accurately without doing guesswork, then there is no need to worry. Let 
the result come in August 2012.
- 
And, Don’t become a Devdas or Superman after the results. In either case
 it’ll be a minor setback or victory, life is long and there are so many
 battles yet to be fought.
 
 
1 comments:
Thanks for the information, aiming for ias exams and as a working professional i always look to online for my preparatory needs. And that's why I got enrolled in IAS general studies and CSAT preparation online course at http://www.wiziq.com/course/119-ias-general-studies-prelimnary-course. Still was looking for some more information about strategies and your post helped me. Thanks again
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