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BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - CDS MCQ


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30 Questions MCQ Test - BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 for CDS 2025 is part of CDS preparation. The BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 questions and answers have been prepared according to the CDS exam syllabus.The BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 MCQs are made for CDS 2025 Exam. Find important definitions, questions, notes, meanings, examples, exercises, MCQs and online tests for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 below.
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BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 1

Consider the following statements:

  1. The first telegraph line in India was laid between Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) and Diamond Harbour.
  2. The first Export processing zone in India was set up in Kandla.
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 1

Explanation:

  1. The first telegraph line in India: The first telegraph line in India was indeed laid between Kolkata (then known as Calcutta) and Diamond Harbour in 1850. This marked the beginning of telegraph communication in India.

  2. The first Export Processing Zone (EPZ) in India: The first Export Processing Zone (EPZ) in India was established in Kandla, Gujarat, in 1965. It was set up to promote exports by providing various incentives and facilities to export-oriented businesses.

Since both statements are correct, the answer is Both 1 and 2.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 2

Potassium Permanganate is used for purifying drinking water, because -

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 2

Potassium permanganate is a point-of entry treatment method that oxidizes dissolved iron, manganese, and hydrogen sulfide into solid particles that are filtered out of the water.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 3

Which of the following states is not included in Capital Region Planning Council?  

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 3

The National Capital Regional Plan covers areas in Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Rajasthan and the National Capital Tenitory (NCT) Delhi. The Union Minister for Urban Development is the Chairman of NCR Planning Board. 

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 4

Where is the third Trade and Investment Working Group Meeting taking place as part of India's G20 presidency?

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 4

The third Trade and Investment Working Group Meeting, as part of India's G20 presidency, is taking place in Kevadiya, Gujarat, India. Kevadiya is located in the state of Gujarat and is the site of the famous Statue of Unity. The meeting is attended by more than 75 international delegates from various G20 countries. The focus of the meeting is to discuss and build consensus among G20 countries on adopting proposals put forward by the Indian Presidency on global trade and investment-related issues. The choice of Kevadiya as the venue for the meeting provides an opportunity for the international delegates to visit the iconic Statue of Unity, which is a symbol of unity and pride for India.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 5

Who became the first male archer to win a gold medal in the recurve event at the World Youth Archery Championships in 2023?

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 5

Parth Salunkhe became the first male archer to win a gold medal in the recurve event at the World Youth Archery Championships held in Ireland from 3 to 9 July 2023. The 19-year-old from Satara in Maharashtra defeated seventh seed Song Injun in the Under-21 men's recurve individual final to secure the gold medal. Salunkhe had topped the ranking round and went on to win the final match with a score of 7-3 after a hard-fought five-set match. This achievement marks a significant milestone for India in archery, as Salunkhe's win sets a record for the country.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 6

Study the following line graph and answer the questins.
Exports from Three Companies Over the Years (in Rs. crore)

Q. Average annual exports during the given period for Company Y is approximately what percent of the average annual exports for Company Z?

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 6

Analysis of the graph: From the graph it is clear that

 

  1. The amount of exports of Company X (in crore Rs.) in the years 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999 are 30, 60, 40, 70, 100, 50 and 120 respectively.

  2. The amount of exports of Company Y (in crore Rs.) in the years 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999 are 80, 40, 60, 60, 80, 100 and 140 respectively.

  3. The amount of exports of Company Z (in crore Rs.) in the years 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999 are 60, 90,, 120, 90, 60, 80 and 100 respectively.

 

Average annual exports (in Rs. crore) of Company Y during the given period 

Average annual exports (in Rs. crore) of Company Z during the given period

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 7

The average of eight numbers is 25, that of the first two is 20 and of the next three is 26. The sixth number is less than the seventh by 4, and less than the eighth by 6. The last number is

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 7

Given Data:

  • The average of 8 numbers is 25:
    • Sum of all 8 numbers = 8 × 25 = 200
  • The average of the first two numbers is 20:
    • Sum of the first two numbers = 2 × 20 = 40
  • The average of the next three numbers is 26:
    • Sum of the next three numbers = 3 × 26 = 78
  • The sixth number (x) is:
    • 4 less than the seventh (y): y = x + 4
    • 6 less than the eighth (z): z = x + 6

Step-by-Step Solution:

Step 1: Sum of the last three numbers

From the total sum:

Sum of the last three numbers = 200 - (Sum of the first five numbers)

Sum of the last three numbers = 200 - (40 + 78) = 200 - 118 = 82

Step 2: Equation for the last three numbers

The last three numbers are xy, and z. Using their relationships:

x + y + z = 82

Substitute y = x + 4 and z = x + 6 into the equation:

x + (x + 4) + (x + 6) = 82

3x + 10 = 82

3x = 72 ⇒ x = 24

Step 3: Find y and z

Using x = 24:

  • y = x + 4 = 24 + 4 = 28
  • z = x + 6 = 24 + 6 = 30

Verification:

The sum of the last three numbers is: 24 + 28 + 30 = 82

This matches the required sum, confirming our calculations.

Final Answer:

The last number is 30.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 8

Three years ago , the average age of a family of 5 members was 17 years. Inspite of the birth of a child in the family, the present average age of the family remains the same. The present age of the child is

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 8

Total age of family 3 years ago = 17x5 = 85 years

Total age of family now = 17x 6 = 102 years

Total age of family excluding the child now = (85 + 15) = 100 years

Age of child = 2 years

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 9

What is the difference between the simple interest on a principal of Rs. 500 being calculated at 5% per annum for 3 years and 4% per annum for 4 years?

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 9

5% for 3 years (SI) = 15% of the amount; At the same time 4% SI for 4 years means 16% of the amount. The difference between the two is 1% of the amount. 1% of 500 = Rs. 5

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 10

? / 529 = 324 / ? 

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 10

x² = 529 * 324 ⇒ x = 23 * 18 = 414

So Option B is correct

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 11

12 percent of the voters in an election did not cast their votes. In this election there are only two candidates. The winner by obtaining 45% of the total votes and defeated his rival by 2000 votes. The total number of votes in the election

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 11

12% percent didn’t cast their vote. 45% of total votes get by the winning candidates, so remaining 43% will be scored by his rival. So, (45/100 -43/100)*P = 2000
P = 100000

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 12

A number is first decreased by 25%. The decreased number is then increased by 20%. The resulting number is less than the original number by 40. Then the original number is –

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 12

Let the number is a a – (75/100)*a*(120/100) = 40 we will get a = 400

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 13

Directions: Study the following bar chart carefully and answer the questions given beside.
The chart given below shows the percentage marks of a student in five different subjects. The maximum marks in each subject are 150.

Q. The difference between the total obtained score in English and Maths is what percent of the difference between the deducted score in Physics and Chemistry?

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 13

Following the common explanation, we get

Difference between the obtained score in English and Maths = 120 – 105 = 15

Difference between the deducted score in Physics and Chemistry = 82.5 – 52.5 = 30

Reqd. % = 15/30 × 100 = 50%

Hence, option D is correct.

Common explanation :

Score in Maths = 70% (150) = 105
 
Similarly calculated for each subject we get

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 14

Based on the bar graph given, calculate the approximate percentage increase in sales of mobile phones from 2004 to 2008.

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 14

Calculation:

Percentage increase in sales of mobile phones in 2004 = 35

Percentage increase in sales of mobile phones in 2008 = 70

Percentage increase in sales of mobile phones from 2004 to 2008 = (70 –  35)/35 × 100

⇒ 35/35 × 100

⇒ 100%

∴ The required percentage is 100%

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 15

Study the given bar graph and answer the question that follows.

The bar graph shows the exports of cars of type A and B (in Rs. millions) from 2014 to 2018.

In which year were the exports of cars of type A Rs. 55 million less than the average exports (per year) of cars of type B over the five years?

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 15

Given:

There are the exports of cars of type A and B (in Rs. millions) from 2014 to 2018 in the given bar graph.

Total number of years = 5

Concept used:

Average = The sum of the terms/Number of terms

Calculation:

The average exports (per year) of cars of type B (in Rs. millions) = (225 + 250 + 200 + 275 + 325)/5 = 1275/5 = 255 (in Rs. millions)

The exports of cars of type A in 2014 (in Rs. millions) = 200

Here, 255 - 55 = 200 (in Rs. millions)

Therefore, The exports of cars of type A in 2014 is Rs. 55 million less than the average exports (per year) of cars of type B over the five years

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 16

EXPAND

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 16

Expand : Become larger or more extensive.
Convert : Change the form,character,or function of something.
Condense : Make denser or more concentrated.
Congest : To concentrate in a small or narrow space.
Conclude : Bring or come to an end.
Antonym of Expand is Congest.
 

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 17

Read the each sentence to find out whether there is any grammatical error in it. The error, if any will be in one part of the sentence. The letter of that part is the answer. If there is no error, the answer is 'D'. (Ignore the errors of punctuation, if any).

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 17

was ITC's Gold Flake Kings sales of which are estimated' or 'whose sales are estimated.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 18

Read each sentence to find out whether there is any grammatical error in it. The error, if any will be in one part of the sentence. The letter of that part is the answer. If there is no error, the answer is 'D'. (Ignore the errors of punctuation, if any).

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 18

sank in the Pacific Ocean

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 19

In the following questions four alternatives are given for the idiom/phrase italicised and underlined in the sentence. Choose the alternative which best expresses the meaning of idiom/phrase. 

 

Q. The popularity of the yesterday's superstar is on the wane. 

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 19

on the wane: becoming weaker or less extensive.

Hence, the correct answer is option d i.e. growing less.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 20

Doctors are loath to prescribe powerful painkillers because their abuse as addictive drugs is a danger for many patients.

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 20

The pronouns ‘their’ and ‘them’ in A and B are ambiguous. In choice D there is a grammatical mistake: The verb does not refer to ‘drugs’, it refers to ‘abuse’ and therefore should be singular. Choice C is the correct answer.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 21

Find out the Synonym of the following word:
MASSIVE

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 21
  • Lump sum: a single payment made at a particular time, as opposed to a number of smaller payments or installments.
  • Strong: having the power to move heavy weights or perform other physically demanding tasks.
  • Little: small in size, amount, or degree.
  • Huge: extremely large; enormous.
  • Massive: exceptionally large.

So, the synonym of Massive is Huge.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 22

Directions: In the following question, five statements are provided. These statements form a coherent paragraph when properly arranged. Select the alternative representing the proper and logical sequencing of these statements in the question.

1. While some of this food inflation could wane in the coming months, there is greater concern about the rise in core inflation (excluding food and fuel) and inflation imported through high global prices.
2. This reflects a broad-based price rise under way, although it is led by fuel inflation (at 7.2%, from 6.1% a month ago) and food inflation (4.4%, from 1.9% in October).
3. If the spectre of slower growth with weak exports at a time when global trade is recovering is not worrying enough, with job creation still to pick up, the latest inflation data set too is cause for concern.
4. Prices at the consumer level rose at the fastest pace in 15 months this November, with inflation touching 4.88%, up from 3.6% in October and just 1.5% in June.
5. Within food, rising onion and tomato prices pushed vegetable inflation to a 16-month high of 22.5%; inflation in egg prices quickened from 0.8% in October to 8% in November.

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 22

The context is about inflation concerns. Sentence 3 is the leading statement - 'inflation data set too is cause for concern'. Sentence 4 presents 'data' of inflation 'inflation touching 4.88%'. Sentence 2 classifies inflation as 'fuel' and 'food' inflation and sentence 5 focuses on 'food' inflation; a 3-4-2-5 link. Sentence 1 is the last one as it mentions another type of inflation ('core') apart from 'food and fuel' inflation. The sequence is: 3-4-2-5-1.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 23

Direction: In the questions given below a sentence is given with two blanks in each. Corresponding to each question two columns are given with three words in each column. Which combination of words from the two columns will perfectly fit into the blanks to make the sentence contextually correct and meaningful? 

Taking a cue from these complaints, the National Human Rights Commission had ____________ a draft of patients’ rights charter with the Ministry and it was ____________ at the 11th meeting of the National Council of Clinical Establishments. 

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 23

According to the given context it is clear that we are talking about a draft of the charter of rights of the patients was shared with the Ministry by the National Human Rights Commission due to the ongoing situation in the country and that draft was discussed in the meeting of the stakeholders.

Coming to the words in the columns, there is only one word from the first column that will fill the blank correctly for the first blank and that is shared whereas from the second column, we can only use discussed among the three given words. Therefore the correct combination would have been AE. No other combination of words would have made the sentence correct both grammatically and contextually.

This makes Option D the correct choice among the given options. 

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 24

Choose the correct active voice for the given passive voice sentence:

Passive Voice: The plants were watered by John.

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 24

The passive voice uses the past simple tense, so we need to use the same tense in the active voice ('watered').

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 25

Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow:

Paragraph 1: The government has announced a list of ‘Institutes of Eminence’ (IoE) among India’s institutions of higher education. This was awaited for the simple reason that finding a place on it would save an educational institution from the clutches of a dreaded regulator. Regulators are meant to ensure that we have a socially desirable outcome, but in the case of higher education in India the opposite seems to have been the case. The University Grants Commission (UGC) has over half a century micro-managed this space to an unimaginable level of silliness. The result has been publicly-funded universities that are cavernous wastes, shattering the aspirations of our youth and producing low-level ‘knowledge’. Evidence of the role of India’s higher-education regulator may be seen in the feature that the few instances when this is not the case the institutions have enjoyed privilege that leaves them protected from its depredations.

Paragraph 2: The latest offering is in the form of a proposed Higher Education Commission of India (HECI). The intention is to leave the HECI to focus on quality while leaving funding of public institutions to the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD). Even as we observe the progress of the HECI and wonder if it is going to be any more than old wine in a new bottle, we already have an inkling of what could go wrong. This springs from the government’s announcement of a list of IoEs. The government has chosen three public and three private institutions for this status. The public institutions are the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, and the Indian Institutes of Technology at Delhi and Mumbai. The private ones are the Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, the JIO Institute and the Manipal Academy of Higher Education. This list suffers from a serious lack of credibility. Where in it are the universities of India? We understand that the government’s aim is to rectify the low presence of Indian institutions in the global rankings of universities.

Paragraph 3: While the early European universities may have started as academies of the arts they were soon to have medicine and astronomy as areas that they pursued with vigour. Somewhere along the line we seem to have lost this breadth and come to revel in a landscape dominated by engineering schools. These engineering schools, notably the IITs, have done us proud but cannot be equated with the great universities of the world for the simple reason that they are focussed on a narrow domain. Also, if the idea behind IoEs is that they will be left alone and given enhanced financial support, it must be acknowledged that until very recently the IITs have not been meddled with neither have they been starved of resources. The IISc is of course broader than the IITs but does not embrace the social sciences and the humanities, the presence of which would be considered necessary for a university.

Paragraph 4 : If a list of eminent institutions in the country is at all needed, the absence of the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) from the first list of IoEs is striking. Its faculty has brought many of the world’s leading ideas to Indian students and in at least area came close to building a new school of thought, however controversial. It is not as if similar efforts in the social sciences have not occurred elsewhere in India but JNU has perhaps sustained its reputation as a university for longer. It already had schools of Computer Science and the Life Sciences over four decades ago when these were fledgling disciplines giving it a certain breadth early on.

Paragraph 5 : Even as we may wonder at the exclusion of JNU from the list of IoEs released by the government one might wonder at how the private institutions that are on it made the cut. While BITS Pilani may have made a significant contribution to the country at a time when it desperately needed engineers, but is yet not what may be considered a university, the presence of the two others on the list leave one nonplussed. One of them, we are told, has been conferred the status on grounds of its promise, a dubious position to take as this institute has little to show except for the financial heft that will surely undergird it. The other is known largely for its association with the practice of charging capitation fees for education.

Q. Which of the following may be inferred from paragraph 3?
I. Universities should embody knowledge across a wide range of disciplines.
II. There is an emphasis on a depth of knowledge across a broad horizon in Indian Universities today.
III. In India, a lot of focus is given to Institutions which are focused on only few areas.

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 25

Statement I is correct. The entire paragraph talks about how an ideal Institution should focus on a wide variety of disciplines. This can be inferred and is correct.

Statement II is the opposite of what the paragraph states and is incorrect.

Statement III is correct as can be seen from the examples of IITs and IISc.

Hence, option D is correct.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 26

Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow:

Paragraph 1 : The government has announced a list of ‘Institutes of Eminence’ (IoE) among India’s institutions of higher education. This was awaited for the simple reason that finding a place on it would save an educational institution from the clutches of a dreaded regulator. Regulators are meant to ensure that we have a socially desirable outcome, but in the case of higher education in India the opposite seems to have been the case. The University Grants Commission (UGC) has over half a century micro-managed this space to an unimaginable level of silliness. The result has been publicly-funded universities that are cavernous wastes, shattering the aspirations of our youth and producing low-level ‘knowledge’. Evidence of the role of India’s higher-education regulator may be seen in the feature that the few instances when this is not the case the institutions have enjoyed privilege that leaves them protected from its depredations.

Paragraph 2 : The latest offering is in the form of a proposed Higher Education Commission of India (HECI). The intention is to leave the HECI to focus on quality while leaving funding of public institutions to the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD). Even as we observe the progress of the HECI and wonder if it is going to be any more than old wine in a new bottle, we already have an inkling of what could go wrong. This springs from the government’s announcement of a list of IoEs. The government has chosen three public and three private institutions for this status. The public institutions are the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, and the Indian Institutes of Technology at Delhi and Mumbai. The private ones are the Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, the JIO Institute and the Manipal Academy of Higher Education. This list suffers from a serious lack of credibility. Where in it are the universities of India? We understand that the government’s aim is to rectify the low presence of Indian institutions in the global rankings of universities.

Paragraph 3 : While the early European universities may have started as academies of the arts they were soon to have medicine and astronomy as areas that they pursued with vigour. Somewhere along the line we seem to have lost this breadth and come to revel in a landscape dominated by engineering schools. These engineering schools, notably the IITs, have done us proud but cannot be equated with the great universities of the world for the simple reason that they are focussed on a narrow domain. Also, if the idea behind IoEs is that they will be left alone and given enhanced financial support, it must be acknowledged that until very recently the IITs have not been meddled with neither have they been starved of resources. The IISc is of course broader than the IITs but does not embrace the social sciences and the humanities, the presence of which would be considered necessary for a university.

Paragraph 4 : If a list of eminent institutions in the country is at all needed, the absence of the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) from the first list of IoEs is striking. Its faculty has brought many of the world’s leading ideas to Indian students and in at least area came close to building a new school of thought, however controversial. It is not as if similar efforts in the social sciences have not occurred elsewhere in India but JNU has perhaps sustained its reputation as a university for longer. It already had schools of Computer Science and the Life Sciences over four decades ago when these were fledgling disciplines giving it a certain breadth early on.

Paragraph 5 : Even as we may wonder at the exclusion of JNU from the list of IoEs released by the government one might wonder at how the private institutions that are on it made the cut. While BITS Pilani may have made a significant contribution to the country at a time when it desperately needed engineers, but is yet not what may be considered a university, the presence of the two others on the list leave one nonplussed. One of them, we are told, has been conferred the status on grounds of its promise, a dubious position to take as this institute has little to show except for the financial heft that will surely undergird it. The other is known largely for its association with the practice of charging capitation fees for education.

Q. What could be a/some result/s of the function of funding of public institutions being left to the Ministry of Human Resource Development instead of HECI?
I. The government may use its discretion to reward institutions according to its ideological predilections.
II. The Institutions may be forced to comply with even some dubious rules setup by the government.
III. The government can be made accountable for attaining excellence in education.

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 26

Statements I and II are correct.  If it is upto the government, it may use its discretion to make the Institutions comply with their ideologies and rules.

Statement III is incorrect. The ministry/government would simply be looking after funding and not functioning of the sector. This cannot be concluded.

Hence, option B is correct.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 27

Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow:

Paragraph 1 : The government has announced a list of ‘Institutes of Eminence’ (IoE) among India’s institutions of higher education. This was awaited for the simple reason that finding a place on it would save an educational institution from the clutches of a dreaded regulator. Regulators are meant to ensure that we have a socially desirable outcome, but in the case of higher education in India the opposite seems to have been the case. The University Grants Commission (UGC) has over half a century micro-managed this space to an unimaginable level of silliness. The result has been publicly-funded universities that are cavernous wastes, shattering the aspirations of our youth and producing low-level ‘knowledge’. Evidence of the role of India’s higher-education regulator may be seen in the feature that the few instances when this is not the case the institutions have enjoyed privilege that leaves them protected from its depredations.

Paragraph 2 : The latest offering is in the form of a proposed Higher Education Commission of India (HECI). The intention is to leave the HECI to focus on quality while leaving funding of public institutions to the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD). Even as we observe the progress of the HECI and wonder if it is going to be any more than old wine in a new bottle, we already have an inkling of what could go wrong. This springs from the government’s announcement of a list of IoEs. The government has chosen three public and three private institutions for this status. The public institutions are the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, and the Indian Institutes of Technology at Delhi and Mumbai. The private ones are the Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, the JIO Institute and the Manipal Academy of Higher Education. This list suffers from a serious lack of credibility. Where in it are the universities of India? We understand that the government’s aim is to rectify the low presence of Indian institutions in the global rankings of universities.

Paragraph 3 : While the early European universities may have started as academies of the arts they were soon to have medicine and astronomy as areas that they pursued with vigour. Somewhere along the line we seem to have lost this breadth and come to revel in a landscape dominated by engineering schools. These engineering schools, notably the IITs, have done us proud but cannot be equated with the great universities of the world for the simple reason that they are focussed on a narrow domain. Also, if the idea behind IoEs is that they will be left alone and given enhanced financial support, it must be acknowledged that until very recently the IITs have not been meddled with neither have they been starved of resources. The IISc is of course broader than the IITs but does not embrace the social sciences and the humanities, the presence of which would be considered necessary for a university.

Paragraph 4 : If a list of eminent institutions in the country is at all needed, the absence of the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) from the first list of IoEs is striking. Its faculty has brought many of the world’s leading ideas to Indian students and in at least area came close to building a new school of thought, however controversial. It is not as if similar efforts in the social sciences have not occurred elsewhere in India but JNU has perhaps sustained its reputation as a university for longer. It already had schools of Computer Science and the Life Sciences over four decades ago when these were fledgling disciplines giving it a certain breadth early on.

Paragraph 5 : Even as we may wonder at the exclusion of JNU from the list of IoEs released by the government one might wonder at how the private institutions that are on it made the cut. While BITS Pilani may have made a significant contribution to the country at a time when it desperately needed engineers, but is yet not what may be considered a university, the presence of the two others on the list leave one nonplussed. One of them, we are told, has been conferred the status on grounds of its promise, a dubious position to take as this institute has little to show except for the financial heft that will surely undergird it. The other is known largely for its association with the practice of charging capitation fees for education.

Q. Which of the following best describes the tone of the author in paragraph 1?

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 27

Euphoric: full of energy, excitement, and cheerfulness.

Castigating: reprimand/rebuke (someone) severely.

Deploring: feel or express strong condemnation of (something).

Lamenting: a passionate expression of grief or sorrow.

Now, if we read the paragraph we can see the author is criticizing the regulation of the education sector and elaborates on this in the entire paragraph.

Clearly, Option A can be eliminated quickly.

Option D can also be eliminated as the author is not sad or expressing grief but is angry.

Out of options B and C, C is a better choice as the author is not verbally scolding anyone (castigating) but is expressing disapproval and criticizing the heavy handedness of the government regulator in the education sector. Here, option C is a better fit.

Hence, option C is correct.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 28

Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow:

Paragraph 1 : The government has announced a list of ‘Institutes of Eminence’ (IoE) among India’s institutions of higher education. This was awaited for the simple reason that finding a place on it would save an educational institution from the clutches of a dreaded regulator. Regulators are meant to ensure that we have a socially desirable outcome, but in the case of higher education in India the opposite seems to have been the case. The University Grants Commission (UGC) has over half a century micro-managed this space to an unimaginable level of silliness. The result has been publicly-funded universities that are cavernous wastes, shattering the aspirations of our youth and producing low-level ‘knowledge’. Evidence of the role of India’s higher-education regulator may be seen in the feature that the few instances when this is not the case the institutions have enjoyed privilege that leaves them protected from its depredations.

Paragraph 2 : The latest offering is in the form of a proposed Higher Education Commission of India (HECI). The intention is to leave the HECI to focus on quality while leaving funding of public institutions to the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD). Even as we observe the progress of the HECI and wonder if it is going to be any more than old wine in a new bottle, we already have an inkling of what could go wrong. This springs from the government’s announcement of a list of IoEs. The government has chosen three public and three private institutions for this status. The public institutions are the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, and the Indian Institutes of Technology at Delhi and Mumbai. The private ones are the Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, the JIO Institute and the Manipal Academy of Higher Education. This list suffers from a serious lack of credibility. Where in it are the universities of India? We understand that the government’s aim is to rectify the low presence of Indian institutions in the global rankings of universities.

Paragraph 3 : While the early European universities may have started as academies of the arts they were soon to have medicine and astronomy as areas that they pursued with vigour. Somewhere along the line we seem to have lost this breadth and come to revel in a landscape dominated by engineering schools. These engineering schools, notably the IITs, have done us proud but cannot be equated with the great universities of the world for the simple reason that they are focussed on a narrow domain. Also, if the idea behind IoEs is that they will be left alone and given enhanced financial support, it must be acknowledged that until very recently the IITs have not been meddled with neither have they been starved of resources. The IISc is of course broader than the IITs but does not embrace the social sciences and the humanities, the presence of which would be considered necessary for a university.

Paragraph 4 : If a list of eminent institutions in the country is at all needed, the absence of the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) from the first list of IoEs is striking. Its faculty has brought many of the world’s leading ideas to Indian students and in at least area came close to building a new school of thought, however controversial. It is not as if similar efforts in the social sciences have not occurred elsewhere in India but JNU has perhaps sustained its reputation as a university for longer. It already had schools of Computer Science and the Life Sciences over four decades ago when these were fledgling disciplines giving it a certain breadth early on.

Paragraph 5 : Even as we may wonder at the exclusion of JNU from the list of IoEs released by the government one might wonder at how the private institutions that are on it made the cut. While BITS Pilani may have made a significant contribution to the country at a time when it desperately needed engineers, but is yet not what may be considered a university, the presence of the two others on the list leave one nonplussed. One of them, we are told, has been conferred the status on grounds of its promise, a dubious position to take as this institute has little to show except for the financial heft that will surely undergird it. The other is known largely for its association with the practice of charging capitation fees for education.

Q. Which of the following is/are true as per the passage?
I. Among countries with a comparable research output, India with 0.8% R&D spending trails Russia, Brazil, South Korea and even Singapore, according to Unesco data.
II. HECI would focus on funding while quality would be regulated by the Ministry of Human Resource Development.
III. The Institution of Eminence (IoE) status has been given to six institutes, three each from the public and private sectors.

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 28

I has not been mentioned anywhere and is incorrect.

‘The intention is to leave the HECI to focus on quality while leaving funding of public institutions to the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD).’
II is incorrect.

‘This springs from the government’s announcement of a list of IoEs. The government has chosen three public and three private institutions for this status. The public institutions are the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, and the Indian Institutes of Technology at Delhi and Mumbai. The private ones are the Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, the JIO Institute and the Manipal Academy of Higher Education.’

III is correct.

Hence, option B is correct.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 29

Directions: Out of the given alternatives, choose the one which can be substituted for the given words/sentence.

A person who pretends to have more knowledge or skill than he really has:

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 29

The one word substitution is Charlatan.

Crook : a person who is dishonest or a criminal.
Apotheosis : the elevation of someone to divine status.
Renegade : a person who deserts and betrays an organization, country, or set of principles.
Charlatan : a person falsely claiming to have a special knowledge or skill.

BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 30

Directions: Out of the given alternatives, choose the one which can be substituted for the given words/sentence.

A disease that spreads over a large area:

Detailed Solution for BSF Head Constable Mock Test - 8 - Question 30

The one word substitution is Epidemic.

Academic : relating to education and scholarship.
Incorrigible : not able to be changed or reformed.
Invincible : too powerful to be defeated or overcome.
Epidemic : a widespread occurrence of an infectious disease in a community at a particular time.

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