Table of contents |
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Principle 1: Limit Your Sources |
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Principle 2: Limit Your Time |
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Principle 3: Focus on Issues, Not News |
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Principle 4: Learn to Make Notes Online |
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Principle 5: Read, Revise, and Execute |
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As mentioned in Essay and GS chapters, there’s no one best way to prepare for this exam. The rest of the chapter merely reflects your learnings; pick and choose what works for you and what you are convinced about. For instance, you read the newspaper meticulously everyday, but you never made any hand-written notes from it because you felt it was a waste of precious time. found a better alternative in making notes online (more on this later). But if you are used to making effective hand-written notes from newspapers in limited time, don’t change it just for the sake of this book.
Now, let's see what are the five important principles required for current affairs preparation.
A fundamental problem with current affairs is the overwhelming amount of reading material available. In their earlier attempts, the aspirant bought every current affairs resource on a whim, under the mistaken belief that more material would lead to more marks. Their room was once filled with CSR, Pratiyogita Darpan, EPW, Chronicle, Yojana, and nearly every magazine imaginable. They would purchase them out of excitement, place them neatly on the desk, only to never open them again due to lack of time. Eventually, they learned the hard way that chasing too much material is counterproductive. It is better to choose quality over quantity.
Current Affairs Sources:
Some aspirants spend an indefinite amount of time researching the ‘best website’ and the ‘best coaching material’ website for current affairs and invest less time actually reading them. Others have this perfectionist mindset that forces them to make copious notes and compilations from tons of material available in the market. Desist from this. Do your research for a day, decide on your sources, and stick to them. That will be sufficient.
The problem with most aspirants is not that they neglect newspapers, but they overplay their importance. Some read newspapers for almost 3-4 hours a day, leaving themselves with no time to read other subjects.
Newspapers are important, but not to the extent that you invest a disproportionate amount of time in reading them
It is best to finish reading a day’s current affairs in under 2 hours. Spending 3-4 hours on daily current affairs is unnecessary and excessive.
Current Affairs Preparation Include:
What’s the difference? News talks about an incident. Issues focus on ideas.To illustrate the difference, let’s consider a few examples.
Framework for Understanding Issues
Toppers never made any handwritten notes for current affairs. Online notes saved a lot of time. They used to read the papers and then save them online. But then, a follow-up question is frequently asked: Can you skip the newspaper altogether and just read these compilations? You shouldn’t, because toppers never completely skip the newspaper. Here’s why:
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