UPSC Prelims syllabus for 2025
Union
Public Service Commission Syllabus
IAS Prelims Syllabus
The UPSC
Prelims syllabus can be divided into two parts:
- General
Studies Paper I
- CSAT
or General Studies Paper-II
General Studies Paper – I
- Current
events of national and international importance.
- History
of India and Indian National Movement.
- Indian
and World Geography-Physical, Social, Economic Geography of India and the
World.
- Indian
Polity and Governance – Constitution, Political System, Panchayati Raj,
Public Policy, Rights Issues, etc.
- Economic
and Social Development – Sustainable Development, Poverty, Inclusion,
Demographics, Social Sector initiatives, etc.
- General
issues on Environmental Ecology, Biodiversity and Climate Change – that do
not require subject specialisation
- General
Science
CSAT/ General Studies Paper-II
- Comprehension
- Interpersonal
skills including communication skills
- Logical
reasoning and analytical ability
- Decision-making
and problem solving
- General
mental ability
- Basic
numeracy (numbers and their relations, orders of magnitude, etc.) – Class
X level)
- Data
interpretation (charts, graphs, tables, data sufficiency etc. – Class X
level)
UPSC CSAT Syllabus
The General Studies Paper-II in UPSC Prelims is often
referred to as CSAT or Civil Services Aptitude Test. The CSAT exam has been
part of controversy ever since its introduction. A section of candidates has
alleged that CSAT is negatively biased towards them. In 2014-2015, CSAT was
declared to be a ‘Qualifying Exam’ with a 33% pass criteria. The GS II or CSAT
intends to check the analytical skills of the IAS aspirants.
Current Affairs Syllabus
In UPSC Prelims (and
in Mains), the focus on dynamic questions has increased in recent years. Even
from sections like Polity which were considered to be static, more and more
questions seem to have their base in some recent issue/topic in the news. Moreover,
Indian Economy and Environment portions in the UPSC Prelims Syllabus focus
mostly on Current Affairs.
A few essential
sources for current affairs preparation are:
- Yojana Magazine and
Kurukshetra Magazine
- Economic and Political Weekly
- Press Information Bureau
Releases (PIB)
- The Hindu and The Indian
Express
In my personal opinion you should read newspaper daily and no
need to make daily notes as it will take a lot of time. You can go through any
coaching institute’s monthly magazine for free, It will help you to revise the
topics that you read in the newspapers and some additional topics. IT IS GOING
TO SAVE YOUR TIME.
Very informative
ReplyDelete๐๐
ReplyDelete