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We are proud to announce CivilseXpert is the First and the Only Institute in India to Incorporate Partial Evaluation in its IAS Online Test and educational curriculum for Prelim 2011 as per the UPSC notification.
 

Posted on 18th Oct 2010

What is CSAT?

CSAT 2011 (Civil Service Aptitude Test) is the proposed exam to replace IAS Preliminary exam. The new syllabus and the subjects were officially announced on 18th October. The new exam pattern replaces the optional subjects with Common Aptitute paper. However in the official notice the name Civil services Preliminary was retained insted of proposed CSAT.

The actual syllabus of IAS Prelim CSAT is given below. We have also given the analysis for the new syllabus and we have updated it with examples on 15th Nov 2010. updated

Model question paper (Published by UPSC on Dec 2010) new

Click here to see the older proposal about CSAT


Civil Services (Prelim) Exam/ CSAT-2011 (SYLLABUS)

From next year (2011) the syllabus and pattern of Civil service exam is all set to change. There will be no optional paper  and aptitude test will be included.
This is a major shift from the pattern of examination the UPSC has been conducting.

From Civil Service Examination 2011, Preliminary Examination would consist of two papers- Paper I and Paper II.  The syllabus and pattern of the Preliminary Examination would be as under :

Click here to see Xpert's CSAT Syllabus Analysis updated

 

(Paper 1 - General Studies*) (200 marks) - Duration: Two hrs.

  • 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, bio-diversity and climate change - that  do not require subject specialization
  • General science.

 

(Paper II - Common Aptitude Test*) (200 marks) - Duration: Two hrs

  • 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)
  • English language comprehension skills (Class X level)

Source: Press Information Bureau (webpage), / The Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions (Pdf document)

* (Note: Name of the both the papers are given by CivilseXpert)

Click here to see Xpert's CSAT Syllabus Analysis updated

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Civilsexpert Proudly announces that Xpert's IAS Online Test is the only facility in India which exactly emulates the CSAT (IAS Prelim) exam conducted by UPSC.

Our superior Online Test facility is so generic so that we can adapt to any change in exam pattern immediately.

We have enough expertise to present the quality test which emulates quality of UPSC.

 

OLDER POST

Proposal about CSAT

The UPSC had told the government two years ago there was a need to test not just the knowledge of aspirants in particular subjects but their aptitude for “a demanding life in the civil services”. It had also recommended bringing down the number of attempts a candidate could take. But Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has kept this aspect on hold.

Now the government has decided to replace the Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination with the Civil Service Aptitude Test (CSAT), which will test candidates on their aptitude and analytical abilities rather than their ability to memorise.

“The CSAT is expected to come into effect from 2011,” Minister of State in the Ministry of Personnel, Prithviraj Chavan, told Lok Sabha on Wednesday 10 March – 2010.Confirming the change for the first stage of CSE, he told the Lok Sabha that the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has approved the proposal for introduction of CSAT in place of the existing CS (Preliminary) Examination.

In his written reply, he said: “CSAT is expected to come into effect from CSE, 2011.” The proposal to this effect was sent to the PMO last year by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) which conducts CSE every year to select candidates for elite all-India services, including IAS, IPS, IFS, IRS and others Group ‘A’ and Group ‘B’ central jobs.

As of now, the change will be effective only for the first stage of the Civil Services Examination (CSE) from 2011 onwards. The second and third stages — CS (Main) Examination and interview respectively — may remain the same till a committee of experts goes into various aspects of the entire system and submits its report.

Officials familiar with the proposal which has got the PM’s nod explained that the changes were suggested by various committees, including the second Administrative Reforms Commission, in their reports submitted over the years. Most of the panels had advocated laying greater emphasis on the “aptitude” of candidates than their knowledge of a subject, arguing that specialists or experts in any particular subject may not necessarily be good civil servants.

To decide the exact content and syllabus of CSAT, UPSC Chairman, Prof. D.P. Agrawal, has constituted a high power committee under Prof. S.K. Khanna, former Vice Chairman, University Grants Commission, to work out the details of  the syllabus for two papers. The committee is expected to submit its report by the end of  April, 2010, after which  UPSC will formally announce the contents of the syllabi of the two objective-type papers of CSAT stage.

For the first time, the Civil Service Aptitute Test (CSAT) was advocated by Dr. Y.K. Alagh in his Civil Services Review Committee Report, 2001.  He recommended major changes  in the structure of  examination system.  He favoured testing the candidates in a common subject rather than on optional subjects. According the Alagh Committee Report the structure of CSAT contains the following  contents -

(1) Basic Awareness (Nation and the World)

The general awareness of current affairs having a bearing on public life in India.

(2) Problem solving and analytical skills

Logical reasoning and decision making skills (Situations from civil service arena be taken to test reasoning and undertanding of problems related to the same).

(3) Elementaty Arithmetic

  • Data analysis ability
  • Data Interpretation / graphics / charts etc.
  • Quantitative

The above mentioned syllabus of CSAT was a proposal to UPSC.  The final shape of the syllabus will be decided after the Prof. S.K. Khanna Committee report.

Referring to introduction of CSAT, an official said: “The new system will also provide a level-playing field and equity, since all candidates will have to attempt common papers unlike the current format which provides for only one common paper.

Accordingly, the candidates will have to appear in two objective-type papers having special emphasis on testing their “aptitude for civil services” as well as on “ethical and moral dimension of decision-making” under a Civil Services Aptitude Test (CSAT). Both these papers — “having equal weightage” — will be “common to all candidates.”

At present the prelims consist of two papers: the first is on general studies and common to all; candidates can then choose the second paper from a list of two dozen-odd subjects. But now it is the second paper that will undergo a major change.

In Conclusion

There shall be two objective type-papers carrying equal marks unlike present, in which General-Studies paper carries 150 marks and optional paper carries 300 marks. So now, it shall be like two papers carrying 150 marks each.

- Therefore, instead of one compulsory paper of General-Studies and one Optional paper, both the papers shall be compulsories.

- Therefore, both the papers will be common to all candidates and the UPSC gets rid of current scaling system which was challenged on one ground or other. The matter has been pending in Supreme Court for long. So now even the court also need not deliver her verdict on the matter. The problem of scaling is over and now no candidate will take any undue advantage over others because of particular optional of his or her choice.

- The compulsory paper other than General-Studies, will test “aptitude for civil services”. It means testing the ability of decision making without compromising with moral and ethical values. Therefore it is ability of value based decision making instead of taking just facts based decision. It will reflect the candidates ability to analyse than ability to memorise.

More clearly, it will be the test to sideline bookish candidates. The decision making ability or ability to analyse may be mostly judged from the topics of Public Administration. The moral and ethical aspects, of decision making may be judged from psychological parts like Motivation, Conflict-management, Administrative behaviour, Human behaviour, Psychology of individual as well as Social-psychology to understand crowd behaviour, Management by objectives and so on.

Altogether, the second objective paper may clubbed form of Pulic Administration, Psychology, Sociology, different economic situation, geographical conditions and technologies needed in the areas of security, intelligence, law and order, Revenue in regulating and controlling administration. It is to ensure result oriented civil servants rather than efforts oriented. The profile of this paper, as hinted by the UPSC, will be a very good blend of Public Administration, Psychology, Sociology, Information and Communication Technology, Economy, International deals and Diplomacy.

Finally, there shall not be any change in the Main Examination including Interview in 2011, as clarified by the minister concerned, on the floor of Lok-Sabha. The change in Main Examination will be made after examining the response to changes in the Preliminary Examination. This is, really, in accordance to “demanding life in presented civil services”.

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