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Interview with Piyush Choubey about preparing POLITICAL SCIENCE OPTIONAL FOR IAS
MAINS
The issue of selecting optional subject for IAS exam is a sensitive one as
selection of right optional is the key to success. The issue had been discussed
again and again but its relevance is eternal. Many more freshers join the race
every year and they should be enlightened because selection of right optional
subjects it the first step to success. DR Piyush Choubey highlights the
preparation strategy for Political Science option for IAS examination.
Interview with Piyush Choubey about preparing POLITICAL SCIENCE OPTIONAL FOR IAS
MAINS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=293&
v=rz9M-oVDrnA
1. What are the basic criteria s of choosing an optional subject? What are the
major advantages of political science ?
The basic criteria to choose an optional subject is simply based on two
considerations. First, the subject should evoke interest in the aspirant and
secondly it should have maximum convergence with GS syllabus so that optional
preparation should rather help in GS preparation instead of reducing time for
the latter. This is one of the most beneficial aspects of Political Science
since it has direct overlap of nearly 40% with GS syllabus and overall
convergence is more than 65% of whole GS syllabus. Once a student has finished
Political Science preparation, he is already prepared content wise for the whole
GS-2 paper and needs to only practice answer writing as per the tone and trend
of questions. Political science covers topics included in Prelims syllabus with
weightage of nearly 8-10 questions and keeps the aspirant updated about events
of national and international importance till the personality test stage. Its
presence at every stage of examination ensures that it is more of asset than a
burden on GS preparation.
2. International Relations is one of the most dynamic portions of UPSC syllabus.
How will you suggest students to prepare for this section?
International relations requires a holistic understanding of the events and
issues at global level and rote based approach is simply not useful and in fact
counterproductive. Good marks in this section both in GS and in political
science can only be attained with ability to interlink various international
developments with each other. This should be accompanied by a comprehensive
study of nature of foreign policy of the key players like India, Russia, USA and
China. Students need to develop their knowledge by regularly reading journals,
newspapers and IR magazines. Relying only on study material available in the
market or one or two books will simply not develop the depth and flexibility
needed to score good marks. An understanding based approach on IR will also help
a lot in Essay and Personality test where aspirants own analysis of
international events will be required. My advice is to students is expand their
sources of study and always try to keep a balance between factual and analytical
content. It is very essential for students to have some idea about the history
of events in a region in order to understand the present behaviour of players in
the region for example West Asia, Central Asia and Africa.
3. What is the best strategy to deal with the Political Science since it has a
good combination of both static and dynamic aspects in both papers?
Political Science contains static portions such as Political thought and
theories of IR along with very dynamic portions like Indian Government and
Politics and International Relations. Most students spend a majority of their
time and effort in preparing the static aspect especially Western Political
thought. Students need to give equal importance to all the sections and keep in
mind the dynamic nature of Paper 2. One needs to focus on the pattern of
questions being asked and figure out the most important topics especially in
case of IR and IGP. Students need to compulsorily include views of eminent
thinkers and scholars in all the papers and need to avoid their own views. Also
answers in IGP and IR section need to have a good balance between factual and
analytical content. For static portions related to Thought and Theory, a good
understanding of the concepts is much more essential than simply mugging up the
content. Consulting good books for each part of syllabus along with IGNOU study
material is a must. Answer writing practice based on strictly timed tests is
indispensable for success in Political Science.
4. What specific advice will you give to beginners and experienced candidates
separately? What should be one's approach if he/she wants to score above 300?
For Beginners
Beginners should not jump directly to readymade material available in the
market. Instead they should avail expert guidance available and also refer to at
least 2-3 good books on each part of syllabus. Once they have developed a basic
understanding of the syllabus then they should start answer writing practice and
get their answers evaluated by expert faculties. One to one discussion with
teacher on structure, flow and organization of answer is crucial for new
aspirants. Rushing through syllabus should be avoided and one should focus more
on quality of understanding than completing syllabus in a short span of time.
For experienced candidates
Aspirants who are aiming to increase their scores further should first join a
good test series program which provides them quality and timely evaluation,
something which can be done only by experienced faculty. Based on the
evaluation, the aspirant needs to identify his/her particular areas of strength
and weakness and work accordingly. Personal guidance and interaction is very
crucial at this stage since I have observed that for experienced candidates it
is seldom the problem of content, instead it is the poor structuring and
presentation which is resulting in low marks. Aspirants at this stage need to
master the art of knowing what to include in their answers and what to avoid.
Instead of searching for new sources of content, one should focus on improving
one s problem by regular answer writing.
How to get more than 300 marks?
Getting marks above 300 requires a consistent and disciplined approach towards
the syllabus. Comprehensive coverage of syllabus instead of selectively picking
topics from syllabus is the first step. Even less frequently asked topics should
be well prepared. Frequently appearing questions should be prepared well in
advance. One needs to rigorously follow a good test series and should aim to for
consistent improvement in his/her scores as the series progresses. Early start
to preparation and long exposure to examination pressure via writing tests along
with following the suggestions provided by faculty after evaluation of each test
will certainly help in this.
5. What mistakes do you think aspirants should avoid while preparing for this
subject in particular?
Some of the common mistakes that I have observed among majority of aspirants
are:
Too much emphasis on Western political thought, sometimes at cost of even whole
Paper 2.
Underestimating the importance of Indian political thought specially thinkers
like M.N. Roy, Aurobindo and Ambedkar.
Unnecessary reliance on notes available in the market and not referring to
standard books and IGNOU study material. This results in aspirants being
unprepared in scenarios where UPSC opts for a dynamic and unconventional pattern
of questions.
Not paying enough attention to views of scholars and commentators, and instead
using their own views in answers.
In IR, over reliance on routine content and not being updated with recent events
of geo-strategic and geo-political importance. Lack of inter-linking and
holistic understanding in IR results in below average marks.
Lack of factual date and examples in answer especially of IR and IGP and
providing a generic analysis when the question is on a very specific issue or
topic.
Finally, lack of answer writing practice and in depth discussion and feedback
from expert faculty resulting in lack of improvement in weak areas.
6. At last, how exactly can an aspirant gain also in General studies from his
preparation of political science?
Aspirants generally make the mistake of dealing with prelims, Mains and optional
preparation separately. Political science has the unique merit that its
preparation provides rich dividends even at the prelims stage unlike any other
optional. I always advise students to study Indian Government and Politics
simultaneously with preparing Indian polity section. This not only ensures that
there is no duplication of efforts and wastage of time but it also keeps the
momentum going on since the knowledge of actual events of Indian politics keeps
the interest of the student alive in Indian constitution as well. Exactly same
strategy is suggested for IR section i.e. a common content based approach
towards IR questions in Prelims, GS Mains and Optional. In fact , it is highly
advisable to wrap up one s Pol Science syllabus before jumping completely into
GS preparation since this ensures that the student is already quite familiar
with at least 65% of syllabus and his/her GS-2 paper for Mains is also covered
beforehand. With so much convergence between GS-prelims , GS Mains and
optional, the only thing needs to be taken care of is modulating one s knowledge
as per the type and word length of the question asked.
7. What exactly is your teaching approach towards the subject and how is it any
different from other guidance available in the market?
Over last few years, I have interacted with thousands of students personally
including some of the top-rankers and based on this interaction I have developed
a very dynamic and student centric strategy of guidance. My intention is always
to ensure that each student receives a guidance which is intrinsic and unique to
his/her problem and not a generic bag of tips and tricks. I do not adhere to the
strategy of selective teaching (something becoming more common day by day) but I
rather focus on complete and comprehensive coverage of syllabus which simply
each and every topic no matter how small or easy, should be taught in a detailed
and lucid manner in the class.
Then it is followed by in-depth discussion on complicated issues and questions
where I actively encourage students to develop their independent opinion and I
keep correcting them in a friendly manner as they progress. Though this is a
tiresome process for me as a teacher, but this ensures that my students are
ready in the examination against even the most unpredictable and dynamic
questions. Since their learning has been shaped by articulated debate and
discussion, their answers always show a balanced viewpoint, something
indispensable for getting good marks.
We at GS-SCORE have a very capable and experienced content development team and
every year we keep on revising and updating our content as per the dynamic
nature of question paper. In spite of my high academic credentials, I still take
out some time every day to study the subject s latest developments and I always
ensure that I am well prepared for any doubts raised by students in the class. I
ensure that as the class proceeds, students are regularly given practice via
class tests and their given a feedback on their performance on one to one basis.
As a teacher I always make an endeavour to develop ability in my students to
interlink various topics in all sections of syllabus. This ability is suitably
tested by our Test series program where students are thoroughly evaluated only
by me not only on their content but also on their structuring, presentation and
organization of the answer. Any student who requests a one to one interaction is
also provided the same by Institute. Overall, my approach is balanced mixture of
interaction-based teaching, careful monitoring of progress of students along
with personal and detailed guidance for answer writing.
Piyush Choubey is a renowned faculty who teaches POLITICAL SCIENCE for IAS EXAM
AT GS SCORE, an institute for civil services preparation based in Delhi.