Showing posts with label IAS Topper Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IAS Topper Interview. Show all posts

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Hard Work, Good Planning, positive Approach and Faith In God Ensure Success - Vinod K.Jacob, IAS Topper 2000 (5th Rank)

A civil servant is one of the most balanced and normal personalities in a country. He/she need not be an expert, a genius or a super-specialist, he/she has to be an average man/woman of pleasing nature and personality with a flair for leadership and administration. This dictum should guide every IAS aspirant throughout the 3 stages- Prelims, Mains and Interview. A 10 to 14 months programme is a must for this Exam. One should not attempt the first Prelims as a trial. T

He first attempt ought to be the best attempt. Preparation should be focussed on the Mains 3 months solely devoted to Prelims. Choice of Optional should be the first step the choice should rest solely on aptitude and bent of mind. The study should begin with understanding of the first principles and the basics. One should refer only to the standard text-books and noted classics in the concerned subjects. Preparation for Mains should not be on the basis of past years' Questions papers only. First, complete the syllabus and then one month preceding the Mains, practise with the help previous years' papers. I feel that it is the performance in General Studies paper that tilts the scales.

My observation has been that he candidates are extremely thorough with their Optionals and level of knowledge is improving s the years pass by. Hence General Studies alone makes or mars one's chances. Likewise, one has to practise writing good essays. Writing and presentation skills count for much. English paper and Language paper are no easy sailing affairs. I could not succeed in my first attempt (1998) because I failed in Hindi compulsory paper. So it is always advisable to brush up one's grammar and vocabulary. Making notes, keeping paper cuttings, regular map reading and group discussions are a must. Keeping focussed is often a tall exercise but with the help of our family and few reliable friends we can always recharge our betteries and stay on course.

Prelims: A three-month exclusive preparation for Prelims is a must. For the subject paper, the whole syllabus should be thoroughly studied, revise, re-revised and mastered. No part can be afforded to be overlooked. No part can be afforded to be overlooked. For General Studied, one has to go through NCERT books and the Hindu and Frontline. Many of the questions can be answered through intelligent guesses. Remember, first complete al mental ability questions and then go onto the rest.

Target : 95/120 to 115/120 (Subject); 90 to 100/150 (G.S).

P.S. : The subject is more important than G.S. hence, spend more time on the subject. Mains : On an average atleast 6 to 8 hours of study a day is a must. I used to take off and Sundays but used to spend 2 hours reading the Hindu even Sundays. All papers should be prepared simultaneously. Equal importance should be given to all papers. One should always stick to the word limit. In case of long answers, do not write more than 500 words. Never take an aggressive stand while attempting your Essay papers. Explain all the differing and opposing schools of thought and with logical reasoning explain your viewpoint.

Target : 1150 to 1250/2000. General Studies, I believe, makes or mars your chances.

Interview : A civil servant is not born. But he is not made one overnight. Hence, one should aim at projection an optimistic outlook. Humility is a quality that has no peers. Our arguments should not resemble rhetoric but should be persuasive. Taking part in debates and extempores is a must. I even took classes in Law in my M.L. one should spend atleast 2 hours a day in reading the newspapers. One should be prepared for analysing any issue of current importance. But, we should never try to give ad.hoc or quick.fix solutions. Remember, stalling for time is a very good way of overcoming a problem. In Civil Services Examination, Emotional Quotient (E. Q.) is as important as I.Q. hence, you should stay focussed, calm, patient and in a proper frame of mind. Remember, he who rules the mind is greater than he who rules the city.

Dedication, Time Management & Hard Work : Secrets Of My Success - Ms. Bhawna Garg, IAS Topper 1999

It is indeed a pleasure to write this column which I remember to have been very particular in reading, once I decided to go for this Exam. By this column, Competition Success Review is indeed providing an appropriate guidance to student aspiring for the civil Services. I must candidly admit that this column has been greatly helpful in ensuring my success in this premiere exam.

For the Civil Services Exam, a very different kind of approach is required. There are three stages in this Exam Preparation -Though, work, then deed, and not anyone of them being less important than other.

With the number of vacancies dwindling each year an the competition getting tougher and at the same time, the number of aspirant increasing- this year around three lakh students has appeared, one must consider all the pros and cons of the situation, before jumping into th fray.

You have to be self-motivated. I would like to remind the aspirants the words of Swamy Vivekananda. "Stand up, be bold and take the whole responsibility on your shoulders and know that you are creator of your own density. All the strength and success that you want are within yourself." Once having decided about going in for the exam, it must be atleast a year before you ought to be appearing for the Prelims.

I decided sometimes in January 97 during my sixth Semester at IIT Kanpur. Then comes the stage as to what is required to be done. Start the practise of regular reading of a newspaper. I was regular with The Hindu and I found it fairly useful. Also the choice of the optional is very crucial. You can decide about it based on your own interests, aptitude, graduation study, consulting the previous years' question papers, etc. it need not necessarily be the popular choice. I had Maths and Chemistry as my optionals. The criteria to choose Chemistry as against Physics was entirely based on my self-analysis because I have more liking for the subject plus by better scoring abilities in it. So despite the fact that there was hardly any guidance available for chemistry as against Physics, I decided about it. Also because I was getting more number of days in between G.S. -Maths and then Math- Chemistry papers (atleast 10 days break in between), this also was favourable and encouraging which did later prove beneficial - for I got sufficient time for last-minute revision.

After the self-convincing choice of optional, the collection of the reading material becomes crucial. The study of the previous years' Test Papers together with solution is very useful to understand the trend and type of questions set and how to answer them. Here again Competition Success Review, by publishing answer to the latest such test papers in various Competitive exams including civil Services as a regular Feature, is way ahead of many such contemporary periodicals.

Apart from this, the university level books are consulted for they match the style of the Paper. By September '98, I started on with some optional subject study - taking one topic at a time but main emphasis was on General Studies especially Polity and Modern History. Due to the demanding B.Tech study, I was not able to give a lot of time exclusively for this Exam. But still, I was single-mindedly concentrating on my goal. At times I had to compromise with my B.Tech studies. I used to make a time schedule and a work schedule for the next day and also note down my time analysis and work progress if that particular day and introspect my shortcomings and possible improvements. This went on till April '98 When I gave my Final Semester exams. In between, I managed to devote the Whole one month just to study Indian Polity - the subject I feared the most in GS and its in-depth study instilled self-confidence in me for an otherwise tough subject for me. I started on for Prelims from mid-March. I just studied the Brilliant Notes on Maths and read the NCERT books on History, Geography and Spectrum Guide for Current Affairs. I got the previous years' solved Test of Mathematics to develop a good speed and maintain it as well.

Generally, my tendency during the Practise Test was to complete the paper 10 minutes earlier than the scheduled time (Duration: 2 hours) for in the Exam Hall, in the Hot Summers, one can never be sure of the comfortable conditions. Also signing the Attendance sheets and certain few announcements being made by the invigilators at intervals may be distracting and time-consuming. Prelim is just a qualifying Exam, so my eyes were always directed on the Mains. Still I devoted one full month of May exclusively for it to avoid any risk so that later I can prepare comfortably for the Mains without having any apprehensions about my clearing the first stage. The generally accepted strategy for this Exam is that one must have studied the whole syllabus for the Mains before the Prelims or at least before its result is out, i.e. by July end. But I must admit that it wasn't the case with me.

After my Prelims - taking a 3.4 days' rest break, I prepared a work plan for the next 5 months. I knew that revision is very important, still it was only by August end that I could finish off my syllabus once. With just two months before the Exam,. This was a bit demoralising and at times. I felt that I was out of the race. But keeping my expectations low, still I was determined not to let my spirits go down (Swami Vivekananda quotations and anecdotes never let me down), and sustained my consistency and without letting any negative thoughts overpower my mind, I worked mechanically till the last.

The next two months, I divided into three slots of 20days, each for the three subjects. At first, I revised Maths wholly followed by Chemistry and then GS till the General Studies paper on 30th October. I couldn't do any special study for the Essay paper. However, the high caliber essays for Civil Services published by CSR proved immensely useful in giving me an insight of the methodology to attempt the next 15 days for Math Paper exclusively and then the next 10 days for the Chemistry Paper. So a sufficient gap in between the Exam proved really beneficial to me.

During the crucial six months duration after the Prelims, I feel that you must have a very systematic approach, be disciplines and sincere, be consistent and work zealously. (Each day I would aim at attainable limits of 10-12 hours of study time, maintain a diary, go for some physical work-out for 30-40 minutes in the evening to refreshing myself.) be calm and positive. You should be so dedicated that no external coaxing should be needed to sit and study for long hours have faith in yourself and the Almighty and your concentrated sincere effort will never betray you.

The execution step is the last but the most cautious one. you must take light diet during the Exam days. Have good sleep. The night before the Exam for two papers during a day can be very exhausting and during the second exam, there may be a tendency of lethargy creeping in quite unwittingly. Be calm and positive. Dress comfortably. Reach the Exam centre well in time, so some deep breathing to maintain your cool and be charming during the interview. The work limit prescribes for the GS paper should be largely conformed with, for it helps in good time management as well. Work out the time plan for the Exam beforehand for the Exam pattern is very well known.

For the Essay paper about 45 minutes can be given for planning out, then two hours of writing (on 200 words) and later 15 minutes of overhauling. Interview preparation is not just a matter of a few days - your whole personality counts. Still you must acquaint yourself with your home State, district your college, your hobbies, general concepts of Public Administration, etc. also you can brush up the Mains GS material like Polity, Economy, History, etc.

Interview is more of a psychological test than just content based. But along with good communication skills and self-confidence, good knowledge base gives you an upper hand. Here again, reading certain articles like, "Facing the Interview Board" published by the Competition Success Review helps prepare oneself accordingly. I solely relied on this important feature in Competition Success Review. Group Discussions and Mock

Interviews are equally important. However, I myself could not make a group and go for any mock interview but I think this may prove helpful especially to those who feel less self-confident and have some difficulty in communication. I did not join any Academy either. On the whole, I feel that the first attempt should not be taken lightly for the enthusiasm and the dedication for the first time may be difficult t sustain on for the next time. Also one must keep his options open while going in for this exam - for with the decreasing number of the seats each year and increasing competition, an alternative job security can give one more self-confidence and thus a wholehearted effort is possible.

With good wishes and good luck to all future aspirants of this coveted service. Self-Confident, Planning And Systematic Study : Stepping Stones To Success - Amit Negi, IAS Topper 1999 (2nd Rank)

To achieve glorious success in the Civil Services Examination, proper approach and excellent guidelines are indispensable. Your Optionals are the things which can make all the difference. This single decision has the potential to alter your life. Choose your Optionals carefully and with due care. Try to choose subjects in which you have some background knowledge. Only choose those subjects which are scoring and also with which you are comfortable

. Remember you'll have to do both intensive and extensive study of Optionals. So it is imperative that you must have interest also in your Optionals. Always keep an open-mind. Information from any source relevant to your goal is always welcome. Discuss with your friends, talk to them and listen to their views. This will expand your knowledge base and also expose you to different views. This is important as this will enable you to view things in a balanced perspective and avoid taking extremes. Make it a habit to go through magazines (especially competition Success Review and General Knowledge Today) and newspapers regularly and read as many as possible.

The syllabus in the Civil Services is very hazy and vast with no clearly-defined boundaries. So, it might happen that you end up reading things which are connected with the syllabus but are practically irrelevant from your preparation point of view. So it is necessary that you get a feel of what the examiner expects from you. For this keep a copy of syllabus and side by side keep the previous year' papers. Compare them and see what types of questions are repeated every year. Try to have a feel as to what constitutes important portions of the syllabus and what is irrelevant. Try to from boundaries of the syllabus. This analysis will give you an in-depth insight into the paper and the examiner's mind. This will make you understand which topics need intensive study. This will also enable you to identify unnecessary portions, which are not important from the point of view of examination, so that you may avoid them and save your precious time and energy.

It is always useful to maintain a note-book to jot down all important developments happening in the National and the International scene. Also if possible one should make short notes for Optional Paper as well as General Studies. For example, in Mathematics and Physics one can make a formula note-book in which one should write all the important formulae and their derivations. Besides making it easier to remember, such notes are also very useful and handy during revision stages and save a lot of time.

Always do a planned and systematic study. Work out your study schedules in a planned and orderly manner. Maintain a daily routine of studying in a manner suited to you and stick to it; no matter what happens. Plan your whole preparation well. I think this whole preparation should last about 12-15 months. So plan your preparation in such a manner that before the prelims you should have completed your both Optionals and General Studies right up to the Mains level. This will ensure that you have sufficient time to revise. So planning at every stage of the examinations important. Also do a very systematic study.

Work out your syllabus and finish it in an ordered manner. Some time when you are free, try to write an essay on post topics covered in the Civil Services. This will expose you to your lacunae as well as make you understand the things involved: writing a good essay. Not only the easy you should also attempt previous years' Optionals Papers and General Studies Papers. This will expose your weaknesses and give you an idea about the extent of your preparation, your knowledge base, your speed and accuracy. Thus you can develop your writing skills and make sure that you can cover lengthy papers, especially GS Paper-1, in time.

Remember in the Civil Services, writing skills matter a lot. Most of the people appearing for Mains Examinations have a lot of knowledge, some of them have been preparing for the last three or four years, even then such candidates are not selected sometimes. One of the reasons for their failure is their writing skills. They are not able to present all the information present in their mind in a coherent and logical manner as expected by the examiner. So, you should develop your writing skills. The attitude that I will write directly in the Examination should be done away with

. Remembers hours do not count. Don't go by the claims of other persons who say that they study more than 18 hours a day. Do not get depressed if you are unable to achieve their targets. Remember, it is your preparation, you are the one who will appear in the examination, you know yourself better, so do your study according to your needs. Quality of hours put in is more important than quantity. You should use your energy an time in an efficient and effective manner.

Take due care of your health. You might go in for a walk in the evenings. also maintain a hobby which relaxes you during your preparation like listening to music etc. take sleep as required by your body and mind. It is always better to do study when one's mind and body are fresh, this helps in easy grasping of things a swell as in retaining them. Remember that without a good health, you will not be able to concentrate on your studies and your whole idea of the Civil services will go haywire.

It is always better to peak at the time of Examination. So channelise your preparation in such a manner that you don't burn yourself out before the Examination. Build up reserves of energy in yourself. You will need this energy at the time of your Examination. Do not worry much about the compulsory Hindi and English language papers. You will coolly pass them, and you don't need to waste your time preparing for them.

For Interview, from a group of friends who have offered the same Optionals. Remember, Interview is of a personality test. The Board will check certain traits in your personality such as your honesty and integrity, your mental alertness, your acumen, your response to some situations, your views on varied topics and also your knowledge base. So, for Interview read as many newspapers and as many magazine as possible. Discuss with your friends. Take mock-interviews. Try to find loop-holes in your arguments and plug them. Form your views on various subjects in a very logical and rational manner supported by data whenever necessary. Do not get nervous whenever necessary. Do not get nervous before the Interviews. Improve your communications skills by giving mock-interviews.

These will also open you up. Ask your friends to grill you, so that you can face pressure from the Board easily. Always pause a bit before answering even if you know the answer. Do not give a hasty reply. Answer in an orderly and logical fashion an always look into the eyes of the interviewer while answering. Be polite and courteous. Don't be too much argumentative. Be consistent in your views, i.e. just don't change your views because of the fact that the Board is differing with you. Remember that they are only testing you and often even try to provoke you. Give balanced answers and avoid taking extremes.

Alongwith your preparation for the Civil services Examination, the following four elements are the pre-requisites for success in the examination:

(1) Hard Work - Remember that there is no substitute for hard work. No genie is coming to help you. You have to finish the whole course by yourself.

(2) Dedication - Dedication towards your duty always pays in life. Be totally dedicated towards your study. You will have to sacrifice something like movies, parties, etc. at this stage of your life to achieve bigger things. Just work day and night and go on and on.

(3) Patience - As the civil Services Emanation spans a whole one year right from Preliminary stage to the Interview stage, it requires a lot of patience to maintain your tempo. At times you may feel tired and sick of further studying during the course of your preparation, but don't throw the towel as yet. Maintain your cool and patience and go on. To take out your anger and frustration, talk to friends and parents. They'll provide you with the much-neede emotional support.

(4) Self- confidence- your self-confidence can make the whole difference. If you don't believe in yourself and your capacity to achieve then no matter how hard you try. You will end up in failure. So your self-confidence should be at a very high level. I don't intend to say that you should become over-confident, but a good self-esteem matters. So to pep up your confidence level say t yourself everyday in front of the mirror that you can do it and you will do it. You should be in the surroundings of the people who could constantly motivate you and inspire you. Keep a group of close friends with you who are as determined t make it to the Civil Services as you are. This will make sure that if you are facing some problems in any subject then you can approach some one. Also while talking and discussing with them you'll be exposed to different views. This will also ensure that you can vent out your frustration by talking to some one. Besides, good friends are always a source of inspiration and motivation.

Motivation And Confidence Secrets Of My Success - Deepak Tayal, IAS Topper 1993 (3rd Rank)

The first and the foremost step to achieve success in the Civil Services Examination is to aim high and have a belief in oneself. Once that is done, one is prepared to give it a go. The first step involves a suitable choice of the Optional subject for the Preliminary Examination and the Mains.

I think that the choice subject be based on interest and comfort level rather than how scoring they are. One should rather than how scoring they are. One should have a natural inclination and aptitude towards these subjects. It always helps if the choice of Optionals for the prelims is one of the subjects chosen for the Mains.

After this, it depends on the Particular individual as to what he feels about the method best suited to him and his instincts. But in general preparation can be broadly classified as long-term or short time depending on the available time for preparation.

For a long term, one should begin with one of the Optional for the Mains and try to finish as much as possible until about 15 days to 2 months depending on the comfort level for the Optional chosen for Prelims and whether one began with the same subject or not. This should be followed by preparation for the prelims. In the prelims, there is no need to give undue emphasis to the General Studies and to waste time in order to attempt to cover everything. A quick study of different areas of the General Studies is enough if one has prepared thoroughly for the Optional in which attempt should be made to score more than 225 marks.

Preparation for Mains should begin soon after the Prelims is over and one should not waste time waiting for the Interview. Here again the major thrust should be on preparing for optional subject more thoroughly and give them more time. The preparation for General Studies can be highly selective and one can easily see that there is a similar pattern in the questions asked in different years. Of course, there is no feels that there is a lot of available time. On the other hand, if one is following short-term preparation either because of lack of time available for studies or because he feels more comfortable with it, there are some suggestions for books from my side, based on what I did. For History & Indian Polity, selected portions of Unique's Guide and for Current Affairs, Economy & Science and Technology, Spectrum's current affairs are good enough to score more than 325 marks if one has the ability to grasp them quickly. It helps if one has read magazines and newspapers regularly but if he is unable to do so, there is no cause for panic and one can do without them.

A major part of the preparation should go towards the Optional. The most important thing to know about the Interview is that it is not a question-answer session and what they are looking out for is different aspects of one's personality. As far as possible, the answer given should reveal a particular aspect of one's personality and attempts should not be made to present a make-up appearance or politically correct answers. There is no harm in taking extreme views if one is able to justify them.

One need not get carried away by the flood of books and coaching institute. If one feels that he is confident enough to take his own, he can do without them. Most of the questions asked in the Interview are opinion-based. For such questions, it always helps if one already such questions…. it always helps if one already has some views on the issue and he can present them spontaneously. If it is a relatively new issue, the best approach is to think there and also to be seen thinking. If the candidate seems to be applying his mind in an effort towards reaching the solution, it is the best thing that can happen in an Interview.

For the knowledge-based questions, the presentation of the answer becomes more important. One should not make himself appear as having crammed be presented in a conversational manner. There is no need to panic for the Interview and even " I don't know, Sir" should be said with confidence and cheerfulness. One is not expected to know everything under the sun. Finally, whatever the stage might be, one has to have faith and confidence in himself. An individual should be the best judge of what he thinks as the best way to prepare. He should not follow the crowd if it doesn't suit his instinct. Once that happens, he is bound to success and excel

Muthyalaraju Revu, Ist rank, Civil Services Exam, 2006

He comes from Chinnagollapalem village in Krishna district, Andhra Pradesh, where his father and two brothers are farmers. Muthyalaraju studied in the village school and did his B Tech from Regional Engineering College, Warangal, and his Masters in Bangalore. His family borrowed money for coaching classes in Delhi. He got into the IPS in 2005, but tried again for IAS and topped in 2006.

"The death of my 12-year-old sister due to poor medical facilities in the village spurred me in the direction of the civil services."

Their story is often one of impressive mobility—the story of a changing India, as much as a changing civil service. Studious and focused 'Bunties' and 'Bablis' from village, tehsil and district schools sally forth in search of higher degrees, reaching Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and Delhi University, sundry engineering and medical colleges and established state universities. Aboobacker Siddique, a farmer's son from Malappuram district in Kerala, makes it to JNU, where a section of the library, taken over by civil service swotters, has been christened Dholpur House, after UPSC's headquarters. Sujit Singh, son of a havaldar in Bihar, makes it first to Delhi's Hindu College, and then to the civil services. Anbukkumar, a constable's son from Tamil Nadu, goes to the elite Madras Christian College in Chennai for his MA.

However, an increasing number do not travel that far, picking up a degree or two from a modest institution nearer home, and a distance learning course. Many less known institutions are chipping away at the dominance of the civil services by established universities. The intake from Delhi University, even if still high, has declined considerably since the '70s. Likewise from Allahabad University, whose silver-haired alumni adorn the upper reaches of the bureaucracy. Calcutta University has fallen off the map. Showing up on the map are little-known colleges and universities in places like Tiruchirapalli, Warangal, Izatnagar, Kolhapur, Bareilly, Rohtak, Meerut, Bhagalpur, Amravati, Belgaum, Nagarjunanagar, Gorakhpur, Gulbarga, Bikaner, Sagar.... And three per cent of the intake is now from distance learning courses.

M. Sudha Devi, 31/ IAS

M. Sudha Devi, 31/ IAS, Additional Commissioner, Mandi, Himachal Pradesh
Married at an early age, Sudha (looking up) had to give up her studies. When the marriage broke up after four years, she finished her BA from Coimbatore, and prepared for the civil services, which she cleared at the first attempt, after joining a coaching institute in Delhi. The daughter of a farmer, she grew up in the tehsil town of Tiruchengode, Tamil Nadu.

"My humble background makes me better able to understand and relate to people’s problems. When I see a farmer with grievances standing in front of me, I see my father."

Greater access to the system helps. Until the late '60s, the civil services exam was the preserve of the English-educated. It could not be taken in another language. Thereafter, candidates were permitted to take some papers, and then all except one basic qualifying English paper, in an Eighth Schedule language. Weightage for the personality interview, in which candidates from elite backgrounds are perceived to have an advantage, was reduced. (It is now just 13 per cent of the total marks). Changes like these helped Malegaon boy Mohammad Qaiser and Varanasi lad Govind Jaiswal make it to the top this year.

Twenty-nine-year-old Qaiser, who took the exam in Urdu, was disappointed by his poor interview result. It did not stop him, however, from standing 32nd in a gruelling three-part exam taken by one-and-half-lakh people at the first stage. Govind, whose muscular and idiomatic Hindi is palpably better than his English, topped the list of Hindi-medium candidates this year. One in four now prefers to take the exam in Hindi, or a regional language. Their success rate is far lower than that of English candidates, but still, their numbers are rising.

And then, of course, there is reservations. The 27 cent per cent reservation of seats for OBCs since the mid-'90s, in addition to the 22.5 per cent reserved for the scheduled castes and scheduled tribes, has begun to radically transform the composition of an upper caste-dominated higher bureaucracy. There may be unfilled quotas in the lower services, but in coveted services like the IAS, IPS and IFS, they are intensely sought. OBCs, especially, are boosting their representation in these top services by making it to the general category. According to the Department of Personnel, in the last five years, 32.5 per cent of officers inducted into the IAS have been OBCs.

The impact can be seen in the individual stories of young men and women who are among the first to represent their communities in the bureaucracy. For example, Sudha Devi, a young additional commissioner in the Himachal cadre, is the first woman from her Kangavellalar farming community in Tamil Nadu to make it to the IAS. Says Sudha, "My getting in has been an eye-opener for this area and my community—so many others are preparing now. Every time I go home,girls come to me for counselling."

Muhammed Qaiser Abdul Haque,(AIR-32 2006)

One of eleven children of a former powerloom worker, now grocer, in the communally sensitive textile town of Malegaon, Maharashtra, he went to school there, then did his Masters from Pune. He joined a civil services study circle for backward and minority students at Hamdard University in Delhi.

"I have seen the lack of resources on the ground, no proper hospital, or colleges.... I see my IAS job as that of a middleman, between the government and the people, and I feel responsible towards all the people, not just those of my community."

Yet, despite reservations, the poorest seem to be largely excluded from the civil service club (as are Muslims). The social data shows that only a minuscule number of the new babus are first-generation learners. The number has declined since the '80s. The number of those educated in government schools is steadily going down (which reflects loss of faith in state education). A commission headed by economist and educationist Y.K. Alagh on civil service recruitment, which submitted its report to the government in 2001, was concerned at these trends. Speaking to Outlook, Alagh reiterated that concern: "A munsif's son is good, but a landless labourer or an artisan's son even better. Half of the country's workforce are landless labourers."

The Alagh report blames government policies that have relaxed age limits and the number of chances available to candidates. It says they favour crammers who spend large sums on coaching (about a lakh of rupees a year, per candidate), and perfect exam-taking techniques, making it harder for bright, poor candidates in all categories to get in. Agrees Planning Commission member B.N. Yugandhar, "Coaching makes it very difficult for first-generation learners to get in."

Age is a touchy issue. At 30 years for the general category (33 for OBCs, 35 for SC/STs), the age limits are among the highest they have been. Correspondingly, the number of new recruits over 26 has been rising steadily, upsetting the bureaucracy, which says older candidates are harder to train, and get frustrated because they don't reach the top due to shorter tenures. In February, then cabinet secretary B.K. Chaturvedi wrote to the PMO, recommending 24 as the age limit for the general category, which is what it used to be in the '60s. Says Satyanand Mishra, secretary, personnel, "Age levels have been increased in deference to the demand that a lower age of recruitment works against people from rural areas. But empirically this is not true—reducing age limits will not handicap any class of people." But for the political class, this is a hot potato. And for the Sanjay Singhs and other denizens of places like Mukherjee Nagar and Hudson Lines, a death blow. "Higher age limits are good for people like me—we work, make money, keep trying, get in," says Sanjay Singh.

Notwithstanding the distaste of reform-minded committees for coaching—and for an exam that has become a byword for narrow, tactical swotting—many civil servant recruits interviewed by Outlook, from small towns and villages, and relatively modest backgrounds, have a different perspective. They see coaching as the leveller that flattens the playing field, helping them compete with the better educated and the socially confident.

For families, coaching is an investment—land is sold and money borrowed to pay for it. Interview coaching, especially, is a must—this year's topper, Muthyalaraju Revu, travelled to Delhi's coaching hub for interview coaching. Says Govind: "It teaches you to be balanced, to keep your ego in check, to come across as energetic and confident." Those understandably petrified of confronting the retired bureaucrats who dominate interview boards are told, "Behave as if you are going to meet your new family."

And so they make it, finally, to their "new family".

But are the new recruits improving the quality of a rather discredited family, often perceived as lacking in accountability, efficiency and integrity? It is hard to generalise—talking to a cross-section, you will encounter the blazingly sincere and the rather cynical, the confident and the diffident, the rock-solid and the showy. Says social activist and ex-IAS officer Aruna Roy, "Many take big dowries, contravening the act they implement. Some are susceptible to community and communal tendencies, which is not surprising, if you look at the distortion of history and values in current-day education, especially in the Hindi belt—many don't know history." She also worries that there are "no role models left to show young recruits they need not bow to political pressure".

On the other hand, asserts Roy, "They are far more rooted in the reality of India than my generation of civil servants. India is very complex now and they understand that complexity better than we did—some have a very genuine awareness of landless, Dalit and minority issues." Agrees Alagh, "Their being in the bureaucracy is an important part of the building of modern India. Despite the homogenisation that takes place when they become part of the elite, they are not the bureaucrats you see at embassy parties. You can tell a JNU district collector a mile off. They can sort out the problems of real India. "

Down on the ground, Anbukkumar, though he is already getting a good reputation in the district where he works, makes no such claims. "To be frank," he says, "I have no big vision or ideals as such. I had no idea of policy-making or decision-making or file notings. IAS simply meant a red-light car and a lot of power. I am slowly learning the ropes now. I may not become the number one IAS officer, but I want to be fair and just. No more dreams, no more ideals. Slowly and surely, I will evolve."

Mr. Sorabh Babu Maheshwari 1999 IAS topper

Mr. Sorabh Babu Maheshwari (23) achieved 1st position among the successful candidates of the Civil Services Examination, 1999-2000. He has done B.E. (Mech.)

" Planned Studies, Hard Work and INNER motivation are the Keys to Success "

We publish below an exclusive interview he gave to Competition Success Review.

CSR: What is the secret of your success in the Civil Services Examination?

Sorabh Babu Maheshwari : There are myriad of factors responsible; to sum up God's grace, family's support and encouragement, planned studies, hard work, inner motivation can be cited as the main factors.

Q. How much time do you think one requires for serious preparation for this examination ?

A. Atleast one year of serious dedicated preparation.

Q. Which journals and newspapers have you been reading for the General Knowledge and other papers ?

A. Competition Success Review, General Knowledge Today, The Hindu, The Hindustan Times, Frontline and a regular reader of India Today

Q.What is your impression of the Interview Board ?

A, Questions posed before a candidate are very well framed and answers to them should be made taking into consideration all possible views and a balanced approach is expected from a candidate.

Q. What is your advice to the future aspirants ?

A. The path towards this coveted service passes through many ups and downs. To carry oneself along these pulls and pushes requires strong inner motivation and decision to aspire for Civil Services should come from within.

Q . Competition Success Review, the largest selling youth magazine in English, has been extremely helpful because...

A. ...it helped in providing ready, easy-to-use material thus saving time. Topics, which are unique to this magazine e.g.,IAS Topper Talks To You, Essays, Personality. Tests proved extremely helpful while preparing as they give good insight into these issues.

Q. What prompted you to choose Civil Services as your career?

A. the unique blend of service opportunities which Civil Services offers. Diversity of job, being a party in policy implementation, bigger responsi bilities, social esteem and to do good to common masses were some factors which made me to go in for Civil Services.

Q. How did your parents, family and friends contribute to your success ?

A. A larger part of success is attributable to them. Without the constant support, encouragement and boost up by family members and friends at times, this day was not possible.

Q. Had you not been selected in the Civil Services Examination, what would have been your reaction ? Which other service career would you have gone in-opted for?

A.This year. I did well in Written Exam ,and Interview and was confident of getting good rank. In adverse situation of not getting selected, though sad I would have gone for another attempt after finding out my lacunae.

Q. How would you visualise your success ?

A. Combined effort of everything went in my favour. I dedicate my success to my parents and elder brother and now find myself at a platform with even bigger responsibilities and challenges as never before.

Q Whom do you attribute your success to ?

A. To my eldest brother especially who has been a constant source of motivation throughout my life span. Without whose support, I could not have achieved this.

Q. What Were your Optionals for the Civil Services Examination ?

A. Mathematics for Prelims; Mathematics and Mechanical Engineering for Mains.

Q. What was your criterion for the selection of Optional subjects ?

A. Having studied Mechanical Engg. in my graduation for 4 years, I found it a natural choice and I felt quite comfortable with Mathematics.

Q. How did you prepare for your Compulsory papers?

A. I made a list of topics to be read, then gave them a priority based on their importance and started from the top giving due time to each of them. This approach was mandatorv for me as I am already in job and did not have ample time.

Q. Competition Success Review is the largest read youth magazine in English. How do you visualise the role of this magazine in moulding the careers of the youth ?

A. Since my childhood, Civil Services ,specific issues particularly the column of 'IAS Toppers Talk To You' inspired me a lot to go for Civil Services as my career.

Q. How did Competition Succeess Review help you in your preparation for the interview?

A. Supplements like 'My Personality Test', 'Facing The Interview Board', 'Improve Your Personality' and 'Group Discussion' give quite an original view of the personality test and help us in assessing our deficiencies beforehand and taking corrective measures.

Q. What is your opinion about Competition Success Review?

A. Competition Success Review is indispensable for aspirants to Civil Services and other competitive exams. It is helping, candidates a lot. It is a part of study material.

Q. What is your opinion about General Knowledge Today?

A. More information ' i less space is the buzzword for General Know1cdgr Today. It provides quite handy, ready-to-use facts, database and information and as such is quite useful during revision hours.

Q. What do you think is the better way of preparation between selective, intensive study and wide, extensive study ?

A. Wide extensive study should be followed by selective intensive study.

Q. Is the pattern of the examination appropriate for selection ? Would you recommend any improvement?

A. By and large, the pattern of examination is good. Efforts, however, should be made to reduce the shell time of the whole process in line with other exams.

Q. Do you feel that there should be no restriction on the number of attempts ?

A. Current policy of restricting attempts checks non-serious candidates and prevents flooding up of the exam. This should continue. ,

Q. With the resumption of Essay paper in UPSC examinations, we are giving four senior essays every month. Is this focus oriented, analytical, feature helpful for the TAS aspirants ?

A. Definitely yes. Best way to prepare for Essay paper is through careful reading of these well-crafted essays by top slot authors. It sharpens the writing ability and boosts confidence.

Q. How do you think Competition Success Review could be more useful to the candidates appearing in the Civil Services and various other competitive examinations ?

A. At present, it focusses only on General Studies aspects. Recent trends and practices in various Optionals should be published to make candidates more aware. Some more model question papers should also be given.

Success stories spur on rural IAS aspirants to babudom

Civil services examination is fast emerging as a cause of migration of rural students to the city. With the last year seeing an increase of 20 per cent in the number of students from a rural background, it seems more and more people are succumbing to the charm of bureaucracy.

Experts attribute the surge to contributing factors such as increased awareness, the role of media, and motivating parents. Also, the elitist aura of the civil services has eroded which has acted as a big morale booster for rural students.

“The myth that only toppers can become IAS officers has been busted. Past results show a steady rise in academically average students cracking the examination,” said Shilpi Gupta, a teacher at a local coaching centre.

“If earlier only one or two students chose to pursue civil services, coaching centres now have 15 to 20 such students in each batch,” said Subhash, administrator of a coaching institute.

Another reason for rural students opting for the civil services is increased exposure from the media. “Every year, reams of pages and airtime are devoted to the winning candidates of the examination. This has acted as a driving force for students to aspire for the prestigious posts,” said Uday Saharan, a sociologist.

As these students come from the interiors of Punjab, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh, most have parents who are either illiterate or with elementary education. Interestingly, this factor, instead of acting as a deterrent, has been a motivating factor for the aspirants.

“Students come to us with the zeal to excel. They say they want to make their parents proud by clearing the test. The misconception that only children of educated parents can be part of civil services has been laid to rest. In fact, in most cases it is the parents who encourage their children to join the field,” said Praveen Bansal, another sociologist.

The case of Anil Kumar, son of a vegetable vendor, who cleared the examination four years ago is one such success story. Even Virender Kumar, who has secured the fourth rank in this year’s examination, also hails from a village in Punjab. “Having studied in a small school in my village, it was not a cakewalk for me to reach this pedestal. However, I never let my background, or lack of it, dampen my spirits. With consistent hard work and a focused mind, I have achieved what I always aspired to,” said Virender.

Apart from providing coaching for academic subjects, these centres also give lessons in personality development and grooming to enable students to overcome their inhibitions. “Students who have never stepped out of their small-town cocoons are generally shy and reserved. Polishing their soft skills is one of the main areas that need to be worked upon. Regular groups discussions and one-to-one sessions help a lot in this regard,” said Sachin Goyal, director of a coaching centre in Sector 24.

Asst.Sub Inspector to IAS: Journey of a farmer’s son

Chandigarh For this UT cop, his memories of the Manimajra police station will always remain close to his heart. It was here, after all, that Kuldeep Chahal (27) burnt the midnight oil and covered the distance between an ASI (assistant sub-inspector) and an IAS. He has scored 82nd rank in the UPSC exams, the results of which were declared on Monday.

Coming from Ujhna village in Jind district of Haryana, Kuldeep’s father is an illiterate farmer. On receiving the news of his son’s success, his first reaction was: “Is IAS bigger than ASI?”

A student of the Government School, Ujhna, Kuldeep did a Master’s in history from Kurukshetra University and came to Chandigarh. He cleared the police recruitment exam and joined the UT police as an ASI three years ago, before starting preparations for the IAS.

“It is a dream come true for me. I am happy that my hard work has paid off. I was quite hopeful of getting a good rank,” said an elated Kuldeep. During his tenure as an ASI, Kuldeep has been part of teams that cracked several robbery cases.

He said: “Tables have turned and an ASI from a small village has become an IAS. It was the endless hard work and determination that helped me achieve my aim. And it is my elder brother, Suresh Chahal, a lecturer with the Government College, Panchkula, whom I owe my success. I can never forget the reaction of my father after he came to know of my success.”

Kuldeep added that his father had no idea what was education all about and did not know what his children were doing. “All he used to ask us was if we were performing well in our respective fields. Just an answer in the affirmative would bring a smile on his face,” he said.

“I came to Chandigarh in 2004 and had joined a coaching centre. But I did a lot of self study at the Panjab University library. I used to initially study for around four hours. Though it was a little tough to manage my time after joining the police, I used to squeeze out every single minute at the Manimajra police station to be with my books,” said Kuldeep.

This was his third attempt. Kuldeep had failed to clear the final interview in the previous two chances.

His brother Suresh said: “It is nothing short of a Diwali for us. My younger brother has cracked the toughest exam in the country, after all.”

I want to improve bureaucracy- Iva Sahay IAS Woman Topper 2009

This year's woman topper of the prestigious civil services examination has a simple aim. she wants to help people who run with files from one office to another.

“I must be able to improve bureaucracy so that I can help people who are running from one office to another with files,“ said Iva Sahay, who ranked third in the All India civil services examination and has the highest ranking among women.
The results of the exam were announced Thursday.

Sahay did her Master's in Geography from Jawaharlal Nehru University here.

She is now pursuing a doctorate from Allahabad University, where her father is a professor of anthropology.
She completed her school education from Ranchi and Allahabad.

“People are beaten in the mesh of politics and bureaucracy. I can't do anything about politics, but I hope I can do something about bureaucracy,“ Sahay told IANS on the phone from Allahabad.

Sahay, who selected geography and anthropology as her subjects for the exam, said hard work above intelligence, was required to crack the UPSC., “You cannot focus on one thing as it is the toughest exam in the country. Hard work matters more than anything else.
Intelligence goes in making your strategy, but it is more about the labour.“

“It was a really tough exam.
I realised it when I saw the results. I had aimed for the first rank and I wanted to be second to none. But when I saw the result, I realised there are people who work harder,“ she added.

Asked why few women compete for the civil services, Sahay said: “Very few women take up the exam. Even when I was taking the exam, I saw very few women. But when they take the exam, they take it with full preparedness. So they are there among the toppers.“

Talking about her future plans, she said: “I must keep my past and remember why I became an IAS. I must not get lost in the lucrativeness of the job.“

Govind Jaiswal - The rickshawallah's son who cracked the IAS

The Real Hero

The 2006 competitive examinations for India's civil services is notable for the number of young people from non privileged backgrounds who feature in the merit list. For the first time, none from India's elite metros feature in the top ten.

We will bring you some amazing success stories in this special series. Today, meet a rickshaw vendor's son from Varanasi who is one of the IAS toppers this year.

Tears ran down Govind Jaiswal's face and refused to stop. Staring him in the face was the only thing he had ever wanted, and now that he had achieved it, he couldn't even reach out for the keys on his cellphone.

He waited till the tears dried up, till the news sunk in and made that one phone call on which depended the hopes of his entire family.

Govind, 24, the son of an uneducated rickshaw vendor in Varanasi, had grown up with cruel taunts like 'However much you study, you will still be a rickshawpuller.' He had studied with cotton stuffed in his ears to drown the noise of printing machines and generators below his window in a poor neighbourhood where small workshops existed cheek by jowl with tiny residential quarters.

He had given Math tuitions to supplement the paltry sum his father could afford to send him each month. His ailing father had sold a small plot of land to give Govind about Rs 40,000 so that he could move to Delhi which would provide him a better place to study.

Throughout his life, he had lived with only one dream -- to become an officer of the Indian Administrative Service. For him that was the only way. And when he broke the news to his family, that he was ranked 48 among 474 successful candidates in his first attempt at the exam -- it was the turn of his three sisters and father to weep with unbridled joy.

'Besides the Civil Services, I had no option'

Icould not afford to have any other career goal. My life would have been absolutely futile had I not made it into the civil services," says Govind, just back from his medicals in New Delhi, mandatory for the IAS.

"You must understand that my circumstances were such that besides the Civil Services, I had no option. I didn't have much of a chance with lower government jobs because they are mostly fixed, neither could I start a business because I had no money. The only thing I could do was work hard at my studies."

It was almost impossible for him to study in the one room he shared with his family. To add to his woes was the power cut that extended between 10 and 14 hours every day. The moment the lights went out, he had to shut the window to block out the deafening noise of generators in the many workshops around his home.

So in search for a quiet place to study, he briefly shared a friend's room at the Banaras Hindu University. Since that did not help him much, he did what many civil services aspirants in northern India do -- he moved to New Delhi.

His father sold his last plot of land for his son's dream

F or his son to make a fresh start in a city Govind had never visited before, Narayan Jaiswal, Govind's father, sold the only remaining plot of land he had saved after getting his three daughters married.

Working for ten years at the government ration shop, Narayan earned a living by weighing goods at the store. One day when the shop shut down, he bought one rickshaw and hired it out. He added three more and at one time was prosperous enough to own about 36 rickshaws.

That was a period of financial security and Narayan was prudent enough to buy three small plots of land. With three daughters to marry off, he knew he would need it in times to come. But bad times soon befell the family. His wife passed away when Govind was in school. For 10 years there was acute hardship. The rickshaws dwindled.

On his meager earnings, the uneducated rickshaw vendor with a hearing disability continued the education of his children. The girls were married after their graduation -- Narayan sold two pieces of land for the weddings, the last plot was sold to achieve his Govinda's dream.

Narayan gave his son Rs 40,000 to prepare for his Civil Services exam in New Delhi and pursue his childhood dream of becoming an IAS officer. For the next three years, he sent his son between Rs 2,500 and Rs 3,000 every month, sometimes foregoing the expense of treating the septic wound in his foot that continues to nag him till today.

Courier boys found his house with difficulty; now the fruitwallah will tell you where the 'IAS' house is'

Outside his narrow lane, opposite the Varanasi City railway station, where Narayan Jaiswal parks his rickshaws and spends most of his waking hours, he still walks barefooted with a bandage, one end hanging loose and scraping the dirty road.

"Beyond this year, my father could not have afforded to send Govind any more money. It was getting very tough for him. Govind was earning Rs 1,500 from tuitions, I don't know what he would have done if he didn't make it to the IAS this year. My father could not sleep for 10 days before the results came," says Govind's eldest sister Nirmala, whose son is almost the same age as her brother.

Now that he will earn Rs 8,000 as his starting salary during his two-year training period in Mussoorie, Govind says his first priority is getting good treatment for his father's wound.

"I want to look after him, I don't know if he will leave Varanasi but I will definitely move him out of this rented room that we have lived for 35 years."

If his son's new job dramatically changes things for the better, Narayan Jaiswal is quite unaffected by it. He is surprised by the scores of journalists and well wishers flocking to his house.

Until now, courier delivery boys found his house with great difficulty but now even the fruit cart-wallah, one-and-a-half kilometres away, will tell you where the 'IAS' house is.

"I like my work. I haven't decided about the future -- what could be a better place than Kashi? As long as my son looks after me, what else can one want?" he says, visibly uncomfortable with the media spotlight.

'My character will be put to the test, then I want to see what a real man I am'

Having lived his life in Varanasi, the holy city on the banks of the Ganga, Govind has given his home state Uttar Pradesh as his preferred region of posting. If he doesn't get UP, he is open to being sent to any state in India.

"Varanasi needs a tight administration. As for me, I want to be a good officer. We are the agents of change and I as an administrator would like to inform common people about their right to know, their right to information. The benefit should finally go to the people."

His hero is President A P J Abdul Kalam. Govind is reading the Hindi translation of the President's best-selling book On Wings of Fire and takes out a nicely thumbed copy from a plastic bag.

"After Gandhiji, President Kalam has given us a dream and the power to dream. His dream is of a developed India and he is a symbol of many common people's dreams."

In a time when the Indian bureaucracy has its drawbacks like a lack of accountability, corruption and perpetuating a system that was handed down by the British to rule a subordinate population Govind's thoughts are fired by the idealism of youth. He insists his idealism will not be watered down in future years, that he will not allow himself to be influenced.

"I am a product of my circumstances that has been wrought with hardships. When I go out as an officer my character will be put to the test, and then I want to see what a real man I am."

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Success Story

Srinagar doctor first Kashmiri to top IAS

A doctor from Srinagar,Shah Faisal,topped the Civil Services Examination 2009 as Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) on Thursday declared its final result selecting 131 IAS,30 IFS and 150 IPS officers.Faisal made to the list in his first attempt.A total of 875 candidates 680 men and 195 women have been selected for the elite jobs,which also include Group A and Group B services,besides IAS,IFS and IPS. The second ranker, Prakash Rajpurohit,is an engineer;the third topper,Iva Sahay,has done her masters in geography from JNU.Sahay,topper among the women candidates,also made it in her first attempt.Besides IAS,IFS and IPS,there are 582 posts belonging to Central Services Group A Indian Revenue Service,Indian Railway Service and others while the remaining 96 seats are meant for Group B services. The number of candidates selected for IPS is more this year as the government,in view of increasing demand for senior police officers to meet numerous security challenges,including naxalism and terrorism,had last year decided to increase the total intake from 130 to 150.The intake of IPS officers will
continue to be high in coming years,considering the huge vacancies of senior cops in different states. Six of the top 25 candidates made it to the merit list in their first attempt and four in their second attempt.

UPSC Civil Services : Rank - 1 (Name: Dr.Shah Faesal, 26 years, Kashmir)

New Delhi/Srinagar: He comes from a remote village in Kupwara district of strifetorn Kashmir and studied in a village school.Eight years ago,his father was gunned down by militants. But Dr Shah Faisal,a 26-year old MBBS,has fought the odds and won. On Thursday,Faisal became
the first Kashmiri ever to top the civil services exam. I dont have words to express how I feel,I am not able to speak.I just wish I was with my family. I am just waiting to hug my mother, Faisal,who came to the capital before the results to get away from the stress of waiting,told TOI. Even through the elation,Faisal gets emotional at the mention of Kashmir.Describing himself as a victim of conflict,he says,I have watched the bloodshed in Kashmir very closely.I was devastated when my father Ghulam Rasool Shah was gunned down.It is him that I miss the most today.He used to dote on me and taught me English and maths when I studied in school, he says. In Srinagar,his mother Mubeena Begum,thrilled beyond words,says,Faisal has made every Kashmiri proud with his hard work and dedication.Her husband,she says,was killed because he refused shelter to militants.Ironically,it was the tragedy that opened a window to the wider world for the family.After the killing,I shifted from village Sheikh Nar in Lolab Sogam area of Kupwara to Srinagar with my children two sons and a daughter.My elder son Shah Faisal had done his matric from Sogam high school while my two other children were in middle school
there.I was a broken woman but never gave up and fought against all odds to bring up my children, says Mubeena,a teacher,like her husband.

UPSC Civil Services :Rank - 2 (Name: Prakash Raj Purohit, 24 years, DelhiElectrica Engineering IIT-Delhi)

He survived ragging at IIT to claim the second spotTIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi: Both Shah Faizal,who topped this years UPSC exam,and 24-year-old Prakash Rajpurohit,who came second,have quite a bit in common. Neither of them took coaching classes to crack what is thought to be the toughest exam in the country,and they did so after having taken up other professions.While Faizal is a doctor from Kashmir,Prakash is an electrical
engineer from IIT-Delhi.The only difference between them on Thursday was their level of excitement the latter did candidly admit that he was disappointed at coming second. Originally from Rajashthans Barmer district,Prakash did his schooling from DAV School in Delhi before joining IIT.His stay there however was something he does not like to remember. I joined IIT in 2003 to study electrical engineering but I was horrified right from day one.My seniors ragged me so severely that I had no option but to complain to the authorities.They were expelled for six months.Some of the things I was asked to do by my seniors cant be mentioned.I was psychologically affected but did not want to give up so easily.I disregarded all thoughts of leaving IIT and carried on.The credit for making me so strong goes to my parents, says Prakash who is an only child.His parents live in Ghaziabad,while he lives with his friends in Vasant Kunj.Prakash was working with a start-up IT firm in Noida before he began to explore the idea of becoming an IAS officer. Initially,I decided to become an engineer and joined IIT because I was very good at math,it was my favourite subject.I left my job in 2008 to prepare for the UPSC exam since I felt
the civil services were very diverse and more challenging.I reached the interview stage in my first attempt in 2008 but could not get any further.But I never gave up,that failure propelling me to forge ahead even stronger and achieve my goal.I never took coaching classes but studied on my own, he says. Success for him is not completely new.He came fourth in the All India IIT exam in 2003. I will be joining the services by August end, hopefully the Rajasthan cadre but before that I want to go back to Ghaziabad and be with my parents, he says,surrounded by his friends.

UPSC Civil Services : Rank - 3 (Name: Iva Sahay, UP , PG - Geography, JNU)

The Sangam citys Iva Sahay has done Allahabad proud by securing third position in the 2009 UPSC Civil Services exams,the results of which were declared on Thursday. Iva Sahay,meanwhile,is the only woman in the top three, and has topped among the women candidates. She attributes her success to her father,Vijoy S Sahay,who heads Allahabad Universitys anthropology departments,and her allout pursuance of the goal. I fancied IAS at an early age of four or five.It turned into an obsession by the time I reached high school, said Iva. My class teacher,Mrs Banerjee,apart from my family believed in my dream of becoming an IAS. Born at Darbhanga in Bihar,Iva has opted for the IAS,despite her familys insistence on
taking up the Indian Foreign Service. She says she wants to reform the bureaucracy and help people caught in a web of files,running haplessly running from one office to another. I will try to improve the bureaucracys functioning.People without any connections are never welcomed into our offices.That attitude should change, she said,speaking over the phone from Allahabad,her hometown. A postgraduate in geography from Jawaharlal Nehru University, Sahay topped the university exams in all four semesters.At the moment, she is studying for a doctorate from Allahabad University.

Kerala: 4th rank for Kerala girl in civil services examination (TV Anupama)

T’PURAM: T V Anupama of Malappuram came fourth rank in the Cvil Services Examination. Three other Keralites also came under the first 100 ranks. And 13 Malayali rank holders are there up to 727 ranks. P I Sreevidya of Kottarakara got 14th rank while Devi Gopinath of Pappanamcode (TVPM) got 81st rank. Eldose Mathew Punnus of Chengannur got 96th rank. 126th rank went to S Lakshmanan of Manacaud,Thiruvananthapuram. Divya V. Gopinath of Medical College and G Vishakh of Thodupuzha won 131st and146th ranks respectively. N M Veena of Vanchiyoor got 207th rank and K Nishanth of Thalassery got rank 261. Rahul of Thrippoonithura, Eranakulam won rank 303 while Jyothis Mohan of Kottayam got rank 358.

Patel tops Civil Services in Gujarat (Anand Patel, 24 years , All India 32)

Ahmedabad: Anand Patel, 24,comes from a typical family of Leuva Patel landowners of north
Gujarat.Thursday changed the course of his life for good,when he topped the civil services exam in the state at rank 32,and is sure to make it to the IAS in his home state cadre. This year 14 Gujaratis have cleared the UPSC exams,which is the highest so far from the state. A vidya sahayak teacher employed in the government school at Panthal village in Khedbrahma taluka of Sabarkantha since 2004,Patel earns only Rs 2,500 a month.Im quitting my job tomorrow! says the excited Patel who cleared the UPSC in the first attempt. Sardar Patel is my role model and I want to serve the country and free it from corruption, says Patel,who trained for the UPSC at the Sardar Patel Institute of Public Administration (SPIPA) here.This native of Hansalpur village,five km from Himmatnagar,scored 91% in class X and 80% in class XII board exams.He then did the primary teachers training course and simultaneously a BA with history major from the Babasaheb Ambedkar Open University.Although they own 10 bighas of land,the Patels are mainly a family of teachers,his parents were teachers and so is his wife,Nirmala,who,like him,is a vidya sahayak in a Chhota Udepur school. His brother and sister-in-law are doctors. Patel cleared the UPSC with history and Gujarati subjects.Says Patel,Gujaratis have lots of talent but lack of knowledge of English inhibits them. Asked how he felt about jumping to a salary scale he could never have dreamed of as a vidya sahayak,he says,money is not important,Gujaratis
can earn money anyhow!

West Bengal: Kolkata Girls Crack Civil Service Exams, Gear Up For Life As Public Servants

Kolkata: As a youngster, Joyoshi Dasgupta dreamt of working in war-ravaged Afghanistan.Pictures of destruction and civil war in Taliban land didnt rattle her. It would be a challenge,she felt,to work in a hostile environment like that and an immense achievement if she could do something for the battle-torn Afghan people. The Kolkata girl could be very close to realising that dream. Joyoshi,a teacher at Manindra Chandra College, has ranked 42nd in the civil service exams, the results of which were announced on Thursday.If I get into foreign service, I wont mind working anywhere in the world, she said. Though delighted,the levelheaded youngster looked composed and firmly focused on her priorities.An administrator,she said,has to be realistic and not just a dreamer.I am,of course,very happy and see this as an opportunity to do something for the country.An administrators job gives you the chance to work directly with the people and for them.Its an excellent opportunity to try and make a difference to the lives
of so many people.It wont be easy but I am not going to shirk or run away from trouble, said Joyoshi. A graduate in physics from Presidency College,she went on to do her MSc from Rajabazar Science College.She stood first in the MSc exam. While she cleared NET and qualified as a college teacher,Joyoshi had been bent upon a career in the civil services since her school days.I never seriously considered any other option,which is why I am pretty satisfied.It feels nice to have reached my first goal in life.As an administrator,there will be several more in the years to come, she said. Daughter of Jaya Dasgupta, an IAS officer who is now the planning and development secretary in Bengal,she didnt have to look far for inspiration.From an early age,she has been familiar with the job of an IAS and its pitfalls.I saw my mother do the job from close quarters. So,I knew it wont be a cakewalk.But the brighter side was there as well.For me,that outweighed the negatives by a long margin. So,I never hesitated, said Joyoshi. Joyoshi is not the lone qualifier from Kolkata this year.Jayita Bose,a former student of Jadavpur University,figured on the list as well.She ranked 171.Its an honour to join the civil services.It has been my dream and I am eagerly looking forward to the job, said Jayita. So is Joyoshi.Impartiality,patience and correct assessment of situations are needed to be a successful administrator in these troubled times,she said.I do appreciate that an IAS officers job has probably got much tougher than the times when my mother joined the service.But there is no substitute for honesty and commitment.It helps find solutions to any problem,no matter how difficult or impossible it may seem.If you ask me,I would prefer a posting in the Maoist belt, said a confident Joyoshi. I would try to stop her.But I know she wouldnt listen to me, said
Joyoshis mother. It has not been an easy journey,though.Joyoshi toiled hard for five years to qualify and this was her third attempt.You need to prepare intelligently.Just studying hard wont get you anywhere.said Joyoshi,who writes stories in her spare time and even plays the piano. For IAS aspirants,she had a word of advice. If you want prosperity,go for the private sector.Choose IAS only if you are bent on public service, she said.Her first priority as a civil servant would be to try and uproot corruption.Not just from the services,but from all segments of our social life.It may sound idealistic but its possible if we all join hands, she signed off.

Andhra Pradesh: Bharat Gupta, MBBS

Hyderabad: A doctor,a business analyst and a mechanical engineer were among the state toppers of the prestigious UPSC examination,the results of which were declared on Thursday.Around 40 students cleared the examination from the state this year. The state topper was Bharath Gupta,an MBBS graduate from Kurnool medical college, who secured 17th rank in this years civil service examination. Bharath,who hails from Anantapur district,completed his medicine course in February this year and cleared the UPSC examination in his first attempt. Another rank holder from the state,Karthikeya Goel,son of a retired IAS
officer,A K Goel,too left a vocation to appear for the exam.Karthikeya left his job as a business analyst with Wipro to sit for the UPSC exam where he secured 40th rank.He had cleared UPSC last year too but chose to sit for it again as he made it only into custom services in his last attempt.He is currently undergoing customs training in Delhi. Ranking 59th in the UPSC list was Bharathi Hollikeri who hails from Karnataka but is settled in Hyderabad.She is currently undergoing IPS training in the National Police Academy. Among others who qualified the exam were Laya Madduri,a mechanical engineer from Bits Pilani.Hailing from Guntur,she is currently undergoing training as deputy collector in the state government.She was earlier working in the software industry.I wanted to do something more peoplecentric and thus appeared for UPSC, Madduri said. So how did the topper prepare for the UPSC exam.I appeared for my preliminary examination while doing my MBBS course.Before my UPSC finals I took a
two months break and stayed in Hyderabad for preparation.After my mains,I completed my course, said Gupta,whose father works with the South Central Railway. This years result has been qualitatively different.There have been many candidates who left their lucrative jobs in the private sector to appear for the examination, said V Gopalakrishna of Brain Tree,that offers coaching to IAS aspirants.However,according to Raji Reddy,a civil service expert from R C Reddy coaching centre,the number of candidates who made it to IAS from the state has gone down from 25 last year to 17 this year.

Tamil Nadu: R Lalitha (Engineer)

State IAS toppers heart is in rural service

Chennai: My mission is to make a difference to the villages in the country.And congratulate me when I truly achieve my goal, says 26-year-old R Lalitha,who has been ranked 12th in the prestigious Civil Services exam this year.It is a moment of exhilarating triumph,but Lalitha chooses to be impressively modest. Daughter of a retired engineer of the Border Roads Organisation of the Army,Lalitha says she wants to root out irregularities and pilferage in the implementation of welfare schemes for the poor. As a fresh engineering graduate a few years ago,Lalitha saw how a steadfast bureaucrat had transformed her tiny Tiruvalarchipatti village in Tiruchi. The then district collector Ashish Vachani is my inspiration.He ensured the leather tanneries set up an effluent treatment system.He improved infrastructure,sanitation and roped in youth for village programmes.He showed how an IAS officer could make a difference. And
that was the spark for this civil engineering graduate to quit her job with the Airports Authority of India and prepare for the civil services.She had missed the civil services by a whisker in 2007 as she secured the 543rd rank and was put on waitlist.However,she refused to despair and went into a super-preparation mode.And in her fourth attempt,she notched up the 12th rank. When I saw my ranking on the internet today,I just couldnt believe my eyes, she says. Tamil Nadu continued to perform impressively in the civil services exams,the results of which were published on Thursday,with 127 of its candidates making it to the elite national list of 875,who cleared the final exam and the interviews. In 2008-09,620 candidates from the state appeared in the main examination and 190 candidates,who wrote the examination in Chennai,were selected for the interview. Around 43 candidates from the Manitha Naeyam IAS training
centre had been selected,said Saidai Sa Duraisamy,who runs the institute that offers free
coaching.Ninety-two students had selected Tamil language and literature as a subject for the main examination. According to Shankar of Shankar IAS Academy,the success of candidates last year had encouraged more candidates to enrol this year.The interest to study for civil services has increased.But the number of people attempting the examinations in Tamil medium has not improved, he said. Thirtyfive students who trained at the Ganesh IAS Academy have also been selected while 22 others,many of them from poor economic background,made it after being trained at the PL Raj Memorial Study Centre. In 2004,16,323 aspirants had appeared for the civil services preliminary exam but the number fell sharply to 9,514 in 2007,declining gradually every year.In fact,the number of aspirants from the state has dropped by a significant 40% in the last five years.

Maharashtra: Two rankers in top 25 slots

Mumbai: May 23 was probably more important for 25-year-old Anay Dwivedi than Tuesday the 6th when the UPSC results were declared. For, towards the end of this month, the Nepean Sea Road resident was ready to take the civil service exam yet again — this would be his fourth shot at the gruelling test. But as John Lennon would have said, life is what happens while we are busy making other plans. “I filled the form for the fourth attempt and was all set to take the prelims. As twice before, I qualified in the written exam but was not selected after the interview. After my engineering, I took my Common Admission Test too and was shortlisted for the interview round. But ever since I was a child, I knew I wanted to be a civil servant like my dad. Everything else was a back-up plan,” said this elated all-India rank five, which also makes him the Maharashtra topper. Friends nudged him to take up a job “and stop wasting time” after
his engineering at Sardar Patel Engineering College. “But this is what I wanted; so I studied, studied and studied all day long.” To get additional help in excelling in his subjects — psychology and public administration — Anay went to Delhi and signed himself under two private tutors. This time during his interview, Anay tackled questions with deft — from views on China and Afghanistan to farmers’ suicide and Bt cotton. According to statistics from the State Institute for Administrative Careers, Maharashtra saw 75 students selected from 875 candidates who took the Union Public Service Commission exam. “We are again witnessing more selections from our state,” said SIAC director S G Gupta. Purna Dharmadhikari,head, Chanakya Mandal, an institute that coaches students for the UPSC, said that in 1986, he was the only one from Maharashtra to clear the exam. “But now, there are many more candidates taking the UPSC. Also, the study material is now available in marathi, allowing a larger section of candidates to appear for the test.” Maharashtra has two rankers in the top-25 slot. At all-India rank 23, stands Rajiv
Raushan (30); he took history and Sanskrit as his optional subjects. Nashik’s Nitin Yeola, at rank 106 is third in the state. Following him is Prerna Deshbhratar, rank 113, who also always wanted to be an IAS officer. She had taken the UPSC earlier, but had been selected for IRS. Despite being posted in Faridabad,Prerna did not give up her desire to pursue an IAS, so she sat for it again “This is a highly competitive exam and you can’t predict your performance, but it feels real good to have finally made it,” said the 27-year-old daughter of an IPS officer. IPS was Prerna’s second option, but the work profile for administrative services interests her the most. Thirty-two-year-old Chhaya Burudekar, an OBC candidate,from Jogeshwari, stood 265th in the all-India list, but she is not happy with her performance, and will be taking the UPSC exam again this year. “I’ll probably end up getting into the Indian Police Service, but I want to take up IAS. So I’ll be taking the exam again,” she said. Burudekar who has a seven-year-old daughter now has been taking the UPSC exam since the last three years and next time, will be her last
attempt. Her parents, who have not had the opportunity to even complete their schooling, said they were extremely proud of their daughter.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

RBI Governor Subbarao is an IITian and IAS topper

Finance Secretary Duvvuri Subbarao, 59, an Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer of the Andhra Pradesh cadre who topped the 1972 batch, will be the new governor of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). He will take over from incumbent Yaga Venugopal Reddy, whose five-year tenure ends September 5.

Announcing this here on Monday, Finance Minister P Chidambaram said Subbarao had been appointed for three years, though the norms allow a tenure of up to five years. By implication, Subbarao term could be extended by two years.

The appointment comes after considerable speculation over who would take over from Reddy, a retired IAS officer who became governor on September 6, 2003.

A key contender for the job was RBI Deputy Governor Rakesh Mohan, who met the finance minister last week. There was also some talk of Reddy being granted an extension.

Today, Chidambaram praised Reddy for his stint at the central bank. “His stewardship of the RBI saw some major changes and improvements. He led the RBI with distinction through a period of change and rapid growth. We warmly thank him for his services,” the finance minister said.

Subbarao has wide experience in public finance and has held important posts in this area. He had joined the finance ministry in May 2007, before which he worked as secretary of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council.

An IIT Kanpur alumnus, Subbarao was among the first of its graduates to join the civil services. He took a Master’s degree in economics from Ohio State University (1978), was a Humphrey Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1982-83) and later picked up a doctorate in Economics from Andhra University. Among other stints, he was also the lead economist at the World Bank from 1999 to 2004.

Widely seen as a reformer, he is credited with having authored a turnaround of Andhra Pradesh’s finances in the late nineties when the state slipped into an unprecedented fiscal crisis.

He takes charge at Mint Road at a time when inflation is ruling at an uncomfortable high of 12.4 per cent and monetary policy is focused on curbing the price rise and tackling inflationary expectations.

Subbarao is currently overseas on official business and was scheduled to return to New Delhi late tonight.

Subbarao’s appointment as RBI governor means a new secretary, department of economic affairs, will have to be appointed soon because he also held that post. Since he was the senior-most among his peers, he was appointed finance secretary.

Sources said Ashok Chawla, currently civil aviation secretary, may be appointed secretary, economic affairs. Chawla was additional secretary, economic affairs from April 2005 to January 2007. Chawla is an IAS officer of the 1973 batch from the Gujarat cadre.

Meanwhile, Sindhushree Khullar, currently additional secretary in the department of economic affairs, has been empanelled to pick up the secretary rank. She is an IAS officer of the 1975 batch of the AGMU cadre.

The finance ministry has five secretaries. Revenue secretary P V Bhide and financial services secretary Arun Ramanathan are from the 1973 batch. Disinvestment secretary Vivek Mehrotra and secretary expenditure Sushma Nath both belong to the 1974 batch. Even after Chawla joins, Ramanathan would be the senior-most among the secretaries at North Block. He is slated to retire in April 2009. Sources suggest Chawla may eventually be appointed the new finance secretary once Ramanathan retires.

Technocrat Mohan joined the RBI as deputy governor in July 2005 for a five-year term. Before joining the central bank, Mohan, 60, worked as secretary, department of economic affairs, finance ministry, for less than a year. In this position, he was alternate governor of the World Bank and Asian Development Bank. Immediately before this, he was with RBI as deputy governor between September 2002 and October 2004.

It is not yet clear whether Mohan will continue in his present charge. He has two years to go as deputy governor and there is a suggestion that he may be headed to the World Bank at Washington. It is likely that Arvind Virmani, currently the chief economic adviser in the finance ministry, may be appointed as deputy governor in Mohan’s place. (Source: Business Standard)