Reading Comprehension For Competitive Exams
Reading Comprehension For Competitive Exams
Reading Comprehension For Competitive Exams
Note : These are practice questions. Candidates applying for Postgradudate programmes can refer to
this document.
Read the passage and answer the questions that follow on the basis of the information provided in
the passage.
1. Education is one of the blessings of life and one of its necessities. That has been my
experience during the 17 years life. In my home in Swat Valley, in the north of Pakistan, I
always loved school and learning new things. I remember when my friends and I would
decorate our hands with henna for special occasions. Instead of drawing flowers and
patterns we would paint our hands with mathematical formulas and equations.
We had a thirst for education because our future was right there in that classroom. We
would sit and read and learn together. We loved to wear neat and tidy school uniforms and
we would sit there with big dreams in our eyes. We wanted to make our parents proud and
prove that we could excel in our studies and achieve things, which some people think only
boys can.
Things did not remain the same. When I was ten, Swat, which was a place of beauty and
tourism, suddenly changed into a place of terrorism. More than 400 schools were destroyed.
Girls were stopped from going to school. Women were flogged. Innocent people were killed.
We all suffered. And our beautiful dreams turned into nightmares.
Education went from being a right to being a crime. But when my world suddenly changed,
my priorities changed too.
I had two options, one was to remain silent and wait to be killed. And the second was to
speak up and then be killed. I chose the second one. I decided to speak up.
The terrorists tried to stop us and attacked me and my friends on 9th October 2012, but
their bullets could not win.
We survived. And since that day, our voices have only grown louder. I tell my story, not
because it is unique, but because it is not. It is the story of many girls.
People like to ask me why education is important especially for girls. My answer is always
the same.
What I have learnt from the first two chapters of the Holy Quran, is the word Iqra, which
means "read", and the word, nun wal-qalam which means "by the pen"?
And therefore as I said last year at the United Nations, "One child, one teacher, one pen and
one book can change the world."
Today, in half of the world, we see rapid progress, modernisation and development.
However, there are countries where millions still suffer from the very old problems of
hunger, poverty, injustice and conflicts.
Dear brothers and sisters, the so-called world of adults may understand it, but we children
don't. Why is it that countries which we call "strong" are so powerful in creating wars but so
weak in bringing peace? Why is it that giving guns is so easy but giving books is so hard? Why
is it that making tanks is so easy, but building schools is so difficult?
So let us bring equality, justice and peace for all. Not just the politicians and the world
leaders, we all need to contribute. Me. You. It is our duty. So we must work ... and not wait.
(Source: Nobel Lecture by Malala Yousafzai, Oslo, 10 December 2014.)
1) When Malala was 10 years old what happened in the Swat valley?
A) Terrorists tried to shut down schools
B) Individuals were threatened with dire action if they didn’t stop going to school
C) Neither A nor B
D) Both A and B
4) Malala’s story cannot serve as an example for others because it’s unique.
A) Agree
B) Disagree
5) Malala and her friends survived because they gave in to the terrorists.
A) True
B) False
2. Indian banks’ pile of bad loans is a huge drag on the economy. It’s a drain on banks’ profits.
Because profits are eroded, public sector banks (PSBs), where the bulk of the bad loans
reside, cannot raise enough capital to fund credit growth. Lack of credit growth, in turn,
comes in the way of the economy’s return to an 8 per cent growth trajectory. Clearly, the
bad loan problem requires effective resolution. Once an asset is recognised as a non-
performing asset (NPA), banks must decide what to do with it. They have several options.
One, they can try to seize the assets pledged by the borrower and sell these. This typically
involves large losses on loans as the assets have to be sold at steep discounts to their book
value.
Two, under the RBI’s Strategic Debt Restructuring (SDR) scheme, they can convert their
loans into equity, acquire a majority stake in the firm, dislodge the promoters or
management and bring in new promoters and management. While this happens in advanced
economies all the time, the SDR scheme has not taken off in India. Indian banks do not have
experience in running businesses till such time as new promoters are found. Nor do they
have experience in locating promoters and management who can take over the stressed
assets. Option three, banks can restructure the loans so that borrowers are able to service
them. This involves stretching out the period of payment, or waiving a portion of the loans,
or reducing the interest rate on loans, or some combination of these. In any restructuring,
banks incur losses on the loans they have made. At PSBs, managers are open to the charge
that they have favoured borrowers in a restructuring scheme and can invite action from the
investigative agencies. In today’s environment, this has resulted in virtual paralysis at PSBs. A
fourth option for banks is to sell the NPA at a discount to an Asset Restructuring Company.
This again involves a significant loss on loans when the transaction is made. But it has the
effect of getting an NPA off the books of the bank or ‘cleaning up the balance sheet’. The
bank’s capital is eroded to the extent of the loss.
(Source: Adapted from “Why a Bad Bank is Tricky,” The Hindu, Oct 10, 2016).
3) Bad loans
A) affect bank’s ability to generate funds
B) affect the government’s functioning
C) reduce tax liability
D) affect public trust
5) When pledged assets are sold by the bank to recover bad debts,
A) It results in a profit to the bank
B) It results in a loss to the bank
C) It results in a loss to the public
D) It results in full recovery of the loan
3. This is a description of how the day started at a primary school. At 9 a.m. children of the
primary school stood loosely in rows near their school building at one side of the school
compound. Not all children were on time and as they came in they joined their class by
standing at the end of the row. Boys and girls stood in separate rows. There was a lot of
noise and bustle as children kept jostling and talking to each other. Some of the very young
children came with a parent or other caretaker and these adults too continued their
conversation. In the general hubbub it was difficult to hear what was being said by the head
mistress who stood on the school verandah facing the rows of jostling children. Then one
student went to the head of the assembly and a newspaper was pushed into his hand by one
of the teachers.
The boy read out some news articles from the paper, but it was difficult to hear what was
said. Then there was a loud command from one of the teachers and the children stood to
attention, said “Jai Bharat, jai Karnataka” and shuffled off towards their classrooms. As the
children went into their classrooms, the teachers moved into the headmistress’ office and
sat down on the benches placed along the wall of the room. They spent a few minutes
talking about various daily issues and then picked up their bags and went on to the classes
they were to teach. In one of the classes, the teacher upon entering the class declared that
the classroom had not been swept and ordered that it should be swept. One or two girls
jumped up to find a broom and swept the floor at the front of the class where no one was
seated and then gathered the dust and bits of paper in a corner behind the door. By and
large the classroom floors were kept fairly, but not spotlessly, clean.
Children sat down on the floor, cross legged, boys to one side and girls to the other, their
satchels beside them. Footwear was left outside the classroom in a row along the wall.
Teachers however, did not bother to remove their footwear before entering the class.
By 9:40 a.m. children were seated in their classrooms and teachers took their places in the
classrooms and began teaching the lesson.
4. Women often get into teaching because it seems to be a career option that is compatible
with their other roles and responsibilities. Of course, this is not the only reason why women
choose teaching and cite other reasons such as the possibility of going deeper into a subject,
the opportunity to interact with children and the nobility of the teaching profession.
Although many women mention their liking for working with children or youngsters as
sources of satisfaction in their work, it doesn’t seem to be the main reason for choosing a
teaching career. A widely held notion among teachers in all school types is that the work of
teaching is especially suited for women because it allows them to perform their socially
approved role as homemakers and caregivers while also doing a ‘respectable job’ that placed
limited demands in terms of time spent outside the home.
Career minded women often face family pressures to choose a job that is seen as suitable or
respectable for women and also one that is compatible with their responsibilities as mother,
wife and homemaker. Men do not face similar pressures in their choice of career and don’t
have to think of domestic chores and care of family members while choosing a career. Even
without overt family pressure, women themselves think of teaching as a job that will allow
them to earn an income and at the same time be devoted to the family. As Arati who taught
biology said:
“I did my M.Sc. and B.Ed. and worked for one year teaching (before getting married). I had
no idea that I could work in agro-based company. If we have to do night shift far away from
the house, or work in some lab far away then how to manage? Food, health and education
of my children are most important to me in the world.”
Arati's case illustrates the element of constraint in the decisions of many women who come
in to teaching for its compatibility with marriage and child rearing. The reasons she
articulated, represented the reasons that account for the fact that many women who could
have opted for alternate career choices end up in teaching. This appears to be especially
true for women teachers in secondary schools, as they are graduates and could have taken
further studies or other careers.
1) From what you read in the paragraph, would you say that
A) Men and women face the same problems when it comes to career choice
B) Society expects different things from men and women
C) Men should not join teaching
D) Women should not join teaching
2) According to the paragraph more career options are open for teachers in secondary
schools because
A) They already have a degree
B) They don’t develop strong affection towards children
C) They develop management skills by teaching
D) Teaching helps them improve their knowledge
5. The latest Lancet series on maternal health reveals that nearly one quarter of babies
worldwide are still delivered in the absence of a skilled birth attendant. Further, onethird of
the total maternal deaths in 2015 happened in India, where 45,000 mothers died during
pregnancy or childbirth while Nigeria shouldered the maximum burden of 58,000 maternal
deaths.
Each year, about 210 million women become pregnant and about 140 million newborn
babies are delivered. Ahead of the U.N. General Assembly, The Lancet has published a new
series of papers on maternal health which reveal that while progress has been made in
reducing maternal mortality globally, differences remain at international and national levels.
“In all countries, the burden of maternal mortality falls disproportionately on the most
vulnerable groups of women. This reality presents a challenge to the rapid catch-up required
to achieve the underlying aim of the Sustainable Development Goals [SDGs] — to leave no
one behind,” says series author Professor Wendy Graham, London School of Hygiene &
Tropical Medicine.
According to the academic papers, there are two broad scenarios that describe the
landscape of poor maternal health care — the absence of timely access to quality care
(defined as ‘too little, too late’) and the overmedicalisation of normal and postnatal care
(defined as ‘too much, too soon’). “The problem of overmedicalisation has historically been
associated with high-income countries, but it is rapidly becoming more common in low and
middle-income countries, increasing health costs and the risk of harm. For instance, 40.5% of
all births are now by caesarean section in Latin America and the Caribbean,” stated one
paper.
While facility and skilled birth attendant deliveries are increasing in many low-income
countries, the authors say that phrases such as ‘skilled birth attendant’ and ‘emergency
obstetric care’ can mask poor quality care. Additionally, many birth facilities lack basic
resources such as water, sanitation and electricity. The authors warn that measuring
progress via the current indicator of skilled birth attendant coverage is insufficient and fails
to reflect the complexity of circumstances. “It is unethical to encourage women to give birth
in places with low facility, no referral mechanism, with unskilled providers, or where content
of care is not evidence-based. This failing should be remedied as a matter of priority,” added
Professor Oona Campbell, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.
In high-income countries, rates of maternal mortality are decreasing but there is still wide
variation at national and international level. For instance, in the U.S., the maternal mortality
ratio is 14 per 1,00,000 live births compared to 4 per 1,00,000 in Sweden. The subSaharan
African region accounted for an estimated 66% (2,01,000) of global maternal deaths,
followed by southern Asia at 22% (66,000 deaths). However, the authors warn that not all
care is evidence-based, and improved surveillance is needed to understand the causes of
maternal deaths when they do occur. Additionally, they point to new challenges in delivering
high quality care, including the increasing age of pregnancy, and higher rates of obesity. The
authors of the series identify five key priorities that require immediate attention in order to
achieve the SDG global target of a maternal mortality ratio of less than 70 per 1,00,000 live
births.
2) Why do the authors argue that measuring progress through skilled birth attendant
availability can mask problems?
A) Many facilities lack equipment and personnel to ensure safe births
B) Many facilities don’t have basic sanitation, water and/or electricity
C) Quality of care is not monitored properly in many facilities
D) All of the option
4) State true or false: All developed countries have similar rates of maternal deaths
A) True
B) False
5) Which of the following sets of problems are responsible for poor maternal care?
A) Not seeking timely care
B) Very little care
C) Neither A nor B
D) Both A and B
6. Amid tensions between the two countries, it has been suggested that India should impose a
trade embargo on Pakistan by suspending its most-favoured nation (MFN) commitment
towards Pakistan in the World Trade Organisation (WTO). The MFN provision, given in
Article I of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), 1994, puts every WTO
member (including India) under an obligation to extend any benefit (say, lowering tariff
rates) accorded to one member (say, the U.S.) to all other WTO members (including
Pakistan). This core non-discrimination principle is the cornerstone of the world trading
system. Arguing for India suspending its MFN commitment towards Pakistan would mean
India restricting imports from Pakistan without restricting imports of like goods from other
countries, or/and India restricting exports to Pakistan without restricting the export of like
goods to other countries. This can be achieved by imposing trade quotas, higher tariffs,
taxes, or even totally banning some or all traded products. But is this economically and
legally feasible? Although bilateral trade between India and Pakistan has increased from
$345 million in 2003-04 to $2.61 billion in 2015-16, it is abysmal compared to India’s total
merchandise trade of $641 billion in 2015-16 and Pakistan’s total trade of around $75 billion,
which includes exports worth $28.3 billion. India’s exports to Pakistan amount to $2.1 billion
whereas imports from Pakistan are just $441 million, resulting in a trade surplus of $1.7
billion in favour of India. Given these numbers, assuming India were to suspend MFN status
by stopping all imports from Pakistan, it would only result in a very marginal decline of
Pakistan’s total exports and that too assuming that Pakistan is unable to find alternative
markets. Even prohibiting all Indian exports to Pakistan, such as textiles, chemicals and
agricultural products, will also not have any noticeable impact on Pakistan because Pakistan
can always source these goods from other countries. On the contrary, restricting India’s
exports, which have contracted considerably in the last 18 months, might hurt India more
than Pakistan. Given the negligible economic impact and potential legal problems,
suspending MFN to impose trade sanctions on Pakistan will only escalate tensions without
much benefit. Instead of weakening trade ties, India and Pakistan should pay heed to this
famous claim that ‘when goods don’t cross borders, soldiers will’. Free trade connects
countries, and thus incentivises peace. Empirically, it has been shown that higher levels of
free trade reduce military conflicts. India and Pakistan should boost free trade amongst
themselves, Pakistan should honour its MFN commitment to India in the WTO, and India
should use the SAARC platform to push for deeper trade ties. (Source: “Keep Up the Fair
Exchange,” The Hindu, Oct. 10, 2016)
3) The bilateral trade between India and Pakistan affects bank’s ability to generate funds
A) high volume in relation to the total international trade of the two countries;
B) medium volume as compared to international trade of the two countries;
C) low volume as compared to the total international trade of the two countries;
D) to be suspended due to tension between the two countries.
7. In West Bengal, nearly 3,000 quacks — informal healthcare providers with no formal medical
education — are to be trained for six months. The crash course in medicine, and to be
conducted by 130 trained nurses, is to begin from December 1. The objective is to provide
these informal providers with a minimum scientific understanding of human health and the
dos and don’ts when those who are sick approach them. “The aim is to turn the self-
proclaimed, untrained village doctors into a group of skilled health workers who can deliver
primary health care in villages and detect life-threatening conditions and refer patients to
qualified doctors or medical facilities,” says Dr. Abhijit Chowdhury from the Institute of Post
Graduate Medical Education and Research, Seth Sukhlal Karnani Memorial Hospital, Kolkata.
“Uttar Pradesh has shown interest in undertaking similar work and we are doing pilot
studies in Bihar and Jharkhand.” “The endeavour is not to produce doctors of sub-optimal
quality for rural people. It is an attempt to use the available health-care human resources to
become assistants to doctors by providing them with some understanding of life-saving
measures,” he says. “They are not as good as qualified doctors and we will teach them not to
call themselves doctors but as health-care workers.” West Bengal has taken the lead in
providing some essential and basic training to informal providers after a novel experiment
that trained quacks to correctly handle cases and compile basic checklists. The results have
put to rest the long-held concerns of the Indian Medical Association (IMA) that trained
informal health-care providers would violate rules with greater impunity and frequency or
worsen their clinical practice. The programme was undertaken in 2013 in 203 villages in the
State’s Birbhum district by the Liver Foundation in West Bengal. Spread over 150 hours over
nine months, the programme for 152 randomly recruited informal providers led to 14.2 per
cent improvement in their ability to correctly handle cases and compile basic checklists.
Where the attendance was 56 per cent, it was found that the gap between qualified doctors
and quacks to correctly manage cases was reduced by half. Those who had attended all the
training sessions were found to be on a par with qualified doctors in handling cases. The
results were published on October 7 in the journal Science. (Source: Adapted from “Healing
With “Qualified” Quacks” The Hindu, Oct 9, 2016).
8. Many years ago, an environmental organization was set up to explain about pollution and
resource depletion and tell people that their daily actions have long term effects on the
world around them. Members of the organization tried to convince people that it is
important to dispose waste properly. They made posters telling people how to keep their
wet wastes like vegetable peels and other kitchen wastes in a separate bucket and not mix it
up with dry waste lie plastic and paper. By doing this, the peels can be converted into
manure for plants and the paper and plastic can be re-cycled to make useful products
instead of going to the landfill. Now, after so many years, the Bangalore City Corporation has
made it compulsory for all apartments to keep their kitchen wastes separate from their dry
paper and plastic wastes.
Everybody has to understand the importance of the environment and take responsibility for
keep our surroundings clean. It is even more important to understand that just by taking all
the waste matter far away from the city we are creating a huge problem for the people in
the villages. If waste is not properly treated it can pollute the water and the soil and harm all
of us. Today, there are many different organizations working to save the environment.
People have come up with many solutions to the many environmental problems that are
harming our beautiful city. There is an organization that converts tetra packs into beautiful
furniture and roofing material. There is a housing colony that manages their water so that
there is no wastage of rainwater. There are people who can show how we can use natural
seeds and fruit peels to make soap and cleaning liquid so that harmful detergents are need
not be used. There are voluntary organization who are actively involved in trying keep the
lakes of Bangalore clean and healthy. There is a government industry that recovers metals
like aluminium from electronic wastes. Even though the problem of environmental pollution
and resource depletion has become very serious, we must not give up hope but join hands
with all the positive efforts to solve problems.
1) What was the message that the environmental organization mentioned in the paragraph
trying to give:
A) Do not cut trees
B) Protect forest
C) Be kind to animals
D) Dispose waste properly
9. The record of India’s achievements is not easy to dismiss, but is that the whole story? An
agreeable picture of a country in a rapid march forward towards development with justice
would definitely not be a comprehensive, or even a balanced, account of what has been
actually happening: indeed far from it. There are many major shortcomings and breakdowns
– some of them gigantic – even though privileged groups, and especially the celebratory
media, are often inclined to overlook them. We also have to recognize with clarity that the
neglect – or minimizing – of these problems in public reasoning is tremendously costly, since
democratic rectification depends crucially on public understanding and widespread
discussion of the serious problems that have to be addressed.
Since India’s recent record of fast economic growth is often celebrated, with good reason, it is
extremely important to point to the fact that the societal reach of economic progress in India has
been remarkably limited. It is not only that the income distribution has been getting more unequal in
recent years (a characteristic that India shares with China), but also that the rapid rise in real wages
in China from which the working classes have benefited greatly is not matched at all by India’s
relatively stagnant real wages. No less importantly, the public revenue generated by rapid economic
growth has not been used to expand the social and physical infrastructure in a determined and
wellplanned way (in this India is left far behind by China). There is also a continued lack of essential
social services (from schooling and health care to the provision of safe water and drainage) for a
huge part of the population. ...While India has been overtaking other countries in the progress of its
real income, it has been overtaken in terms of social indicators by many of these countries, even
within the region of South Asia itself. (Jean Dreze and Amartya Sen, An Uncertain Glory: India and
its Contradictions)
2) The Authors seem to suggest that it is important to look at the ‘whole story’ because
A) India must rise up the ranks of South Asian countries.
B) For a democracy, public understanding of issues is the route to rectification.
C) Privileged groups and media tend to give little importance to this.
D) While celebrating India’s record of economic growth, it is important to compare
oneself to another country like China.
3) Which of the following is not mentioned as a cause for major shortcoming in India’s
progress?
A) Rise in real wages of the working classes.
B) Equitable income distribution across classes.
C) Infrastructure, societal and physical.
D) Progress of real income.
10. While there’s no perfect definition of life, there [is enough reason] to think that certain
atoms common in [Earth’s] biochemistry are likely to be used by organisms [that might exist
in locations other than Earth] and might help us recognize life elsewhere. On Earth, the chief
structural elements in biology are carbon, nitrogen and hydrogen, while chemical
interactions take place in liquid water. In astrobiology, there’s wide agreement that life
elsewhere is likely to be carbon based and that a planet with liquid water would, at least,
favour “life as we know it.” These deductions arise from realizing that life is constructed
from a limited [set of things], the periodic table of chemical elements, which is the same
throughout the universe.
(David C. Catling, A Very Short Introduction to Astrobiology.)
2) The author writes: “On Earth, the chief structural elements in biology are carbon, nitrogen
and hydrogen [.]” This means that
A) Carbon, nitrogen and hydrogen make up living things on Earth.
B) Carbon, nitrogen and hydrogen are important elements in Earth’s atmosphere.
C) Biology involves the study of carbon, nitrogen and hydrogen.
D) Carbon, nitrogen and hydrogen are elements with the same structure.
5) To say that a planet with liquid water would “favour” life as we know it is to say that
A) Liquid water is important for life.
B) The existence of liquid water on a planet raises the possibility of life on that planet.
C) Liquid water is all that is required for life anywhere in the universe.
D) A planet with a frozen surface cannot have life.
11. Prison not only robs you of your freedom, it attempts to take away your identity. Everyone
wears a uniform, eats the same food, follows the same schedule. It is by definition a purely
authoritarian state that tolerates no independence or individuality. As a freedom fighter and
as a man, one must fight against the prison’s attempt to rob one of these qualities.
From the courthouse, I was taken directly to Pretoria Local, the gloomy red-brick
monstrosity that I knew so well. But I was now a convicted prisoner, not an awaiting-trial
prisoner, and was treated without even the little deference that is afforded to the latter. I
was stripped of my clothes and Colonel Jacobs was finally able to confiscate my [cloak]. I was
issued the standard prison uniform for Africans: a pair of short trousers, a rough khaki shirt,
a canvas jacket, socks, sandals and a cloth cap. Only Africans are given short trousers, for
only African men are deemed ‘boys’ by the authorities.
I informed the authorities that I would under no circumstances wear shorts and told them I
was prepared to go to court to protest. Later, when I was brought dinner, stiff cold porridge
with half a teaspoonful of sugar, I refused to eat it. Colonel Jacobs pondered this and came
up with a solution: I could wear long trousers and have my own food, if I agreed to be put in
isolation. ‘We were going to put you with the other politicals,’ he said, ‘but now you will be
alone, man. I hope you enjoy it.’ I assured him that solitary confinement would be fine as
long as I could wear and eat what I chose.
(Nelson Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom)
1) According to the author, as a freedom fighter and as a man, one must fight
A) To be released on parole as quickly as possible.
B) To better the living conditions in prison.
C) To maintain one’s individuality and independence within the prison system.
D) To wear clothes of your choice.
2) On his arrival at prison, to what did the author attribute the lack of deference he was
shown?
A) His status as a convicted prisoner.
B) Because he was an African.
C) He was a repeat offender.
D) His lack of individuality.
12. After seven years of marriage, Deeti was not much more than a child herself, but a few
tendrils of white had already appeared in her thick black hair. The skin of her face, parched
and darkened by the sun, had begun to flake and crack around the corners of her mouth and
her eyes. Yet, despite the careworn commonplaceness of her appearance, there was one
respect in which she stood out from the ordinary: she had light grey eyes, a feature that was
unusual in that part of the country. Such was the colour - or perhaps colourlessness - of her
eyes that they made her seem at once blind and all-seeing. This had the effect of unnerving
the young, and of reinforcing their prejudices and superstitions to the point where they
would sometimes shout taunts at her - chudaliya, dainiya - as if she were a witch: but Deeti
had only to turn her eyes on them to make them scatter and run off. Although not above
taking a little pleasure in her powers of discomfiture, Deeti was glad, for her daughter's sake
that this was one aspect of her appearance that she had not passed on - she delighted in
Kabutri's dark eyes, which were as black as her shiny hair. Now, looking down on her
daughter's dreaming face, Deeti smiled and decided that she wouldn't wake her after all: in
three or four years the girl would be married and gone; there would be enough time for her
to work when she was received into her husband's house; in her few remaining years at
home she might as well rest.
(Amitav Ghosh, Sea of Poppies)
2) Why was Deeti glad that her daughter did not have grey eyes?
A) She liked eyes which were black as shiny hair.
B) Deeti did not want Kabutri to get teased by other children.
C) Grey eyes look colourless and give the impression of being blind.
D) Only witches have grey eyes.
4) By saying ‘Deeti was not much more than a child herself’ the author means
A) Seven years of marriage had aged her.
B) Some of her hair were already white, indicating her advanced years.
C) She herself was a young woman.
D) Deeti was old enough to have a child.
5) What was Deeti’s response to the taunts of the young?
A) Made her wish that her eyes were dark like Kabutri’s.
B) She enjoyed a little her ability to look at them and make them uncomfortable enough
to run away.
C) She tried to stay indoors and out of their way.
D) She tried to address their prejudices and superstitions.
13. Throughout my years of fieldwork with the Shuar, [a community in the Amazon Rainforest,] I
have witnessed a [variety] of behaviors that would shock Western parents. I.. imagined
…they would stare in alarm at the sight of children setting fire to fields, walking barefoot
past [large, hairy spiders], or mowing grass with knives. But as the years have gone on, I
have found myself less surprised by the culture of the Shuar, and more surprised by our
own. Why don’t we allow children access to the world as we know it, a world that involves
death, sex and…yes, sometimes even [knives]? After all, there’s good reason to think that
small-scale societies like the Shuar…have held onto something we have recently lost. (Dorsa
Amir, “Love, Death, and Other Forgotten Traditions: What We Don’t Tell Our Children,”
Nautilus, November 23, 2017.)
1) The author’s earlier response to the sight of Shuar children doing dangerous work was
probably one of
A) Wonder and joy
B) Shocked surprise
C) Fear
D) Despair
2) According to the passage, one of the most surprising things about the life of the Shuar
children is that
A) They did not play with toys.
B) They were generally destructive.
C) They did not know much about life outside the Amazon Rainforest.
D) They often did the work of adults.
4) The author’s contact with the Shuar people caused her to become “more surprised” by
her own society. This means that
A) The ways of the Shuar people taught her to question the ways of her society.
B) She became a stranger to her own people.
C) She could no longer understand why children were protected in her society.
D) She began to think like the Shuar people.
14. Rabindranath Tagore’s song “Janaganamana Adhinayaka” came, from the very day it was
sung publicly, to occupy a unique place all over India, and even abroad, as one of our finest
national songs. The attention of the whole country was focused on it with reference to the
question of selecting it as our National Anthem. But serious charges were also brought
against it in this connection…
The charges were mainly these: first, that the song was a eulogy of King George V, composed
on the occasion of his visit to India, and according to some, sung at the Coronation Durbar at
Delhi; secondly, that it was actually a devotional song and as such could be given the status
of a patriotic song, but did not deserve the prestige of the National Anthem; and thirdly, that
it had no all-India appeal—some of the provinces were not mentioned in it, so that they
could not very well accept it as the National Anthem…Of the charges mentioned above, the
first is the most serious and should, therefore, be taken up first. Rabindranath himself said in
a letter (20.11.1937) regarding the origin of the song:
1) Why could the author of the National Anthem not fulfill his friend’s request?
A) Because it was beneath him to honor the request of someone loyal to the British
monarch.
B) Because he was angry with the actions of the British monarch with respect to India.
C) Because he did not think that any human monarch controlled the destiny of India.
D) Because he did not think that George V was in charge of the destiny of India.
2) Most likely, the author of this passage considers “the first charge” against
“Janaganamana Adhinayaka” as being the most serious because
A) It is difficult to refute.
B) It makes Tagore appear unpatriotic.
C) The other charges made were not substantiated by evidence.
D) It is difficult to refute and obviously true.
3) Most likely, Tagore judged the person who requested him to write a song in praise of the
King in the following way:
A) He saw him as weak and opportunistic.
B) He saw in him the makings of an ambitious courtier.
C) He saw him as being not unintelligent, but ambitious.
D) He saw him as being unintelligent, shallow and ambitious.
5) The author writes: “Bano also told me that Grandmother did not like girls that were too
pretty because she thought they would do something wrong sooner or later.” This
means that
A) Grandmother thought that pretty girls were likely to commit crimes.
B) Grandmother thought that pretty girls were given to sinful behavior.
C) Grandmother thought that pretty girls were vain and therefore likely to be led astray
by men.
D) Grandmother thought that pretty girls were too selfish to realise that their behavior
would hurt others.
6) “My hair fell to my shoulders and I often had it in a ponytail or two plaits.” This
description is supposed to tell us that the speaker
A) Was plain-looking.
B) Did not fuss over how she appeared.
C) Wore her hair in a feminine way.
D) Was highly unattractive.
15. Rather than heralding a new era of easy living, the Agricultural Revolution left farmers with
lives generally more difficult and less satisfying than those of foragers. Hunter-gatherers
spent their time in more stimulating and varied ways, and were less in danger of starvation
and disease. The Agricultural Revolution certainly enlarged the sum total of food at the
disposal of human kind, but the extra food did not translate into better diet or more leisure.
Rather, it translated into population explosions and pampered elites. The average farmer
worked harder than the average forager, and got a worse diet in return. The Agricultural
Revolution was history’s biggest fraud…
Think for a moment about the Agricultural Revolution from the viewpoint of wheat. Ten
thousand years ago wheat was just a wild grass, one of many, confined to a small range in
the Middle East. Suddenly, within just a few short millennia, it was growing all over the
world. According to the basic evolutionary criteria of survival and reproduction, wheat has
become one of the most successful plants in the history of the earth. Such areas such as the
Great Plains of North America, where not a single wheat stalk grew 10,000 years ago, you
can now walk upon hundreds and hundreds of kilometres without encountering any other
plant. Worldwide, wheat covers about 2.25 million square kilometres of the globe’s surface,
almost ten times the size of Britain. How did this grass turn from insignificant to ubiquitous?
Wheat did it by manipulating Homo sapiens to its advantage. This ape had been living a fairly
comfortable life hunting and gathering until about 10,000 years ago, but then began to
invest more and more effort in cultivating wheat. Within a couple of millennia, humans in
many parts of the world were doing little from dawn to dusk other than taking care of wheat
plants. It wasn’t easy. Wheat demanded a lot of them. Wheat didn’t like rocks and pebbles,
so Sapiens broke their backs clearing fields. Wheat didn’t like sharing its space, water and
nutrients with other plants, so men and women laboured long days weeding under the
scorching sun. Wheat got sick, so Sapiens had to keep a watch out for worms and blight. …
Wheat was thirsty, so humans dug irrigation canals or lugged heavy buckets from the well to
water it. Its hunger even impelled Sapiens to collect animal faeces to nourish the ground in
which wheat grew. (Yuval Harari, Sapiens)
1) According to the passage, what did humans think would be the benefits brought by the
Agricultural Revolution?
A) Lesser starvation.
B) Better diet.
C) More leisure.
D) All of the above.
2) In what way was the diet of farmers probably worse than the diet of hunter-gatherers?
A) Diets became less diverse as it was largely made up of crops grown.
B) Food availability became dependent on water, pests and other issues.
C) Both of the above.
D) None of the above.
5) Why does the author identify wheat as one of the successful plants in the history of the
earth?
A) Ten thousand years ago it was a wild grass.
B) It was initially grown in the Middle East.
C) To grow wheat requires much effort on the part of the farmer.
D) Wheat is grown extensively across the world.
16. The…hero worship of great men is taking a very dangerous turn in India, with its nascent
patriotism and powerful foreign rule. We have already produced one great mathematician,
Srinivasa Ramanujan, and his name is bandied about with the utmost pride by people here
who have not had the energy nor the intelligence to master a single one of Ramanujan’s
papers. In fact, the history is tragic. Ramanujan’s intellect was stifled by the treatment he
received here, and he died at the age of thirty-five, of tuberculosis brought on by overwork
and by malnutrition in his formative years. The best job that he could get was that of a clerk
in the Madras Port Trust. The mathematical training that he received was given in England,
where there was one mathematician, G. H. Hardy, intelligent enough to recognize merit; no
one in India could claim half as much!...The effect of Ramanujan’s work was felt and
manifested in the further researches of British workers, but nowhere in India, because it was
much easier to worship a hero than to study his works.
-- D. D. Kosambi, “An Introduction to Lectures on Dialectical Materialism,” 1943.
2) The author says that the attitude of Indians with respect to Ramanujan’s achievements
is one of
A) Boundless patriotism.
B) Baseless boasting.
C) Blind prejudice.
D) Ignorant idol-worship.
3) Most probably, the author regards hero worship in India as being “dangerous” because
A) It is brought on by anxiety about the lack of real talent in the country.
B) Combined with ignorance, it is likely to cause communal disturbances in the country.
C) Combined with ignorance, it is likely to lead to false pride in the country.
D) It shows up an ugly side of the Indian psyche.
4) The author’s attitude towards the people who bandy about Ramanujan’s name with
utmost pride is one of
A) Contempt
B) Concern
C) Compassion
D) Caution
5) By ‘stifled’ is meant
A) Undermined
B) Deflated
C) Confiscated
D) Suffocated
17. Having stated the facts, let me now state the case for social reform. In doing this, I will
follow Mr. Bonnerji as nearly as I can, and ask the politically-minded Hindus, Are you fit for
political power even though you do not allow a large number of your own countrymen like
the untouchables to use public schools? Are you fit for political power even though you do
not allow them the use of public wells? Are you fit for political power even though you do
not allow them the use of public streets? Are you fit for political power even though you do
not allow them to wear what apparel and ornaments they like? Are you fit for political
power even though you do not allow them to eat any food they like? I can ask a string of
such questions. But these will suffice… I am sure no sensible man will have the courage to
give an affirmative answer. Every Congressman who repeats the dogma of Mill that one
country is not fit to rule another country, must admit that one class is not fit to rule another
class.
-- Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, “The Annihilation of Caste,” 1935
1) When the author suggests that the politicallyminded Hindus of India in 1935 are not fit
for political power, he means that
A) They do not have the capacity to govern the country.
B) They would not know what to do with the right to govern the country, if indeed they
had such a right.
C) They have no moral right to govern people whom they do not treat as being equal to
themselves.
D) They have no business asking for political power in a country as diverse as India.
3) The author’s argument that one class is not fit to rule another class is based on
A) A parallel that he draws between class and country.
B) A definition of class proposed by Marxists.
C) A comparison that he makes between class and country.
D) A strong line of thought in Mill’s political works.
4) The author means to be “stating the case for social reform.” From the context, it is clear
that this means
A) That social reform is long overdue.
B) That social reform must precede the attainment of political power.
C) That politically-minded Hindus have made a mess of social reform.
D) That political power will grow organically out of a reformed society.
5) The kind of situation prevalent in the society that the author describes is best described
as
A) Social segregation.
B) Breakdown of the social structure.
C) Disillusionment amid social disorder.
D) Exploitation of one social segment by another.
18. Due to the growth of international migration, the question of how Western nations think of
arranged marriages bears very serious consequences in terms of how we perceive the
emotional lives of migrants and diasporic community members. The prevalent Western
perception of arranged marriages as a premodern social system is based both on ignorance
of arranged marriage and on a lack of insight into Western norms…To varying degrees, each
arranged marriage is influenced by filial and social pressures on the agency of the would-be
couple. But so are Western marriages, in form. In romantic love too, social class, education,
profession, religion (factors that are deeply influenced by family), all mediate and shape
attraction and compatibility. The social reality we are raised in shapes our freedom to
choose partners, even to feel desire…Couples in arranged marriages often find romance in
family-initiated introductions because it speaks to their broader value system. For many, it is
a smarter, more spiritual form of love because it prioritises collective will and emotional
labour over sexual impulse and selfish individuality… Badiou’s definition of true love as
transgressive and disruptive is limiting, idealistic and dismissive of the cultures and
experiences of most people in the world. It gets in the way of understanding how love can
be expressed and experienced within even the most seemingly ‘traditional’ practices.
--Farhad Mirza, “Love in a Time of Migrants: Rethinking Arranged Marriages.” Aeon
magazine, November 2018. (Slightly modified from the original.)
2) Some couples find that arranged marriages provide “a smarter, more spiritual form of
love” because
A) Such marriages lay greater emphasis on what people in the community want, rather
than what the couple wants.
B) Such marriages are not focused exclusively on personal fulfilment in a narrow sense.
C) Such marriages are grounded in the will of the couples’ families, who make sure that
the marriages keep going despite the usual ups and downs.
D) Such marriages strike a smart balance between pleasure and duties to family.
19. An earlier survey from the City of Harare reported that fewer than 1 in every 4,000 patients
(0.001 per cent) that visited the Outpatients department had depression. “In rural clinics,
the numbers diagnosed as depressed are smaller still,” a psychiatrist, Melanie Abas wrote in
1994. But in 1991 and 1992, Abas… and a team of local nurses and social workers visited 200
households in Glen Norah, a low-income, highdensity district in southern Harare. They
contacted church leaders, housing officials, traditional healers and other local organisations,
gaining their trust and their permission to interview a large number of residents. Although
there was no equivalent word for depression in Shona, the most common language in
Zimbabwe, Abas found that there were local idioms that seemed to describe the same
symptoms. Through discussions with traditional healers and local health workers, her team
found that kufungisisa, or ‘thinking too much’, was the most common descriptor for
emotional distress. This is very similar to the English word ‘rumination’ that describes the
negative thought patterns that often lie at the core of depression and anxiety… “Although all
of the socioeconomic conditions were different from where I had worked earlier, in the
U.K.,” Abas says, “I was seeing what I recognised as pretty classical depression.” Using terms
such as kufungisisa as screening tools, Abas and her team found that depression was nearly
twice as common as in a similar community in the U.K. It wasn’t just a case of headaches or
pains, either— there was the lack of sleep and loss of appetite. A loss of interest in once
enjoyable activities. And, a deep sadness (kusuwisisa) that is somehow separate from
normal sadness (suwa).
--Alex Riley, “How a Wooden Bench in Zimbabwe is Starting a Revolution in Mental Health,”
Mosaic magazine, October 2018. (Slightly modified from the original).
4) Abas and her team found that the close equivalent in Shona of the English ‘depression’ is
a term that translates as ‘thinking too much’. They interpreted this fact to imply that
A) Depression was very uncommon in sunny Harare
B) Zimbabweans were clearly being benefited by a strong social structure
C) Complex mental disorders were being mistaken for emotional peculiarities of
individuals
D) Zimbabwean church leaders and traditional healers were providing effective
counselling to members of the community
20. The women who came to perform in the public theatre were already outcasts. As one of the
actresses herself observed, they lived under the shadow of an accursed birth… from which
there was no escape. Standard biographies of actresses in Bengali texts invariably allude to
the… ‘forbidden’ or ‘anonymous’ quarters or ‘a certain place’. Lacking the identity of the
[male head of the household] that society recognised as the only identity, residential locality
and single status were reason enough for the woman concerned to be identified as a
prostitute. Even those who were not directly recruited from prostitute quarters were
regarded as public women because they consented to appear and perform in public. When
Binodini refers to herself as a janmadukhini or one who is wretched from birth, she is not
only describing her unique condition, but speaking for many women in her position.
--Rimli Bhattacharya, “Introduction,” My Story and My Life as an Actress by Binodini Dasi,
1998.
1) To say that actresses in the Bengali theatre were “already outcasts” is to say that
A) They belonged to the lower castes of Bengali society.
B) They were condemned by circumstances to live outside respectable society.
C) They were outcasts because of their choice of profession.
D) They had been thrown out of their homes, and now no respectable family would give
them shelter
2) It appears from this passage that actresses were regarded as “public women”. This
suggests that
A) They were considered to be women of easy virtue.
B) They appeared alongside men in the public life of the community.
C) They had a say in matters concerning their wellbeing in the “anonymous” quarters of
the city.
D) They could not work in the privacy and safety of their homes.Choose the most
appropriate answer. To claim that a woman without a man to protect her is a prostitute
is to
3) A) State the way things are for women in general in any society.
B) Claim the moral high ground over women in general.
C) Rob her of her liberty and dignity as a human being.
D) Make an unfounded assumption about her sexuality and moral character.
4) Most probably, the reason why women like Binodini thought of themselves as wretched
from birth is that
A) They had no choice but to depend on men to meet their basic needs.
B) In the end, life as a public woman meant an impoverished old age.
C) They were caught in a socio-economic trap from which there was no escape.
D) They could never win back the love of family members who had cared for them.
21. Let us ask: what is it that all fundamentalists share?... [It] is their common tendency to
reduce texts, including their own sacred ones, to a singular message. It is no coincidence
that Islamists do not allow Muslims to discuss the holy texts of Islam openly and historically,
and Hindutva fundamentalists want certain readings of their holy texts — even A.K.
Ramanujan’s scholarly thesis about the various rewritings of the Ramayana and
Mahabharata — banned… There is a total refusal among fundamentalists to engage with
texts and stories in a contemplative, critical and historical. manner… They not only ban
certain texts, they mostly even confine the ‘sanctioned’ texts to a single message. This runs
against everything that literature does and that students of literature were trained to do. No
significant literary text offers only one message. In that sense, the trend to [sew on]
simplistic morals to literary works is a serious misreading… Unfortunately, with the demise
of the Arts [as an academic stream or programme], this necessary engagement with texts is
dying out: even literature is marketed in a singular manner today, reduced to a ‘selling
point.’
--Tabish Khair, “Why Literature is the answer to Fundamentalism,” The Hindu, March 19,
2017.
2) The author writes that “the trend to [sew on] simplistic morals to literary works is a
serious misreading.” This probably means that
A) Important literary works are rarely easy to interpret.
B) Since they deal with a complex human reality, important literary works convey
complex messages.
C) Important literary works are too far removed from ordinary life to talk directly about
morals.
D) Important literary works are too sophisticated to convey definite messages or morals.
22. I work in Hindi films, but it is an open secret that the songs and dialogues of these Hindi films
are mostly written in Urdu. Eminent Urdu writers and poets— Krishan Chandar, Rajinder
Singh Bedi, K.A. Abbas, Gulshan Nanda, Sahir Ludhianwi, Majrooh Sultanpuri, and Kaifi
Azmi—are associated with this work. Now, if a film written in Urdu can be called a Hindi film,
it is logical to conclude that Hindi and Urdu are one and the same language. But no, our
British masters declared them two separate languages in their time. Therefore, even 25
years after independence, our government, our universities, and our intellectuals insist on
treating them as two separate and independent languages. Pakistan radio goes on ruining
the beauty of this language by thrusting into it as many Persian and Arabic words as
possible; and All India Radio knocks it out of all shape by pouring the entire Sanskrit
dictionary into it. In this way they carry out the wish of the Master, to separate the
inseparable. Can anything be more absurd than that? If the British told us that white was
black, would we go on calling white black for ever and ever? My film colleague Johnny
Walker remarked the other day, “On All India Radio, they should not announce ‘Ab Hindi
mein samachar suniye’ [Now listen to the news in Hindi] they should say, ‘Ab samachar mein
Hindi suniye’ [Now listen to Hindi in the News].
--Balraj Sahni, Convocation Address at Jawaharlal Nehru University, 1972
1) The author of the lines above finds the official separation of Hindi and Urdu to be
A) Woefully ignorant of linguistic history.
B) Completely illogical.
C) In violation of the social realities of the Indian subcontinent.
D) Intellectually bankrupt.
2) The author argues that the forcible separation of Hindi and Urdu in independent India is
based on:
A) The British diktat that the two were to be treated as languages spoken by different
groups of Indians.
B) The conviction that if Pakistanis have adopted Urdu as their language, Indians must
have a language specific to Indians.
C) The government’s servile acceptance and continuation of the British policy of treating
them as separate languages.
D) The foolishness of bureaucrats and lawmakers who don’t know better.
4) It is suggested that the heavily Sanskritised language used by All India Radio in its
newscasts is
A) Unrecognizable as Hindi.
B) Almost a foreign language.
C) Formal Hindi.
D) No different from Sanskrit.
23. What if the Boiling River is just the result of an oilfield accident—an improperly abandoned
oil well, a frack job gone wrong, or oilfield waters improperly reinjected into the earth? I
know of many case, in Peru and [elsewhere], where oilfield accidents have caused
geothermal features—the most infamous being the Lusi mud volcano in East Java, which has
displaced more than thirty thousand people. Accidents of this scale quickly take on
significant financial and political importance, and as a result, Lusi’s “true cause” remains a
contentious issue. In the Talara Desert, I recently visited two tourist attractions with
surprising backgrounds. The plan had been for two old oil wells— wells that were only
producing warm, salty water—to be properly sealed and closed up by the oil companies. As
the story goes, the locals saw potential in the pools of warm water and pressured the
companies to keep the wells open. The oil companies gave in, and the wells were converted
into bathing pools. Now unsuspecting tourists pay to relax in the “natural healing thermal
waters” while rubbing the “rejuvenating” thermal muds on their faces.
--Andrés Ruzo, The Boiling River: Adventure and Discovery in the Amazon, 2016.
2) The author compares the Boiling River to the Lusi mud volcano because
A) They are both geothermal features with hot liquids in them.
B) Like Lusi, it might be the handiwork of an oil corporation.
C) Clearly, where there is mud, there is water.
D) Peru has geological features similar to those in East Java.
3) By ‘rejuvenating’ is meant
A) Refreshing
B) Recuperating
C) Rewilding
D) Renewing
24. By the time a child is six or seven she has all the essential avoidances well enough by heart
to be trusted with the care of a younger child. And she also develops a number of simple
techniques. She learns to weave firm square balls from palm leaves, to make pinwheels of
palm leaves or frangipani blossoms, to climb a coconut tree by walking up the trunk on
flexible little feet, to break open a coconut with one firm well-directed blow of a knife as
long as she is tall, to play a number of group games and sing the songs which go with them,
to tidy the house by picking up the litter on the stony floor, to bring water from the sea, to
spread out the copra to dry and to help gather it in when rain threatens, to roll the
pandanus leaves for weaving, to go to a neighboring house and bring back a lighted faggot
for the chief's pipe or the cook-house fire, and to exercise tact in begging slight favours from
relatives.
But in the case of the little girls all these tasks are merely supplementary to the main
business of baby-tending. Very small boys also have some care of the younger children, but
at eight or nine years of age they are usually relieved of it. Whatever rough edges have not
been smoothed off by this responsibility for younger children are worn off by their contact
with older boys. For little boys are admitted to interesting and important activities only so
long as their behavior is circumspect and helpful. Where small girls are brusquely pushed
aside, small boys will be patiently tolerated and they become adept at making themselves
useful. The four or five little boys who all wish to assist at the important, business of helping
a grown youth lasso reef eels, organize themselves into a highly efficient working team; one
boy holds the bait, another holds an extra lasso, others poke eagerly about in holes in the
reef looking for prey, while still another tucks the captured eels into his lavalava. The small
girls, burdened with heavy babies or the care of little staggerers who are too small to
adventure on the reef, discouraged by the hostility of the small boys and the scorn of the
older ones, have little opportunity for learning the more adventurous forms of work and
play. So while the little boys first undergo the chastening effects of baby-tending and then
have many opportunities to learn effective cooperation under the supervision of older boys,
the girls' education is less comprehensive. They have a high standard of individual
responsibility, but the community provides them with no lessons in cooperation with one
another.
This is particularly apparent in the activities of young people: the boys organize quickly; the
girls waste hours in bickering, innocent of any technique for quick and efficient cooperation.
[Margaret Mead, Coming of Age in Samoa, 1928]
1) The primary purpose of the passage with reference to the society under discussion is to
A) Explain some differences in the upbringing of girls and boys
B) Give a comprehensive account of a day in the life of an average young girl
C) Delineate the role of young girls
D) Show that young girls are trained to be useful
4) It can be inferred that in the community under discussion all of the following are
important except
A) Domestic handicrafts
B) Fishing skills
C) Division of labour
D) Formal education
25. Health certainly has the potential to be a source of a number of different traps. For example,
workers living in an insalubrious environment may miss many workdays; children may be
sick often and unable to do well in school; mothers who give birth there may have sickly
babies. Each of these channels is potentially a mechanism for current misfortunes to turn
into future poverty. The good news is that if something like this is what is going on, we may
only need one push, one generation that gets to grow up and work in a healthy
environment, to set the trap loose. This is Jeffrey Sachs’s view, for example. As he sees it, a
large proportion of the world’s poorest people, and indeed entire countries, are stuck in a
health-based poverty trap.
Malaria is his favorite example: Countries in which a large fraction of the population is
exposed to malaria are much poorer (on average, countries like Côte d’Ivoire or Zambia,
where 50 percent or more of the population is exposed to malaria, have per capita incomes
that are one-third of those in the countries where no one today gets malaria). And being so
much poorer makes it harder for them to take steps to prevent malaria, which in turns keeps
them poor. But this also means, according to Sachs, that public health investments aimed at
controlling malaria (such as the distribution of bed nets to keep the mosquitoes at bay
during the night) in these countries could have very high returns: people would be sick less
often and able to work harder, and the resulting income gains would easily cover the costs
of these interventions and more.
[A. Banerjee and E. Duflo, Poor Economics, 2011]
1) The article advocates which of the following underlying lessons to alleviate poverty?
A) Increase the per-capita incomes of poor countries
B) Hand out mosquito nets to poor families
C) Invest public money to improve public health
D) Enforce a requirement on poor families to buy mosquito nets.
2) Which of the following best captures the relationship between poverty and malaria, as
described in the passage?
A) Poverty drives higher rates of malaria
B) Malaria causes poverty
C) Both of the above
D) None of the above
26. For Indians, higher education has been, in Stanley Wolpert’s evocative words, “the swiftest
elevators to the pinnacles of modern Indian power and opportunity.” This realization,
coupled with the severe limitations of publicly funded higher education institutions and the
greater purchasing power of the middle class, means that Indians are prepared to pay rather
than be denied. According to NSSO data, the government’s share in overall education
expenditure has been declining steadily, from 80 percent in 1983 to 67 percent in 1999. For
states like Kerala, the decline is steep, from 75 to 48 percent, while for Madhya Pradesh it is
from 84 percent to 68 percent. Indeed, while private expenditure on education has risen
10.8 times in the last 16 years, that for the poor rose even faster, by 12.4 times. Many
students who formally enroll in publicly funded colleges and universities, barely attend
classes there. Instead, they pay considerable sums to the burgeoning private sector
vocational IT training firms such as NIIT and the Aptech.
However, the most noticeable trend has been the transformation in the provision of
professional education, especially engineering, medicine and business schools. In the case of
engineering colleges, the private sector, which accounted for just 15 percent of the seats in
1960, now accounts for 86.4 percent of seats (and 84 percent of all engineering colleges). In
the case of medical colleges, the private sector dominance is less stark, but the trend is
unambiguous: the proportion of private seats has risen from 6.8 percent in 1960 to 40.9
percent in 2003. While we don’t have precise data, the situation in the 1000 odd business
schools suggests that 90 percent are private sector. Even as political parties rail [sic] against
de jure privatization, de facto privatization continues unabated. The degree to which states
have allowed private higher education institutions varies considerably… Gradually, the state
plans to eliminate its annual commitment of Rs. 350 crores on a total of 240 general-degree
colleges run by private bodies.
[Devesh Kapur and Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Indian Higher Education Reform: From Half-Baked
Socialism to HalfBaked Capitalism, 2004]
1) Which of the following captures government’s policy towards higher education in India?
A) The government has been reducing its share of overall expenditure towards higher
education
B) The government is increasing its expenditure on higher education in most Indian
states
C) The government maintains its expenditure on higher education at a constant level
D) The government is reducing its support to higher education selectively
2) Higher education has been “the swiftest elevators to the pinnacles of modern Indian
power and opportunity” What does this mean?
A) Indians have more power and better opportunities due to state funding of higher
education
B) Higher education has improved the ability of Indians to acquire more power and
opportunities
C) Indians cannot acquire power and utilise opportunities of modern life without higher
education
D) Indians have not enjoyed power and opportunities due to the inferior nature of the
country’s higher education
5) What is the most noticeable trend in higher education in India reported in the passage?
A) The Indian middle class prefers publicly funded educational institutions for higher
education
B) The government is playing an important role in regulating higher educational
institutions
C) The number of public engineering, medical and business schools being set up around
the country is rapidly increasing
D) An increased proportion of private educational institutions are providing professional
education in engineering, medicine and business
28. Light pollution is a significant but overlooked driver of the rapid decline of insect
populations, according to the most comprehensive review of the scientific evidence to date.
Artificial light at night can affect every aspect of insects’ lives, the researchers said, from
luring moths to their deaths around bulbs, to spotlighting insect prey for rats and toads, to
obscuring the mating signals of fireflies...
Insects are important prey for many species, but light pollution can tip the balance in favour
of the predator if it traps insects around lights. Spiders, bats, rats, shorebirds, geckos and
cane toads have all been found feeding around artificial lights. Such increases in predation
risk was likely to cause the rapid extinction of affected species, the researchers said.
The researchers said light pollution is particularly hard for insects to deal with. Most human-
caused threats to insects have natural analogues, such as climate change and invasive
species, meaning some adaptation may take place. But the daily cycle of light and dark had
remained constant for all of evolutionary time, they said.
However, light pollution was the easiest of all the threats to insects to deal with, Seymoure
said. “Once you turn off a light, it is gone. You don’t have to go and clean up, like you do
with most pollutants. I am not saying we need to get rid of light at night, I think we just need
to use it wisely.”
Simply turning off lights that are not needed is the most obvious action, he said, while
making lights motionactivated also cuts light pollution. Shading lights so only the area
needed is illuminated is important, as is avoiding bluewhite lights, which interfere with daily
rhythms. LED lights also offer hope as they can be easily tuned to avoid harmful colours and
flicker rates.
“The evidence that light pollution has profound and serious impacts on ecosystems is
overwhelmingly strong,” said Matt Shardlow, the chief executive of the conservation charity
Buglife. “It is imperative that society now takes substantial steps to make the environment
safer for insects”.
[Damian Carrington, Light pollution is key 'bringer of insect apocalypse', The Guardian]
3) The first sentence of the passage mentions that light pollution is an ‘overlooked driver’.
This means that light pollution:
A) is taken seriously as a cause for trends in insect population
B) is irrelevant as a cause for trends in insect population
C) is the only cause for trends in insect population
D) is ignored as a cause for trends in insect population
Although official reports and studies cite the problems of land shrinkage, lack of access to
credit, poor infrastructure, unreliable markets, and now unpredictable climate change as key
reasons for the continued agrarian distress, there are additional factors that make Basamma
and millions like her vulnerable and susceptible to continuous economic and social erosions.
These include poor soil conditions, loss of biodiversity, knowledge dissonance, inadequate
labour support, increasing input costs, low prices for produce, new economic pressures, and
the absence of any collective entity to address their innumerable grievances.
Dwindling size of holdings, as families split and share their holdings over generations, has
rendered the average holding to be only 1.31 hectare (2011 census), making it impossible to
meet even the family’s subsistence needs. Most of these plots are also raindependent and,
for those that lie in the rain-shadow belt or in the arid and semi-arid areas, cultivation is
possible only once a year, thereby providing a cycle of work and production for about only
six months of the year. Low productivity and the recent sharp fluctuations in rainfall have
only made production more tenuous over the years. Like their neighbours and relatives,
Basamma’s holding has shrunk over the years, as have the productivity and the abilities of
the land to sustain them. If family partition rendered only three hectares as their share, then
the demands of having a daughter married and constructing a new house saw the sale of
one hectare.
Vasavi, A. R. (2015). Killing Fields. The Hindu Sunday Magazine.
3) The loss of the threshing yard is symbolic of which of the transformations facing
marginal farmers in India?
A) The arrival of modern agricultural practices and decline of ritual and superstition
B) The rupture of the social, economic and cultural practices and relationships that
sustained marginal agriculture as a viable livelihood
C) The dramatic expansion of the road network in the country and subsequent loss of
fertile agricultural land
D) The urgency with which farmers need to get their crops to the market
4) Which of the following reasons explains the bleak prospects facing Basamma and her
husband?
A) The partition of inherited ancestral land
B) Sale of a part of their land for building a house and marrying their daughter
C) Climate change induced unpredictability
D) All of the above
5) Which of the following reasons explains the bleak prospects facing Basamma and her
husband?
A) The partition of inherited ancestral land
B) Sale of a part of their land for building a house and marrying their daughter
C) Climate change induced unpredictability
D) All of the above
30. The supply-demand problem of education has many interesting aspects to it. The number of
youths wanting higher education has shot up but the supply suffers on various counts. First,
government sources are quoted in the news that there is a shortage of 30-40% faculty in
colleges and universities at all levels. I have not found data in support of this claim. Second,
almost anyone who is thinking of education says that the syllabi are outdated. Third,
industry and business complain that the outcome of education - quality of job applicants is
extremely bad but we have no measure of how good or bad it is. Graduation certificates, like
school certificates, have lost credibility and meaning. Further, considering that about 90% of
the Indian workforce is in the unorganized sector where hiring is quite informal, certificates
and diplomas count less than a reference trusted by the employer. And yet, parents want
their children to go to colleges and complete graduation. There is a certain helpless faith in
our educational institutions that they will somehow deliver at least for “my” child. At the
same time, we do not rely totally on these institutions. At appropriate times we also send
children to private tutors. ASER 2017 shows that nearly 40% students of attending
government schools go for tuitions. ASER has been pointing out that in the Eastern states
around Bihar, massive proportions of school children go to private tutors.
-- Madhav Chavan, “Giving the emperor new clothes”, Beyond Basics: ASER Report 2017
2) What exactly does the passage say with respect to the syllabus?
A) It needs to be changed
B) It is fine as it is
C) There should be more discussion about it
D) It needs to be brought up to date
31. THE HISTORY OF LIFE on earth has been a history of interaction between living things and
their surroundings. To a large extent, the physical form and the habits of the earth’s
vegetation and its animal life have been molded by the environment. Considering the whole
span of earthly time, the opposite effect, in which life actually modifies its surroundings, has
been relatively slight. Only within the moment of time represented by the present century
has one species—man—acquired significant power to alter the nature of his world. During
the past quarter century this power has not only increased to one of disturbing magnitude
but it has changed in character.
The most alarming of all man’s assaults upon the environment is the contamination of air,
earth, rivers, and sea with dangerous and even lethal materials. This pollution is for the most
part irrecoverable; the chain of evil it initiates not only in the world that must support life
but in living tissues is for the most part irreversible. In this now universal contamination of
the environment, chemicals are the sinister and little recognized partners of radiation in
changing the very nature of the world—the very nature of its life. Strontium 90, released
through nuclear explosions into the air, comes to earth in rain or drifts down as fallout,
lodges in soil, enters into the grass or corn or wheat grown there, and in time takes up its
abode in the bones of a human being, there to remain until his death.
Similarly, chemicals sprayed on croplands or forests or gardens lie long in soil, entering into
living organisms, passing from one to another in a chain of poisoning and death. Or they
pass mysteriously by underground streams until they emerge and, through the alchemy of
air and sunlight, combine into new forms that kill vegetation, sicken cattle, and work
unknown harm on those who drink from once pure wells. As Albert Schweitzer has said,
‘Man can hardly even recognize the devils of his own creation.’
It took hundreds of millions of years to produce the life that now inhabits the earth—eons of
time in which that developing and evolving and diversifying life reached a state of
adjustment and balance with its surroundings. The environment, rigorously shaping and
directing the life it supported, contained elements that were hostile as well as supporting.
Certain rocks gave out dangerous radiation; even within the light of the sun, from which all
life draws its energy, there were short-wave radiations with power to injure. Given time—
time not in years but in millennia—life adjusts, and a balance has been reached. For time is
the essential ingredient; but in the modern world there is no time. The rapidity of change
and the speed with which new situations are created follow the impetuous and heedless
pace of man rather than the deliberate pace of nature. Radiation is no longer merely the
background radiation of rocks, the bombardment of cosmic rays, the ultraviolet rays of the
sun that have existed before there was any life on earth; radiation is now the unnatural
creation of man’s tampering with the atom. The chemicals to which life is asked to make its
adjustment are no longer merely the calcium and silica and copper and all the rest of the
minerals washed out of the rocks and carried in rivers to the sea; they are the synthetic
creations of man’s inventive mind, brewed in his laboratories, and having no counterparts in
nature.
Carson, Rachel (1962) “The Obligation to Endure”, Silent Spring. Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1962.
3) ‘Man can hardly even recognize the devils of his own creation.’ What does this
statement mean?
A) Man understands the fallouts of his own creation
B) Man enjoys creating evil creations
C) Man does not understand the potential negative impact of his own creation
D) Man wants his creations to have a life of their own
5) According to the passage, what has affected the radiation in modern time?
A) Man’s experiments with nature
B) Man’s experiments with the atoms
C) Ultraviolet rays of the sun
D) Radiation from rocks
32. At midnight on March 6, 1957, Kwame Nkrumah took to the stage in Accra to announce the
independence of the Gold Coast, renamed Ghana in homage to the ancient West African
empire. In his speech, Nkrumah declared that 1957 marked the birth of a new Africa “ready
to fight its own battles and show that after all the black man is capable of managing his own
affairs.” In his view, the decade-long struggle for Ghanaian independence was only one
battle in the broader struggle for African emancipation. “Our independence,” Nkrumah
famously maintained, “is meaningless unless it is linked up with the total liberation of the
African continent.” This connection between Ghana’s independence and African
emancipation not only looked forward to the formation of new African states but also
envisioned national independence as the first step in constituting a PanAfrican federation
and transforming the international order.
Half a century removed from Ghanaian independence and as we reckon with the failures
and limits of the postcolonial state, it is easy to miss the revolutionary implications and
global reverberations of that March night in 1957. From our vantage point, the transition
from empire to nation in the twentieth century appears inevitable. And while the
universalization of the nationstate marked an important triumph over European
imperialism, it has also come to represent a political form incapable of realizing the ideals of
a democratic, egalitarian, and anti-imperial future. In contrast, for those in the audience in
Accra that night and observers across the world, the world historical significance of the first
subSaharan colony to gain independence was palpable. Within the Black Atlantic world, the
independence of the fourth black state after Haiti, Liberia, and Ethiopia was especially
momentous. Ghanaian independence, arriving just months after the successful conclusion of
the Montgomery bus boycott, constituted the beginnings of a struggle for racial equality
across the world.
[Adom Getachew, Worldmaking after Empire: The Rise and Fall of Self-Determination
(Princeton University Press 2019) 1-2]
5) Ghana’s independence was a key historical moment in the struggle for ___.
A) Gender equality
B) Racial equality
C) International order
D) European imperialism
33. “By speaking of Nehru’s faith, my intentions are not purely historical. I wish to recover faith’s
primary meaning: trust or confidence, unshakeable belief or conviction – meanings that do
not necessarily imply a religious sense. It is crucial to do this, at a moment when our ideas of
faith are in danger of becoming unnecessarily restricted. When religion is being held up as a
unique source of faith, we need to remind ourselves that there are other firm foundations
upon which we can build moral and ethical projects, in both private and public life. If
secularism, as we have recently been told, has multiple meanings, so too does faith. In our
own recent history, there is perhaps no better practical instance of the effort to find a non-
religious bedrock for morality than that of Nehru himself…
Nehru was a politician without religious faith, but in possession of the deepest moral sense.
He tried to develop a morality without the fall-back of religion, and while having to act under
the compulsions of wielding power. It was his moral faith, at least as much as his ideological
commitments, which sustained his political action.
The Indian political scene is today dominated by a paradox. We observe plenty of politicians
who profess to have religious faith; yet we find it difficult to get any sense of moral depth to
their characters, any sense of moral struggle or self questioning over their actions, policies
or choices. They seem to view politics and the capture of state power as ends in themselves:
theirs is a purely instrumentalist understanding both of reason and of faith.
”Source: Khilnani, Sunil. 2002. Nehru’s Faith, Economic and Political Weekly, Nov 30: 4793-
99.
5) According to the author, why is it wrong to build morality only on the basis of religion?
A) Because such an approach is unnecessarily restrictive
B) Because such an approach is not appropriate for politics
C) Because such an approach was used by Nehru
D) None of the above
34. Dolphins are regarded as the friendliest creatures in the sea and stories of them helping
drowning sailors have been common since Roman times. The more we learn about dolphins,
the more we realize that their society is more complex than people previously imagined.
They look after other dolphins when they are ill, care for pregnant mothers and protect the
weakest in the community, as we do.
In a classic study published in 1984, researchers trained a female bottlenose dolphin called
Akeakamai to mimic sounds generated by a computer. The electronic sounds, and
Akeakamai's responses, are remarkably similar. Then the biologists began to link these
sounds to objects like a hoop, pipe, Frisbee or ball. Akeakamai was quick to figure out the
connection and make the vocalization appropriate to each object. In essence, she had
learned a new vocabulary. Wild dolphins achieve similar feats. Each dolphin has its own
signature whistle, which acts like a name.
Even more impressingly, in 2001 two bottlenose dolphins at the New York Aquarium passed
the "mirror test". After researchers drew patterns and shapes on the animals' skin using "a
non-toxic temporary black ink Entre marker", the dolphins quickly swam over to a mirror
and spent long periods studying themselves. This suggests they can recognise themselves, at
least to some degree, something only a handful of species can do.
Dolphins are kings of communication! They send each other messages in different ways –
they squeak and whistle and also use body language, leaping out of the water, snapping
their jaws and even butting heads!
Adapted from National Geographic, 2019
35. A key finding—and one with significant implications as climate change looms—is that the
impact of temperature and rainfall is felt only in the extreme; that is, when temperatures
are much higher, rainfall significantly lower, and the number of “dry days” greater, than
normal. A second key finding is that these impacts are significantly more adverse in
unirrigated areas (and hence rainfed crops such as pulses) compared to irrigated areas (and
hence crops such as cereals).
India needs to spread irrigation – and do so against a backdrop of rising water scarcity and
depleting groundwater resources. In the 1960s, less than 20 percent of agriculture was
irrigated; today this number is in the mid-40s. The IndoGangetic plain, and parts of Gujarat
and Madhya are well irrigated. But parts of Karnataka, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh,
Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh, and Jharkhand are still extremely vulnerable to climate change on
account of not being well irrigated. The challenge is that the spread of irrigation will have to
occur against a backdrop of extreme groundwater depletion, especially in North India. India
pumps more than twice as much groundwater as China or United States. Indeed, depletion
in groundwater is most alarming in North India in comparison to other parts of the world.
Further analysis of groundwater stations across India reveals a 13 percent decline in the
water table over the past 30 years.
Fully irrigating Indian agriculture, that too against the backdrop of water scarcity and limited
efficiency in existing irrigation schemes, will be a defining challenge for the future.
Technologies of drip irrigation, sprinklers, and water management—captured in the “more
crop for every drop” campaign—may well hold the key to future Indian agriculture and
hence should be accorded greater priority in resource allocation. And, of course, the power
subsidy needs to be replaced by direct benefit transfers so that power use can be fully
costed, and water conservation furthered.
Another conclusion is the need to embrace agricultural science and technology with
renewed ardor. Swaminathan (2010) urged that anticipatory research be undertaken to pre-
empt the adverse impact of a rise in mean temperature. Agricultural research will be vital in
increasing yields but also in increasing resilience to all the pathologies that climate change
threatens to bring in its wake: extreme heat and precipitation, pests, and crop disease. The
analysis shows that research will be especially important for crops such as pulses and
soyabean that are most vulnerable to weather and climate.
Of course, climate change will increase farmer uncertainty, necessitating effective insurance.
Building on the current crop insurance program (Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana),
weather-based models and technology (drones for example) need to be used to determine
losses and compensate farmers within weeks (Kenya does it in a few days).
Adapted from Economic Survey 2017-18 chapter titled “Climate, Climate Change, and
Agriculture”
In one wide-ranging study, hundreds of new species of viruses were discovered across
multiple species of animals in different parts of the world. At present, we do not know if
these have the potential to jump hosts and cause pandemics. However, the numbers
indicate that increasing pressures of food production and land are likely to result in larger
animal farms and further forest destruction. If the stories of zoonoses emerging in humans
in the last century are anything to go by, this can only increase the potential for future
pandemics like COVID-19.
(Shivanand, T. (2020) SARS-COV-2 & the incredible tale of the dying monkeys, i Wonder (5),
14-18)
2) Which of the following is the medium of transmission of the COVID-19 virus in human
beings?
A) Hiccups
B) Burp
C) Mucus
D) Sweat
37. I have begun to understand how climate change – if treated as a true planetary emergency
akin to those rising flood waters – could become a galvanising force for humanity, leaving us
all not just safer from extreme weather, but with societies that are safer and fairer in all
kinds of other ways as well. The resources required to rapidly move away from fossil fuels
and prepare for the coming heavy weather could pull huge swaths of humanity out of
poverty, providing services now sorely lacking, from clean water to electricity, and on a
model that is more democratic and less centralized than the models of the past. This is a
vision of the future that goes beyond just surviving or enduring climate change, beyond
“mitigating” and “adapting” to it in the grim language of the United Nations. It is a vision in
which we collectively use the crisis to leap somewhere that seems, frankly, better than
where we are right now.
Once the lens shifted from one of crisis to possibility, I discovered that I no longer feared
immersing myself in the scientific reality of the climate threat. And like many others, I have
begun to see all kinds of ways that climate change could become a catalysing force for
positive change – how it could be the best argument progressives have ever had to demand
the rebuilding and reviving of local economies; to re-claim our democracies from corrosive
corporate influence; to block harmful new free trade deals and rewrite old ones; to invest in
starving public infrastructure like mass transit and affordable housing; and to take back
ownership of essential services like energy and water. All of which would help to end
grotesque levels of inequality within our nations and between them.
There is a rich populist history of winning big victories for social and economic justice in the
midst of large-scale crises. These include, most notably, the policies of the New Deal after
the market crash of 1929 and the birth of countless social programs after the second world
war. This did not require the kind of authoritarian trickery that I described in my last book,
The Shock Doctrine. On the contrary, what was essential was building muscular mass
movements capable of standing up to those defending a failing status quo, and that
demanded a significantly fairer share of the economic pie for everyone.
1) According to the passage, what could work as a galvanising force for humanity?
A) Climate change
B) Responses to climate change
C) Ignoring climate change
D) Governments tackling climate change
38. “No one is touching me, and I am touching no one,” said Rananjai Dixit (name changed), a
migrant worker from Banda district in Uttar Pradesh. He was speaking to our research team,
sharing his experiences with them. We interviewed 215 quarantined rural migrants in Bihar
and UP, mainly over the telephone. The interviewees came from a range of castes. Dixit
spoke to our team about the pain he suffered during the emergency triggered by COVID-19.
“Nobody wants to come in close contact with us,” he said. Coronavirus, he said, has
produced only two castes in villages – ‘prawasi (outsider)’ and ‘niwasi (insider)’.
Prawasis have become untouchables for niwasis across the spectrum of caste. The pandemic
has changed the dynamic of untouchability in Indian society and brought a type of horizontal
untouchability between bodies, which goes beyond caste and religion. The volatility of the
times has diluted the rigidity of caste-based exclusion to some degree, especially in light of
the experiences of migrant labourers on their homebound journeys. Some of these changes
in caste relations have remained after the workers have settled in their villages.
I am going to dwell on some aspects of the way the migrant workers experienced caste
relations – or the sudden lack of hierarchies within the structure – during their journey back
home. These observations are based on interviews by our team. Migrants have described
the journey as going through the “darkest tunnel in their life”. There are some common
threads that bind these narratives. On the one hand, there is the physical suffering of the
journey. Equally telling is the way the shared journey broke down caste rigidities and taboos.
Most workers told our team they had no idea how to reach their village. “The only thing on
our mind at that moment was that we were desperate to reach home. It was better to die at
home rather than die outside from hunger and coronavirus,” the workers said. The workers
described the journey in detail, “Some of us walked to reach home, some cycled their way
back, some hitched rides in trucks, ambulances, autorickshaws. Whatever mode of transport
we could get. We paid whatever money we had to these drivers. After they dropped us at a
certain point, we would walk and wait for another vehicle to give us a ride,” said the
workers. “Caste was not on our minds in those times. The only thing that occupied our
attention was how to reach home,” a Dalit migrant told the team in one of the interviews.
A Brahmin migrant worker narrated how caste taboos were suspended on the journey. He
said small tents had been put up by local villagers, religious institutions and traders between
Delhi and Agra. These were distributing packets of puri- sabji and water. “We saw a tent
with a Ravidas sewa sthal nameplate. They were distributing food and water. There were six
people in our group – one Brahmin, three Yadavs, two Kurmis. We were very hungry and
thirsty. One of the group members said, these are Dalits. Let’s look for another tent down
the road. But then everybody in our group started to scold him, saying, ‘Do not rake up caste
issues now. Or we will die of hunger.’” Some migrant workers spoke about their journey on
the Shramik Express as they travelled from Delhi to Prayag Raj. An OBC worker spoke about
the acute danger they were facing. In times such as these, all migrant workers became
people of one caste which was the caste of sufferers, he said. The worker said he was
extremely thirsty, but had no water with him. “One sweeper from my locality travelling with
me on the same train had some water left in his bottle. He offered the water to me. I drank
it without thinking about caste purity and impurity,” he said.
Badri Narayan, Excerpts from “Has the Pandemic Changed How Caste Hierarchies Play Out in
India?”, The Wire, 20th June 2020.
1) In the light of COVID-19 pandemic, what is the author describing in this passage?
A) caste has ceased to matter in 21st century India
B) migrant workers encountered caste in different ways in their travel back home
C) the role of government in enabling migrant workers to reach homes
D) migrant workers were welcomed in their home villages
2) According to the author, what is NOT a new type of caste created by the pandemic:
A) Prawasi
B) Niwasi
C) Dalit
D) Sufferers
39. Who is different in class? Any child can be different if he or she is unable to conform to
certain standards, some undefined culture, some unspoken norms. So, it could be the child
whose reading or arithmetic skills are significantly below par for the class, or the child who
has difficulty managing her attention and behaviour in and out of the classroom. It could be
the child who has a physical difficulty of any sort, or the child who engages in stimming (a
repetitive behaviour that children on the autism spectrum sometimes display as a coping
mechanism). Whatever the cause, children in these situations suffer doubly. They have a
primary difficulty and are keenly aware that for the other children, things just seem to be
easier. But instead of acceptance and affection from peers, they face rejection, ridicule and
isolation. It does not seem to matter whether these are gross or subtle – it hurts just as
much to be called a name or excluded from a whispered exchange as it is to be hit. Given
that children are too young to be talked out of such reactions, it has been of interest to me
and my colleagues to see what kind of school culture can lead to a total acceptance of
everyone, no matter what their difficulties are. We are interested in moving away from a
model where the so-called normal students are encouraged to accept those who are
different. Total acceptance could be a very different thing and such a culture would
emphasise the essential same-ness of all human experience, show that respect does not
have to be earned or deserved and even question the deep assumption that each of us is
something more than our habits, memories, and attitudes.
One clue from the current research is that when one emphasises similarities, rather than
differences, it is easier for children to feel empathy, affection and companionship with each
other. Where are our similarities most evident? Social interaction and emotional expression
are all very much present in any school environment, but adults rarely make these the focus
of an education. What if social interaction and emotional expression were at the heart of
education? It would soon become clear to the children that everyone has their moods, their
tangled relationships, their challenges and limits, their love of play and a silly joke and so on.
Everyone needs sympathy and help at some time or other, not only the child with a learning
difficulty. In fact, our feelings unite us all, adult and child alike, because all of us have our ups
and downs; all of us have our difficulties. Also, when a school is about much more than
academic subjects, there is no reason to single out the child who needs more one-on-one
reading time in particular. Another child demands teacher attention on the games field,
another needs extra assistance in the pottery class and yet another needs a great deal of
help in finishing his lunch! In this way, the same-ness becomes apparent without us having
to articulate it in clichés like, ‘We all have our strengths and weaknesses.’
A great deal of research is going into how we can support the learning of children with
various kinds of difficulties. While counselling and therapy can address feelings of
inadequacy in the individual child, the effects are somewhat limited, I feel. Why not look at
psychological wellbeing as residing in the class or school as a whole? Resilience, as a
property of an environment, a community, rather than of an individual, is more holistic,
more compassionate. No amount of individualised counselling and therapy can bring about a
shift in the culture of a school, and this is where I believe we should put our energy.
(Source: Mukunda, K. (2019). Total acceptance. Learning Curve, (5), 39-41)
Such a disaster, Shakespeare suggested, could not happen without widespread complicity.
His plays probe the psychological mechanisms that lead a nation to abandon its ideals and
even its self-interest. Why would anyone, he asked himself, be drawn to a leader manifestly
unsuited to govern, someone dangerously impulsive or viciously conniving or indifferent to
the truth? Why, in some circumstances, does evidence of mendacity, crudeness, or cruelty
serve not as a fatal disadvantage but as an allure, attracting ardent followers? Why do
otherwise proud and self-respecting people submit to the sheer effrontery of the tyrant, his
sense that he can get away with saying and doing anything he likes, his spectacular
indecency?
Shakespeare repeatedly depicted the tragic cost of this submission—the moral corruption,
the massive waste of treasure, the loss of life—and the desperate, painful, heroic measures
required to return a damaged nation to some modicum of health. Is there, the plays ask, any
way to stop the slide toward lawless and arbitrary rule before it is too late, any effective
means to prevent the civil catastrophe that tyranny invariably provokes?
The playwright was not accusing England’s current ruler, Elizabeth I, of being a tyrant. Quite
apart from whatever Shakespeare privately thought, it would have been suicidal to float
such a suggestion onstage. Dating back to 1534, during the reign of the queen’s father,
Henry VIII, legal statutes made it treason to refer to the ruler as a tyrant. The penalty for
such a crime was death.
When we were children there was no need to know who the king in the fairy story was. It
didn't matter whether he was called Shiladitya or Shaliban, whether he lived at Kashi or
Kanauj. The thing that made a seven-year-old boy's heart go thump, thump with delight was
this one sovereign truth, this reality of all realities: "Once there was a king."
But the readers of this modern age are far more exact and exacting. When they hear such an
opening to a story, they are at once critical and suspicious. They apply the searchlight of
science to its legendary haze and ask: "Which king?"
But the readers of this modern age are far more exact and exacting. When they hear such an
opening to a story, they are at once critical and suspicious. They apply the searchlight of
science to its legendary haze and ask: "Which king?"
The modern reader's curiosity, however, is not so easily satisfied. He blinks at the author
through his scientific spectacles and asks again: "Which Ajatasatru?"
When we were young, we understood all sweet things; and we could detect the sweets of a
fairy story by an unerring science of our own. We never cared for such useless things as
knowledge. We only cared for truth. And our unsophisticated little hearts knew well where
the Crystal Palace of Truth lay and how to reach it. But today we are expected to write pages
of facts, while the truth is simply this:
"There was a king."
I remember vividly that evening in Calcutta when the fairy story began. The rain and the
storm had been incessant. The whole of the city was flooded. The water was knee-deep in
our lane. I had a straining hope, which was almost a certainty, that my tutor would be
prevented from coming that evening. I sat on the stool in the far corner of the verandah
looking down the lane, with a heart beating faster and faster. Every minute I kept my eye on
the rain, and when it began to diminish I prayed with all my might: "Please, God, send some
more rain till half-past seven is over." For I was quite ready to believe that there was no
other need for rain except to protect one helpless boy one evening in one corner of Calcutta
from the deadly clutches of his tutor.
If not in answer to my prayer, at any rate according to some grosser law of nature, the rain
did not give up.
Exactly to the minute, in the bend of the lane, I saw his approaching umbrella. The great
bubble of hope burst in my breast, and my heart collapsed. Truly, if there is a punishment to
fit the crime after death, then my tutor will be born again as me, and I shall be born as my
tutor.
As soon as I saw his umbrella I ran as hard as I could to my mother's room. My mother and
my grandmother were sitting opposite one another playing cards by the light of a lamp. I ran
into the room, and flung myself on the bed beside my mother, and said:
"Mother, the tutor has come, and I have such a bad headache; couldn't I have no lessons to-
day?"
I hope no child of immature age will be allowed to read this story, and I sincerely trust it will
not be used in text-books or primers for junior classes. For what I did was dreadfully bad,
and I received no punishment whatever. On the contrary, my wickedness was crowned with
success.
(Source: excerpts from ‘Once there was a king’ by Rabindranath Tagore)
4) What does the statement ‘my wickedness was crowned with success’ mean here?
A) The author was wicked
B) His plan for not attending the classes was a wicked plan
C) The tutor was successful in making the author attend the class
D) The author’s plan to not attend that day’s class succeeded
42. While it is obviously necessary to know how to read and write, and to learn engineering or
some other profession, will technique give us the capacity to understand life? Surely,
technique is secondary; and if technique is the only thing we are striving for, we are
obviously denying what is by far the greater part of life. Life is pain, joy, beauty, ugliness,
love, and when we understand it as a whole, at every level, that understanding creates its
own technique. But the contrary is not true: technique can never bring about creative
understanding. Present-day education is a complete failure because it has overemphasized
technique. In overemphasizing technique we destroy man. To cultivate capacity and
efficiency without understanding life, without having a comprehensive perception of the
ways of thought and desire, will only make us increasingly ruthless, which is to engender
wars and jeopardize our physical security. The exclusive cultivation of technique has
produced scientists, mathematicians, bridge builders, space conquerors; but do they
understand the total process of life?
Can any specialist experience life as a whole? Only when he ceases to be a specialist.
Technological progress does solve certain kinds of problems for some people at one level,
but it introduces wider and deeper issues too. To live at one level, disregarding the total
process of life, is to invite misery and destruction. The greatest need and most pressing
problem for every individual is to have an integrated comprehension of life, which will
enable him to meet its ever-increasing complexities. Technical knowledge, however
necessary, will in no way resolve our inner, psychological pressures and conflict; and it is
because we have acquired technical knowledge without understanding the total process of
life that technology has become a means of destroying ourselves. The man who knows how
to split the atom but has no love in his heart becomes a monster. We choose a vocation
according to our capacities; but will the following of a vocation lead us out of conflict and
confusion? Some form of technical training seems necessary; but when we have become
engineers, physicians, accountants - then what? Is the practice of a profession the fulfilment
of life? Apparently with most of us it is. Our various professions may keep us busy for the
greater part of our existence; but the very things that we produce and are so entranced with
are causing destruction and misery. Our attitudes and values make of things and occupations
the instruments of envy, bitterness and hate. Without understanding ourselves, mere
occupation leads to frustration, with its inevitable escapes through all kinds of mischievous
activities. Technique without understanding leads to enmity and ruthlessness, which we
cover up with pleasant-sounding phrases. When function is all-important, life becomes dull
and boring, a mechanical and sterile routine from which we escape into every kind of
distraction. The accumulation of facts and the development of capacity, which we call
education, has deprived us of the fullness of integrated life and action. It is because we do
not understand the total process of life that we cling to capacity and efficiency, which thus
assume overwhelming importance. But the whole cannot be understood through the part; it
can be understood only through action and experience.
(Source: https://jkrishnamurti.org/content/chapter-2-rightkind-education)
43. With only 11 years left to achieve the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, some of the
most economically advanced countries have still not met targets in areas like poverty
reduction, youth employment, education and training, gender equality and numerical
literacy, according to a new OECD report.
Measuring Distance to the SDG Targets 2019: An Assessment of Where OECD Countries
Stand finds that in most OECD countries there is widespread access to electricity, mobile
networks and basic sanitation. Countries have met targets for maternal and infant mortality;
and are making progress in reducing deaths from AIDS, TB, Hepatitis B, and road accidents.
They are also cutting smoking and gradually adopting renewable energy sources. Yet, OECD
countries are still leaving many people behind, and are struggling to reach the targets
related to gender equality and to reducing inequality. Even more worrisome, some countries
are moving in the wrong direction on some targets, with worsening performance since 2005.
In particular, medium-term GDP growth and productivity growth are on the wane in many
countries. One in seven people in the OECD area live in poverty, and one in four 15-year-olds
and adults lack basic numerical competency. Obesity and unemployment have been rising in
one third of OECD countries since 2005, and in 13 countries vaccination coverage is
dropping, risking outbreaks of diseases thought to have been eradicated. The number of
threatened species is on the rise in two thirds of OECD countries.
“The SDGs and the 2030 Agenda objective of leaving no one behind are our promise and our
responsibility to future generations. Unfortunately we are very far from being able to
declare Mission Accomplished,” said OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría, launching the
report at the start of the annual OECD Week. “We must all redouble our efforts, with
countries working together to make sure that the goals are achieved within the deadline
that the international community set four years ago. We owe it to our children and to our
planet.”
The report uses a unique methodology that enables a comparison of countries’ progress and
data gaps across the 17 SDG Goals and the specific targets that underpin them, using the UN
Global List of 244 indicators as a starting point. It also finds that over half the 2030 targets
involve a transboundary effect, meaning that achieving them in one country will have an
impact in others or on global goods, such as climate.
•Around 14% of the OECD population lives in relative poverty, far from the goal of halving
poverty rates (half o the median rate in OECD countries is 5.5%).
•Across the OECD, 14% of youths are not in education, employment or training. Rates are
above 20% in Italy and Turkey, and are at least 17% in Chile, Mexico and Spain.
•Women hold fewer than one-third of seats in national parliaments on average in the OECD,
with no country achieving the target level (i.e. equal representation).
•Official development assistance (ODA) is still running at less than half the UN target of 0.7%
of national income.
•Some 6% of women across the OECD report having been subjected to violence by a partner
in the last 12 months [and as high as 11% in some countries]. This is far from the target to
eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls.
(Source: Advanced economies still have plenty of work to do to reach Sustainable
Development Goals)
1) In which of the following areas have the OCED countries made considerable progress,
according to the passage?
A) Communication
B) Education
C) Social Justice
D) None of the above
3) What according to OECD Secretary General is the approach that the OECD countries
should follow to achieve the SDG targets within the deadline?
A) Cooperation among member countries
B) Competition among member countries
C) A transboundary strategy
D) All of the above
4) According to the passage, one of the targets which no OECD country has been able to
achieve is?
A) Equal representation for women in parliament
B) Reduction in infant mortality
C) Improved access to electricity
D) Improved vaccination coverage
5) According to the passage, what is the percentage of 15-year-olds and adults in OECD
countries who lack numerical competency?
A) 25%
B) 20%
C) 75%
D) 37%
44. India faces multiple problems of under-nutrition and obesity co-existing with deficiencies of
micro-nutrients such as iron, zinc, calcium, and several vitamins. This triple burden of
malnutrition must be identified, understood, and addressed. It is much more important
especially in the case of children and adolescents as it is during these phases of life that we
see rapid growth of the body and development of food habits. Childhood and adolescence
are two conjoined periods of continuous growth and development - a seamless duration. For
instance, between two and 10 years of age, children tend to grow at an average of 6-7cm in
height and 1.5 kg to 3 kg in weight every year. But, specifically, when the growth spurt
happens at about 10-12 years in girls and two years later in boys during adolescence, their
nutritional needs vastly increase. In the case of girls, their nutritional status impacts not only
their health but that of generations to come. Malnutrition in any form can put children and
adolescents at risk of compromised immune function, thus making them vulnerable to
infections.
To understand and foster their immunity, one also needs to understand disruptive social
environment factors that affect diet quality. In urban as well as among middle class and
affluent communities, restricted movement, constrained socialisation and even dwindling
physical contact have become the new normal. COVID-19 isolation and fatigue have led to
generalised stress, adding to the immunity challenge for children. These challenges coupled
with a lack of diet diversity leading to imbalanced micro-nutrient intake or consumption of
high carbohydrate and high sugar foods, endanger the child’s health by compromising their
immunity and making them vulnerable to infections. Hence, the way we approach nutrition
needs to change.
(Excerpts from Gavaravarapu, S., Hemalatha, R. Getting nutrition back on the school high
table. The Hindu. November 1, 2021)
Statement A: COVID 19 stress is the main cause for loss of immunity among children.
Statement B: Lack of diet diversity is a reason for children becoming more vulnerable to
infections.
4) Complete the following sentence by selecting one of the options given below: The
passage implies that ……….
A) we need to broaden our understanding of nutrition
B) multi-vitamins must be provided for children from urban and affluent families
C) COVID 19 has led to the malnutrition among children
D) nutritional needs of all the children across stages are similar
5) Consider the following two statements:
Statement A: Authors of this article are dissatisfied with the approach to malnutrition.
Statement B: The triple burden of malnutrition coupled with lack of social interaction is
unaddressed.
Select the appropriate option from the ones given below:
45. Naukri is permanent and regular employment that generally provides a monthly salary and a
considerable degree of legally sanctioned job security. Pakki naukri – the ‘complete’ or
‘perfect’ version of it – is sarkari naukri (government employment). In terms of pay and
prestige, most ‘perfect’ of all is a central government job (which is what railway workers
have), as opposed to one with the state government. By comparison with either, even a
relatively secure and well-remunerated regular job with a private sector firm is kacchi
(‘incomplete’ or ‘imperfect’) naukri. Old timers reflect on how the relative valuation
encapsulated in the time honoured proverb, uttam kheti, madhyam vyavsay, nich naukri
(‘highest agriculture, business middling, lowest naukri’) is now reversed.
Long gone are the days when ‘service’ was tainted by association with the servility of the
‘servant’ (naukar). Naukri confers ijjat (‘honour’ or ‘respect’), whereas – for women
especially – other kinds of employment outside the home detract from it. It raises the status
of the household, enormously enhances its creditworthiness, and is a major asset when it
comes to arranging a marriage or resisting the unreasonable demands of a boss. It was
because she was the daughter of a naukri-vala, Budhvantin explained, that her mother-in-
law treated her with such consideration when, after their elopement, Bukhau eventually
brought her back to his impoverished village near Bhilai. Though for the most part
unrealistically, in slum bastis (‘neighbourhoods’) on the periphery of the town young boys
still learning their etters imagine themselves with a government job and their teenage sisters
dream of a husband who has one.
Young men with the requisite educational qualifications, and the means to do so, spend
years in ‘time pass’ until their hopes of appointment are finally extinguished on reaching the
age limit. To promote their prospects, parents often mortgage or sell fields to pay private
school fees, or bribes to a middle-man (dalal) who claims to be able to ensure selection. The
supply of sarkari naukri is an index of vikas (of ‘progress’ or ‘development’), which is why
many of my informants were hopeful when Chhattisgarh became a separate state that the
government bureaucracy would expand.
[Excerpts from Parry, J., & Ajay, T. G. (2020). Classes of Labour: Work and life in a central
Indian steel town. Routledge].
2) The author says that the proverb used by old timers about different types of work is now
reversed. Which option would best capture this reversal?
A) Highest agriculture, lowest business, middling naukri
B) Highest naukri, middling business, lowest agriculture
C) Highest business, middling naukri, lowest agriculture
D) Highest naukri, middling agriculture, lowest business
5) What does the phrase 'spending years in time-pass' imply in this paragraph?
A) Absence of a job and no real income
B) Absence of a job and waiting till the right age for employment is reached
C) Absence of a job and inability to pay off middle-men to ensure selection
D) Absence of a job and repeated attempts at entrance exams and job applications
46. At first glance, the term youth is used simply to define individuals who fall within a
stipulated age category. For instance, the United Nations defines youth as individuals aged
between 15 and 24, while the African Union and East African Community define youth as
individuals between the age of 15 and 35. However, further exploration reveals that age
categories are insufficient in determining youthhood. Definitions of youth vary in terms of
age, space, time, location, gender, and socio-economic and political dynamics. As such, there
are multiple categorizations of youth whose experiences differ considerably.
Similarly, the meaning and definition of adulthood can shift easily from situation to
situation. For example, in the context of conflict, age and gender roles are disrupted and
disregarded as youth and women may commit acts of violence to ensure survival.
Furthermore, in the case of the loss of parents, young people (of either gender) may be
forced into the position of head of household, taking on the role of ‘protector’ and
‘provider’. In this way, categories of differentiation in age can vanish completely.
The word ‘youth’ cannot be removed from politics and power. In African society, decision
making and the public space is reserved for (male) adults and elites who seek to capture and
maintain power. Politics is also an adult terrain where the subordination of the youth is
justified in the name of culture and continuity. Youth and age are socially constructed and
easily manipulated. The capabilities of the youth are often exploited to sustain the power of
those in authority while young people themselves feel increasingly disenfranchised, unable
to access any tangible gains from the economy and society. Yet, their agency should not be
underestimated, as their ability to organize their power to action can be an effective
instrument for change as seen in the Arab Spring, #EndSars Movement in Nigeria,
#Zimbabweanlivesmatter, and other social movements around the continent.
[Excerpts from LoWilla, M. (n.d.) Young Women Building Peace at the Intersection of
Women, Peace and Security and Youth, Peace and Security, Women’s International Peace
Centre
Blog, https://wipc.org/young-women-building-peace-at-the intersection-of-women-peace-
and-security-and-youth peace-and-security/ (accessed on 12th November 2021)]
1) What are the factors considered for defining youth in different societies?
A) Age
B) Political power
C) Gender
D) All of the above
2) Which of the following statements captures the main argument of the passage?
A) Categories of differentiation in age are changeable as the example of youth and
adulthood show
B) Culture is a contributor to defining youth
C) Elites and male decision-makers manipulate the definitions of youth
D) Conflicts and gender roles can force youth to take the role of an adult
3) Based on the above passage, indicate whether the two statements given below are true
or false.
A. Capabilities of youth are supported by elites and decision makers.
B. Societal and economic gains are not always accessible to the youth.
4) Why does the author say that youth and age are socially constructed?
A) Young people are easily manipulated by people in power
B) Disenfranchised young people create social movements
C) The categorisation of youth changes across time and social context.
D) Lack of power creates different categories within the youth
47. As children grow older, they try to make sense of their world in a variety of ways. Some of
their understanding develops as a result of their own observations; things they overhear
their parents or other family members say; conversations with friends; and their exposure to
popular media. Teachers and textbooks also add to a child’s repertoire of knowledge.
However, often, the understanding children develop through their real-world experiences is
different from what they learn in the classroom. School education rarely addresses these
dual, parallel understandings. We developed a module on respiration to identify student
conceptions, and use these as the base to build a better understanding of the concept. The
teacher started the class by asking students to take a couple of deep breaths. After some
initial hesitation, the children played along. “Do we breathe air or oxygen?” she asked them.
The class responded with a resounding answer. “Oxygen”, they said. She asked, “But, last
year, we learnt that air is a mixture of many gases, right? So, how do we breathe just oxygen
then?” This puzzled the children. After brief thought, one student responded, “The hair in
our nose helps us to separate oxygen from air”. Another student responded, “But oxygen is
much smaller. The hair inside the nose traps only large particles.” Both had reasons for
believing what they did. They started building hypotheses about how we could breathe just
oxygen from the mixture of gases in the air. Many students supported each perspective. This
resulted in an argument, with each side offering examples and counterexamples. It was a
pleasure to see the students thinking, arguing and, most importantly, being engaged in a
scientific discussion — an opportunity that seldom arises in conventional teaching. At this
point, a girl who had remained silent throughout raised her hand, and said, “But pure
oxygen is flammable. If we breathe in pure oxygen, won’t there be a fire inside us?” Another
student pointed out that “If we could purify air and breathe just oxygen, we wouldn't need
to wear pollution masks, and the problem of air pollution would have been solved!
4) “It was a pleasure to see the students thinking, arguing and, most importantly, being
engaged in a scientific discussion — an opportunity that seldom arises in conventional
teaching.” This extract means that …..
A) In conventional teaching opportunities to think, argue are plenty.
B) In conventional teaching there is no opportunity for engaging in a scientific discussion.
C) In conventional teaching a lot of opportunities to think and argue could be designed.
D) In conventional teaching opportunities for engaging in a scientific discussion are rare.
5) “They started building hypotheses about how we could breathe just oxygen from the
mixture of gases in the air. Many students supported each perspective. This resulted in an
argument, with each side offering examples and counterexamples.” This interaction is an
example of ...
A) Incompatible arguments
B) Conflict resolution
C) Supportive perspectives
D) Scientific approach
48. G. Selvam (35) is an upstanding young agricultural labourer who has bonded himself as a
pannaiyal (permanent farm servant) out of economic necessity. Selvam’s family is of the
Parayar scheduled caste.
A loan of Rs 100 taken over six years ago from a petty usurer, led directly to his present
condition as farm servant. At that time, the loan was taken for subsistence needs and was
perceived as a temporary expedient. On account of a 120 percent interest rate, the loan of
Rs 100 became a liability of Rs 220 over a year. The usurer pressed Selvam, then 31 years
old, to sell his house in order to repay the loan. Selvam, refusing to abandon the family
house site, went around asking for a way to work off his debt. The opportunity presented
itself in the form of the landlord SCC. This landlord, who was looking for a young and strong
farm servant, was willing to advance the money to clear the debt, provided Selvam attached
himself as a farm servant for a remuneration of Rs 65 per month plus one sheet and a dhoti,
a shirt, and a towel-cloth (thundu) a year.
Since then, that is, for six years, Selvam has been working for well over 13 hours a day.
SCC (landlord), like some other big landlords in the village, has found it much to his
advantage to hire a farm servant in this way. He has advanced small sums of money to
Selvam over the years, sums always taken “temporarily,” but with no real chance of the
debtor repaying the debt and getting out of his present condition. Selvam makes it clear that
he is not paid anything near the remuneration he should be getting for this work. “There is
no choice,” he says, “I can’t leave my mudalali (employer, landlord) unless I can clear my
debt of Rs 300. I would certainly like to leave.”
Extracted from Ramachandran, V. K., and Madhura Swaminathan, (eds.) (2018), Telling the
Truth, Taking Sides: Essays for N. Ram, Tulika Books, New Delhi.
1) What are the main issues that the passage talks about?
A) Farming, housing property rates, and credit supply
B) Indebtedness, bondage, and caste
C) Housing loans, Interest rates, and credit
D) Market practices and farm ownership
5) Which of the following statements best explains the actions of the landlord?
A) Providing non wage benefits like food, clothing, and shelter for workers
B) Hiring indebted workers as farm servants
C) Setting low wages to reduce costs of farming
D) Choosing experienced and trained workers for farming
49. India has suffered one of the longest school closures in the world. For close to 18 months (in
some states more than that), 265 million students have not been to school. Unless a
sustained education recovery effort is organized over multiple years, the effects of these
widening inequalities will become glaring in the years to come.
All surveys and research done during the period of the pandemic between May 2020 to July
2021 show that there has been no meaningful teaching-learning for the children of the rural
and urban poor, dalit, Adivasi, OBC, minorities, migrant workers and other vulnerable
groups. Remote learning was completely remote for them, as many lacked access to online
learning, materials and teacher support.
The recently completed SCHOOL survey done in 15 states and UTs found that over 72
percent of elementary age children were not studying regularly (or not studying at all) using
any method at the time of the survey, and only 8 percent of rural children were studying
'regularly' online. A majority of children had not had any interaction with their teacher
during the 30 days preceding the survey. An overwhelming share of parents said that
teachers had not helped their child to study over the previous 3 months. Nearly half the
children in the sample were unable to read more than a few words of simple text.
Addressing the education emergency and renewing the system cannot be done without
additional resources. The cuts in the education budgets of the Centre and of many states are
ominous. Other countries are infusing funds into their education system. India's children,
who have been battered by COVID, need more support, not less at this time of crisis.
To help state governments and education professionals address this grave situation, India's
National Coalition on Education Emergency, has released "A Future at Stake – Guidelines and
Principles to Resume and Renew Education" along with other essential resources to help
with the reopening of schools. Research has revealed the particularly devastating loss of the
most basic language and mathematics skills among children of the rural and urban poor,
Dalits, adivasis, minorities and migrant labourers, leading to millions of drop-outs.
Adapted from ‘Meaningful Restart of Education is Critical’, India Together, 4th November
2021, https://indiatogether.org/edu-restart-education
1) Why will 18 months of school closure cause widening inequality in the years to come?
A) Because students do not study regularly
B) Because of the digital divide
C) Because of students dropping out
D) Lack of interest from parents among disadvantaged communities
3) Which of the following options is NOT mentioned in the SCHOOL survey on online
learning?
A) There is a lack of teacher preparedness for remote teaching and learning.
B) There is a lack of teachers’ engagement with students in the process of teaching-
learning.
C) There is a lack of satisfaction among parents with respect to online teaching.
D) There is a lack of reading proficiency among the students.
4) What is the way that the government can address education recovery?
A) Infusing funds from other countries
B) Teaching parents and teachers
C Creating new digital learning technologies
D) Increasing resource allocation and improving facilities
5) The passage implies that ...
A) Long school closures have negatively impacted skills like language and mathematics
B) Cuts in education budgets of states have contributed to school drop-outs
C) Parents have not been able to support skill development in children
D) The government has provided additional resources to support the study of language
and mathematics
50. Tens of millions of Indian women take microfinance loans every year. Some of these loans
are for consumption, but many help fuel small businesses. These unsecured loans are at
relatively high interest rates of 18 to 24 per cent, and women usually form joint liability
groups to take on these borrowings. All these women are insured, and their credit history is
recorded. Partly as a result of these arrangements, 98 per cent of the loans are repaid
despite the high rates of interest. There are now close to 60 million borrowers, and the
average loan size is close to Rs.40,000.
It's fair to say that microfinance operations have worked well in many places, and this sector
has helped India achieve financial inclusion in a big way. Microfinance is now a big business,
and no longer hidden below the water line. Predictably, with this scale, new standards and
regulations have also emerged. All microfinance lenders are registered with the Reserve
Bank of India (RBI), and many of them are also members of one of the self-regulatory
organisations: Sa-Dhan and the Microfinance Institutions Network (MFIN). These two have a
code of conduct for microfinance operations, which they can enforce on their own members
- up to the extent of fining them for breaches of this code.
The RBI is proposing new rules for microfinance. There will be no cap on the number of
lenders from whom a person may borrow (earlier, this was capped at two) or the interest
rate that lenders can charge, so long as the total monthly installments of all loans is less than
half the monthly income of the borrower. These long-asked-for rules will level the playing
field, allowing microfinance institutions to compete better with banks, which have relatively
fewer restrictions on their operations.
Shivastava, Harsh (2021) ‘Microfinance needs better self regulation’, India Together, 31st
October 2021, https://indiatogether.org/mfi-regulate-economy
1) Which factors ensure the repayment of loans despite the high interest rate by
microfinance borrowers?
A) Group accounts, insurance and credit history records
B) Joint liability groups and 18 to 24 % interest
C) Insurance, trust and proper record maintenance
D) Record of credit history, low amount of loan, regular follow-up
4) Vimala and Karuna earn Rs. 8000 and Rs. 15000 per month respectively. Both are
currently paying an installment of Rs 4000/- on an existing loan. In order to set up a
small business, both have applied for a new loan of Rs 50000/- each. As per the
proposed RBI guidelines which one of them is eligible for the new loan?
51. Even though independent databases, such as the CRS and State records, show large spikes in
deaths, with no other explicable cause other than COVID-19, the Centre continues to be in
denial of the mortal scale of the pandemic. Tuesday’s statement by Bharati Pravin Pawar,
Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare, in the Rajya Sabha, that there were no
“specific reports” of deaths from States due to lack of oxygen , led Congress leader K.C.
Venugopal, to say the party will move a privilege motion against her… It is technically true
that while no death certificate or medical record would note a COVID-19 patient’s demise as
due to “lack of oxygen”, and therefore not causative, the very fact that the Centre moved in
April-May to repurpose all its industrial oxygen capacity into producing and transporting
medical grade oxygen is itself evidence that the inability to access it must be considered as a
probable cause of death. In the early days of the pandemic, a COVID-positive test was
necessary to count as a COVID-19 death until the ICMR said it was not always required. It is
bewildering why India — with the third highest number of COVID-19 deaths globally, whose
oxygen crisis was international news, and mortality figures considered an under-count —
sees value in denying oxygen-shortage casualties. Counter-productively, it diminishes public
faith in the health-care system. India’s leadership sought to convey the impression that the
country had conquered the pandemic and — chastened by the second wave — is now
advising abundant caution, with the public messaging focused on the possibility of a third
wave, and how nearly a third of the population continues to be vulnerable as per the ICMR’s
fourth serology survey. But diminishing the tragedy, especially in Parliament and in its
official records, only further erodes the Government’s credibility.
(Source: The Hindu. (2021, July 22). Dealing with denial: The Hindu editorial on playing down
the COVID-19 tragedy. The Hindu. Retrieved April 25, 2022, from
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/dealing-with-denial-the-hindu-editorial-on-
playing-down-the-covid-19-tragedy/article35454701.ece )
1) Why does the passage argue that the excess COVID-19 deaths were caused by lack of
oxygen in India?
A) Supply shortage of oxygen and the repurposing of industrial oxygen to medical grade
oxygen
B) Increase in death rates in the country
C) Both A and B
D) Neither A nor B
2) Why was the cause "lack of oxygen" not captured by government reports?
A) COVID-19 related deaths due to lack of oxygen were not officially accounted for in
statistics
B) There is no way to measure excess death rates due to COVID-19
C) Health infrastructure and availability of oxygen supply to hospitals was adequate
D) Death rates due to COVID-19 were low when measured on a per capita basis
5) Why is the author arguing that the Government must accept the presence of excessive
COVID related deaths in parliament and official records?
A) It would increase investment in producing medical grade oxygen
B) It would lead to better measurement in healthcare statistics
C) It would correctly place India as the country with the third highest deaths caused by
India
D) It would make the government accountable for its actions
52. The education system does not function in isolation from the society of which it is a part.
Hierarchies of caste, economic status and gender relations, cultural diversity as well as the
uneven economic development that characterise Indian society also deeply influence access
to education and participation of children in school. This is reflected in the sharp disparities
between different social and economic groups, which are seen in school enrolment and
completion rates. Thus, girls belonging to SC and ST communities among the rural and urban
poor and the disadvantaged sections of religious and other ethnic minorities are
educationally most vulnerable. In urban locations and many villages, the school system itself
is stratified and provides children with strikingly different educational experiences. Unequal
gender relations not only perpetuate domination but also create anxieties and stunt the
freedom of both boys and girls to develop their human capacities to their fullest. It is in the
interest of all to liberate human beings from the existing inequalities of gender. Schools
range from the high- cost ‘public’ (private) schools, to which the urban elite send their
children, to the ostensibly ‘free’, poorly functioning local- body - run primary schools where
children from hitherto educationally deprived communities predominate. A striking recent
feature is the growth of multigrade schools in rural areas, based on the mechanical
application of ‘teacher - pupil ratios’ to the need to provide a school within 1 km. of each
habitation, yet unsupported by the necessary curricular concepts or clarity on materials or
pedagogy.
(Excerpts from NCERT (2005). National Curriculum Framework, 2005. New Delhi. pp. 9)
3) Multigrade schools pose new challenges’. Which of the following statements describe
the reason/s for this?
Statement A: There is no clarity on what materials to use for teaching
Statement B: There is no discussion on what methods are useful to engage multigrade
children
Statement C: Teacher-pupil ratio is not maintained
4) “Unequal gender relations not only perpetuate domination but also create anxieties and
stunt the freedom of both boys and girls to develop their human capacities to their
fullest. It is in the interest of all to liberate human beings from the existing inequalities of
gender.”
From this extract following conclusion can be drawn –