I am giving you a 'To Do List':-
1) Sit in your comfortable environment tomorrow and answer both the question papers.
Total time will be 6 Hrs. Morning -3 Hrs
Evening - 3 Hrs
After that you will analyse and solve these papers for next 7 Days.
1) Sit in your comfortable environment tomorrow and answer both the question papers.
Total time will be 6 Hrs. Morning -3 Hrs
Evening - 3 Hrs
After that you will analyse and solve these papers for next 7 Days.
Read this for UPSC-CSE Prelims Question Paper analysis this year(2026):-
This wasn’t just a tough paper. It was long, exhausting, and, at times, plain strange. You weren’t just solving questions; you were constantly racing the clock, second-guessing yourself, and trying to hold on to whatever clarity you had.
In previous years, even the tougher ones like 2023, you could still find some footing. There was always a decent number of questions, maybe 35-40, where if your basics were strong, you could answer with confidence. Even when you guessed, it felt informed. Elimination made sense.
This year, that comfort was missing.
Honestly, I could count maybe 15-20 questions where I felt reasonably sure, and even there, “sure” didn’t feel like 100%. The rest? It felt like you were constantly negotiating with uncertainty. You knew things, but not enough to be fully confident. And that’s a frustrating place to be after years of preparation.
What hit harder was how unpredictable the paper felt.
Subjects like Polity, Economy, Geography, Environment, these are where serious aspirants usually build their strength. No matter how difficult the paper gets, these areas have always rewarded clarity and consistency.
But this time, it felt different. It wasn’t just “out of comfort zone"; it was more like being "out of control". Questions didn’t always follow a pattern you could prepare for. It felt random in a way that makes you pause and wonder what exactly you should have done differently.
History was another headache. UPSC has been moving away from standard sources for a while, but this year it really showed. There were quite a few questions where you just couldn’t trace back your preparation to a clear answer. And guessing in history? That’s usually a dangerous game, and it felt like many fell into that trap.
Current affairs gave some relief, but not enough. Yes, if you’ve followed newspapers regularly, you could attempt a fair number. But many questions still demanded a level of detail that honestly feels unrealistic to retain.
Then there was the length of the paper. Long statements and layered options slowed you down. And unlike other years, there wasn’t that small stretch of “easier questions” where you could regain confidence or pick up speed. It felt like a constant grind from start to finish.
Even elimination tricks, which many of us rely on when unsure, didn’t really help much this time. In fact, at places, they seemed to backfire. And that’s probably what made the paper feel even more unpredictable.
All of this brings you to an uncomfortable thought.
Exams like these are supposed to reward hard work, and they do, largely. But papers like this also make you feel that luck has a bigger role than you’d like to admit. When two options look equally convincing, when you’re down to instinct more than knowledge, outcomes can swing either way.
And yet, strangely, there is some comfort in that.
Because whatever this paper was – tough, weird, unpredictable – it was the same for everyone. No one walked out feeling completely confident. In the end, it’s still a competitive exam. What matters is not how perfect you were, but how you performed relative to others.
Looking at the paper, it feels quite likely that the cutoff will go down. Which also means one thing, CSAT suddenly becomes much more important. For many, that second paper could make all the difference.
Sitting with it now, a few hours later, I realise something.
Maybe UPSC isn’t just testing what you know anymore. It’s testing how you respond when things don’t go as expected. How you handle doubt, how you make decisions under pressure, how you stay composed when nothing feels certain.
For now, like most aspirants, I wait. Checking answers, doing rough calculations, going back and forth between hope and doubt.
Because in this exam, you don’t just prepare for what you know, you prepare for the uncertainty that comes with it.
This wasn’t just a tough paper. It was long, exhausting, and, at times, plain strange. You weren’t just solving questions; you were constantly racing the clock, second-guessing yourself, and trying to hold on to whatever clarity you had.
In previous years, even the tougher ones like 2023, you could still find some footing. There was always a decent number of questions, maybe 35-40, where if your basics were strong, you could answer with confidence. Even when you guessed, it felt informed. Elimination made sense.
This year, that comfort was missing.
Honestly, I could count maybe 15-20 questions where I felt reasonably sure, and even there, “sure” didn’t feel like 100%. The rest? It felt like you were constantly negotiating with uncertainty. You knew things, but not enough to be fully confident. And that’s a frustrating place to be after years of preparation.
What hit harder was how unpredictable the paper felt.
Subjects like Polity, Economy, Geography, Environment, these are where serious aspirants usually build their strength. No matter how difficult the paper gets, these areas have always rewarded clarity and consistency.
But this time, it felt different. It wasn’t just “out of comfort zone"; it was more like being "out of control". Questions didn’t always follow a pattern you could prepare for. It felt random in a way that makes you pause and wonder what exactly you should have done differently.
History was another headache. UPSC has been moving away from standard sources for a while, but this year it really showed. There were quite a few questions where you just couldn’t trace back your preparation to a clear answer. And guessing in history? That’s usually a dangerous game, and it felt like many fell into that trap.
Current affairs gave some relief, but not enough. Yes, if you’ve followed newspapers regularly, you could attempt a fair number. But many questions still demanded a level of detail that honestly feels unrealistic to retain.
Then there was the length of the paper. Long statements and layered options slowed you down. And unlike other years, there wasn’t that small stretch of “easier questions” where you could regain confidence or pick up speed. It felt like a constant grind from start to finish.
Even elimination tricks, which many of us rely on when unsure, didn’t really help much this time. In fact, at places, they seemed to backfire. And that’s probably what made the paper feel even more unpredictable.
All of this brings you to an uncomfortable thought.
Exams like these are supposed to reward hard work, and they do, largely. But papers like this also make you feel that luck has a bigger role than you’d like to admit. When two options look equally convincing, when you’re down to instinct more than knowledge, outcomes can swing either way.
And yet, strangely, there is some comfort in that.
Because whatever this paper was – tough, weird, unpredictable – it was the same for everyone. No one walked out feeling completely confident. In the end, it’s still a competitive exam. What matters is not how perfect you were, but how you performed relative to others.
Looking at the paper, it feels quite likely that the cutoff will go down. Which also means one thing, CSAT suddenly becomes much more important. For many, that second paper could make all the difference.
Sitting with it now, a few hours later, I realise something.
Maybe UPSC isn’t just testing what you know anymore. It’s testing how you respond when things don’t go as expected. How you handle doubt, how you make decisions under pressure, how you stay composed when nothing feels certain.
For now, like most aspirants, I wait. Checking answers, doing rough calculations, going back and forth between hope and doubt.
Because in this exam, you don’t just prepare for what you know, you prepare for the uncertainty that comes with it.
Self Study and consistency is the key.
We are soon starting a rigorous guidance/mentorship programme for free for the next one year up to May 22,2027. UPSC-CSE Prelims on May 23,2027.
I will soon provide you a study routine for next one year.
We are soon starting a rigorous guidance/mentorship programme for free for the next one year up to May 22,2027. UPSC-CSE Prelims on May 23,2027.
I will soon provide you a study routine for next one year.
10 Important Topics For APSC-CCE Prelims:-
1. State Election Commission
2. State finance commission
3. Lokayukta
4. PIL
5. RTI
6. District planning committee
7. 5/6th schedule
8.Executive-Vs-Legislative
9. Writ
10. Anti defection law
1. State Election Commission
2. State finance commission
3. Lokayukta
4. PIL
5. RTI
6. District planning committee
7. 5/6th schedule
8.Executive-Vs-Legislative
9. Writ
10. Anti defection law
👏1
UPSC Chairman's comment on this year UPSC-CSE Prelims:-
UPSC Chairman Dr. Ajay Kumar has addressed the controversy and confusion surrounding the Civil Services Preliminary Examination 2026 after many aspirants described the paper as unusually difficult, lengthy, and unpredictable.
The examination triggered widespread debate among candidates across social media platforms, with many questioning the nature and source of several analytical and situation-based questions.
Responding to these concerns, Dr. Ajay Kumar said the release of the provisional answer key would provide clarity to candidates. He acknowledged that this year’s examination felt particularly challenging for many aspirants and assured them that the Commission understands their concerns.
One of the biggest questions raised by candidates was regarding the source of the questions asked in the examination. Clarifying this, the UPSC Chairman stated that most answers were based on standard textbooks, government websites, official press releases, reputed newspapers, and journals — the core sources generally followed by serious UPSC aspirants during preparation.
The UPSC also issued an official statement explaining how the examination papers are prepared. Subject experts from different parts of the country design the question papers while ensuring fairness and maintaining a level playing field for candidates from diverse educational and social backgrounds.
The Commission further clarified that the questions asked in the Civil Services Preliminary Examination were framed using authentic and credible sources, including textbooks, journals, government materials, and reputed publications.
He also assured candidates that they would have enough opportunity to challenge any answer they believe may be incorrect. Candidates can raise objections against the provisional answer key through the official UPSC portal till 6 PM on May 31 by submitting supporting references from authentic sources.
.
UPSC Chairman Dr. Ajay Kumar has addressed the controversy and confusion surrounding the Civil Services Preliminary Examination 2026 after many aspirants described the paper as unusually difficult, lengthy, and unpredictable.
The examination triggered widespread debate among candidates across social media platforms, with many questioning the nature and source of several analytical and situation-based questions.
Responding to these concerns, Dr. Ajay Kumar said the release of the provisional answer key would provide clarity to candidates. He acknowledged that this year’s examination felt particularly challenging for many aspirants and assured them that the Commission understands their concerns.
One of the biggest questions raised by candidates was regarding the source of the questions asked in the examination. Clarifying this, the UPSC Chairman stated that most answers were based on standard textbooks, government websites, official press releases, reputed newspapers, and journals — the core sources generally followed by serious UPSC aspirants during preparation.
The UPSC also issued an official statement explaining how the examination papers are prepared. Subject experts from different parts of the country design the question papers while ensuring fairness and maintaining a level playing field for candidates from diverse educational and social backgrounds.
The Commission further clarified that the questions asked in the Civil Services Preliminary Examination were framed using authentic and credible sources, including textbooks, journals, government materials, and reputed publications.
He also assured candidates that they would have enough opportunity to challenge any answer they believe may be incorrect. Candidates can raise objections against the provisional answer key through the official UPSC portal till 6 PM on May 31 by submitting supporting references from authentic sources.
.
So for UPSC-CSE:-
Some sources are:-
Textbooks, PIB Releases,PRS legislative research,Yojana and Kurukshetra Magazine,Govt websites.
Some sources are:-
Textbooks, PIB Releases,PRS legislative research,Yojana and Kurukshetra Magazine,Govt websites.
Question For Today:-
Why is maritime security vital to protect India's sea trade? Discuss maritime and coastal security challenges and the way forward.
(250 Words/15 Marks)
ভাৰতৰ সাগৰীয় বাণিজ্য সুৰক্ষাৰ বাবে সামুদ্ৰিক নিৰাপত্তা কিয় জৰুৰী? সামুদ্ৰিক আৰু তটীয় নিৰাপত্তাৰ সৈতে জড়িত প্ৰত্যাহ্বানবোৰ আৰু ভৱিষ্যত লবলগীয়া কাৰ্যপন্থা সম্পৰ্কে আলোচনা কৰক।
(২৫০ শব্দ/১৫ নম্বৰ)
Write and send to us for free evaluation. Please don't ignore. Writing best answers will land you a job in UPSC CSE and State PCS.
Why is maritime security vital to protect India's sea trade? Discuss maritime and coastal security challenges and the way forward.
(250 Words/15 Marks)
ভাৰতৰ সাগৰীয় বাণিজ্য সুৰক্ষাৰ বাবে সামুদ্ৰিক নিৰাপত্তা কিয় জৰুৰী? সামুদ্ৰিক আৰু তটীয় নিৰাপত্তাৰ সৈতে জড়িত প্ৰত্যাহ্বানবোৰ আৰু ভৱিষ্যত লবলগীয়া কাৰ্যপন্থা সম্পৰ্কে আলোচনা কৰক।
(২৫০ শব্দ/১৫ নম্বৰ)
Write and send to us for free evaluation. Please don't ignore. Writing best answers will land you a job in UPSC CSE and State PCS.
APSC Focus:-
‘মিছন চেনেহজৰী’—আমাৰ শতিকা পুৰণি ঐতিহ্য, সংস্কৃতি, পৰম্পৰা আৰু জীৱিকাৰ ইতিহাস কঢ়িয়াই থকা মুগা বয়ন শিল্পক বিশ্বমুখী কৰি তোলাৰ বিনম্র প্রয়াস।
মাননীয় কেন্দ্ৰীয় মন্ত্ৰী শ্ৰীজ্যোতিৰাদিত্য সিন্ধিয়া ডাঙৰীয়াৰ দূৰদৰ্শী নেতৃত্ব সদায়েই আমাৰ বাবে অনুপ্ৰেৰণাদায়ক হিচাপে চিহ্নিত হৈ আহিছে আৰু ‘মিছন চেনেহজৰী’ত এই বাৰ্তা স্পষ্ট ৰূপত প্ৰকাশিত হৈছে। মুগা ৰেচম উদ্যোগক বিশ্ব দৰবাৰত এক নৱ পৰিচয়েৰে চিনাকি কৰি দিয়াৰ লক্ষ্যৰে আজি আমি ৪০০ কোটিতকৈ অধিক ব্যয়সাপেক্ষ এই ঐতিহাসিক অভিযান আৰম্ভ কৰিবলৈ পাই গৌৰৱ অনুভৱ কৰিছোঁ।
এতিয়া অহা তিনিবছৰলৈ আমাৰ স্পষ্ট লক্ষ্য—
✅ মুগা ৰেচম ৰপ্তানি ২,০০০ কিল'গ্ৰামতকৈ অধিক কৰি তোলা
✅ মুগা সূতাৰ মূল্য প্ৰতি কিল'গ্রামত ৩০ৰ পৰা ৪৫ হাজাৰ টকালৈকে বৃদ্ধি কৰা
✅ ৫টা আধুনিক ৰীলিং ইউনিট আৰু এক বিশেষ মুগা সূতা কটা মিল স্থাপন
✅ ৫,০০০ হেক্টৰ চোম আৰু সোঁৱালু গছপুলি ৰোপণ
এই অভিযানে অসমৰ হাজাৰ হাজাৰ কৃষক, শিপিনী আৰু শিল্পীৰ জীৱন-জীৱিকা সুৰক্ষিত কৰিব আৰু ১,১৮০টা ফাৰ্মাৰ্ছ ইণ্টাৰেষ্ট গ্ৰুপ আৰু ৩০টা কৃষক উৎপাদক সংস্থা গঠনৰ জৰিয়তে মুগা উৎপাদক আৰু শিপিনীসকলক আৰ্থিকভাৱে অধিক শক্তিশালী কৰি তুলিবলৈ চেষ্টা কৰা হ’ব। উল্লেখ্য যে, অসমৰ যুগমীয়া মুগা শিল্পক বিশ্ববজাৰত এক বিশ্বাসযোগ্য আৰু অভিলাসী ব্রেণ্ড হিচাপে প্ৰতিষ্ঠা কৰিবলৈ শিপিনীসকলক ডিজিটেল ব্যৱস্থাৰ সৈতে সুসংঘবদ্ধ কৰা আৰু বিশ্বৰ ক্রেতাসকলৰ বাবে মান নিশ্চিত কৰাত সহায়ক হোৱাকৈ জি আই প্ৰামাণীকৰণ ব্যৱস্থাত মনোনিৱেশ কৰা হ’ব।
মাননীয় প্ৰধানমন্ত্ৰী শ্ৰীনৰেন্দ্ৰ মোদী ডাঙৰীয়াৰ দ্বৈত ইঞ্জিন চৰকাৰৰ জনমুখী দৃষ্টিভংগীৰ এক উজ্জ্বল প্ৰতিফলন ‘মিছন চেনেহজৰী’—য’ত অসমৰ ঐতিহ্য, শিল্প আৰু মুগা শিল্পৰ সৈতে জড়িত সকলোৰে সোণালী সপোনক বিশ্বজনীন গতি প্রদান কৰিবলৈ আমি একেলগে কাম কৰি যাম।
‘মিছন চেনেহজৰী’—আমাৰ শতিকা পুৰণি ঐতিহ্য, সংস্কৃতি, পৰম্পৰা আৰু জীৱিকাৰ ইতিহাস কঢ়িয়াই থকা মুগা বয়ন শিল্পক বিশ্বমুখী কৰি তোলাৰ বিনম্র প্রয়াস।
মাননীয় কেন্দ্ৰীয় মন্ত্ৰী শ্ৰীজ্যোতিৰাদিত্য সিন্ধিয়া ডাঙৰীয়াৰ দূৰদৰ্শী নেতৃত্ব সদায়েই আমাৰ বাবে অনুপ্ৰেৰণাদায়ক হিচাপে চিহ্নিত হৈ আহিছে আৰু ‘মিছন চেনেহজৰী’ত এই বাৰ্তা স্পষ্ট ৰূপত প্ৰকাশিত হৈছে। মুগা ৰেচম উদ্যোগক বিশ্ব দৰবাৰত এক নৱ পৰিচয়েৰে চিনাকি কৰি দিয়াৰ লক্ষ্যৰে আজি আমি ৪০০ কোটিতকৈ অধিক ব্যয়সাপেক্ষ এই ঐতিহাসিক অভিযান আৰম্ভ কৰিবলৈ পাই গৌৰৱ অনুভৱ কৰিছোঁ।
এতিয়া অহা তিনিবছৰলৈ আমাৰ স্পষ্ট লক্ষ্য—
✅ মুগা ৰেচম ৰপ্তানি ২,০০০ কিল'গ্ৰামতকৈ অধিক কৰি তোলা
✅ মুগা সূতাৰ মূল্য প্ৰতি কিল'গ্রামত ৩০ৰ পৰা ৪৫ হাজাৰ টকালৈকে বৃদ্ধি কৰা
✅ ৫টা আধুনিক ৰীলিং ইউনিট আৰু এক বিশেষ মুগা সূতা কটা মিল স্থাপন
✅ ৫,০০০ হেক্টৰ চোম আৰু সোঁৱালু গছপুলি ৰোপণ
এই অভিযানে অসমৰ হাজাৰ হাজাৰ কৃষক, শিপিনী আৰু শিল্পীৰ জীৱন-জীৱিকা সুৰক্ষিত কৰিব আৰু ১,১৮০টা ফাৰ্মাৰ্ছ ইণ্টাৰেষ্ট গ্ৰুপ আৰু ৩০টা কৃষক উৎপাদক সংস্থা গঠনৰ জৰিয়তে মুগা উৎপাদক আৰু শিপিনীসকলক আৰ্থিকভাৱে অধিক শক্তিশালী কৰি তুলিবলৈ চেষ্টা কৰা হ’ব। উল্লেখ্য যে, অসমৰ যুগমীয়া মুগা শিল্পক বিশ্ববজাৰত এক বিশ্বাসযোগ্য আৰু অভিলাসী ব্রেণ্ড হিচাপে প্ৰতিষ্ঠা কৰিবলৈ শিপিনীসকলক ডিজিটেল ব্যৱস্থাৰ সৈতে সুসংঘবদ্ধ কৰা আৰু বিশ্বৰ ক্রেতাসকলৰ বাবে মান নিশ্চিত কৰাত সহায়ক হোৱাকৈ জি আই প্ৰামাণীকৰণ ব্যৱস্থাত মনোনিৱেশ কৰা হ’ব।
মাননীয় প্ৰধানমন্ত্ৰী শ্ৰীনৰেন্দ্ৰ মোদী ডাঙৰীয়াৰ দ্বৈত ইঞ্জিন চৰকাৰৰ জনমুখী দৃষ্টিভংগীৰ এক উজ্জ্বল প্ৰতিফলন ‘মিছন চেনেহজৰী’—য’ত অসমৰ ঐতিহ্য, শিল্প আৰু মুগা শিল্পৰ সৈতে জড়িত সকলোৰে সোণালী সপোনক বিশ্বজনীন গতি প্রদান কৰিবলৈ আমি একেলগে কাম কৰি যাম।
APSC Focus:-
মাননীয় মুখ্যমন্ত্ৰী ড° হিমন্ত বিশ্ব শৰ্মাই উছৰ্গা কৰা ‘কৌশল কানেক্ট’ ম’বাইল এপ্লিকেশ্যনে ৰাজ্যৰ দক্ষ যুৱক-যুৱতী আৰু শ্ৰমিকসকলৰ বাবে মুকলি কৰিছে নতুন সম্ভাৱনাৰ দুৱাৰ।
৫০টাৰো অধিক সেৱা একেখন মঞ্চত সংযুক্ত কৰি এই পদক্ষেপে কৰ্মসংস্থাপন বৃদ্ধি কৰাৰ লগতে ‘বিকশিত অসম’ গঢ়াৰ যাত্ৰাকো অধিক শক্তিশালী কৰিব। কাঠমিস্ত্ৰি, ৰাজমিস্ত্ৰি, ৰংমিস্ত্ৰি, বিদ্যুৎকৰ্মীকে ধৰি ৫০টাৰো অধিক সেৱা এই বিশেষ ম'বাইল এপটোৰ জৰিয়তে অসমবাসীয়ে লাভ কৰিব পাৰিব।
Launched by HCM Dr. Himanta Biswa Sarma, the Kaushal Connect mobile app brings 50+ essential services onto a single platform while connecting skilled workers with meaningful employment opportunities.
A major step towards empowering Assam’s youth, fostering self-reliance and building a stronger skilled workforce for Vikshit Bharat.
মাননীয় মুখ্যমন্ত্ৰী ড° হিমন্ত বিশ্ব শৰ্মাই উছৰ্গা কৰা ‘কৌশল কানেক্ট’ ম’বাইল এপ্লিকেশ্যনে ৰাজ্যৰ দক্ষ যুৱক-যুৱতী আৰু শ্ৰমিকসকলৰ বাবে মুকলি কৰিছে নতুন সম্ভাৱনাৰ দুৱাৰ।
৫০টাৰো অধিক সেৱা একেখন মঞ্চত সংযুক্ত কৰি এই পদক্ষেপে কৰ্মসংস্থাপন বৃদ্ধি কৰাৰ লগতে ‘বিকশিত অসম’ গঢ়াৰ যাত্ৰাকো অধিক শক্তিশালী কৰিব। কাঠমিস্ত্ৰি, ৰাজমিস্ত্ৰি, ৰংমিস্ত্ৰি, বিদ্যুৎকৰ্মীকে ধৰি ৫০টাৰো অধিক সেৱা এই বিশেষ ম'বাইল এপটোৰ জৰিয়তে অসমবাসীয়ে লাভ কৰিব পাৰিব।
Launched by HCM Dr. Himanta Biswa Sarma, the Kaushal Connect mobile app brings 50+ essential services onto a single platform while connecting skilled workers with meaningful employment opportunities.
A major step towards empowering Assam’s youth, fostering self-reliance and building a stronger skilled workforce for Vikshit Bharat.
Question For Today:-
GS-3
What are the major challenges to internal security and peace process in the North Eastern States? Map the various peace accords and agreements initiated by the government in the past decade.
(250 Words/15 Marks)
উত্তৰ-পূৰ্বাঞ্চলৰ ৰাজ্যসমূহত আভ্যন্তৰীণ নিৰাপত্তা আৰু শান্তি প্ৰক্ৰিয়াৰ মূল প্ৰত্যাহ্বানবোৰ কি কি? বিগত দশকত চৰকাৰে আৰম্ভ কৰা বিভিন্ন শান্তি চুক্তিসমূহৰ ৰেখাংকণ কৰাঁ।
(২৫০ শব্দ/১৫ নম্বৰ)
Write and send to us today for free evaluation.
GS-3
What are the major challenges to internal security and peace process in the North Eastern States? Map the various peace accords and agreements initiated by the government in the past decade.
(250 Words/15 Marks)
উত্তৰ-পূৰ্বাঞ্চলৰ ৰাজ্যসমূহত আভ্যন্তৰীণ নিৰাপত্তা আৰু শান্তি প্ৰক্ৰিয়াৰ মূল প্ৰত্যাহ্বানবোৰ কি কি? বিগত দশকত চৰকাৰে আৰম্ভ কৰা বিভিন্ন শান্তি চুক্তিসমূহৰ ৰেখাংকণ কৰাঁ।
(২৫০ শব্দ/১৫ নম্বৰ)
Write and send to us today for free evaluation.
যোগীঘোপাৰ মাল্টি-মডেল লজিষ্টিক পাৰ্ক হৈছে পূব ভাৰতৰ বাণিজ্য আৰু সংযোগ ব্যৱস্থাৰ এক নতুন অধ্যায়। মাননীয় প্ৰধানমন্ত্ৰী শ্ৰীনৰেন্দ্ৰ মোদী আৰু মাননীয় মুখ্যমন্ত্ৰী ড° হিমন্ত বিশ্ব শৰ্মাৰ দূৰদৰ্শী নেতৃত্বত গঢ় লৈ উঠা এই বৃহৎ পদক্ষেপে পথ, ৰে’ল আৰু জলপথক একেলগে সংযোগ কৰি অসমৰ বাণিজ্যিক সম্ভাৱনাক নতুন গতি দিব। চুবুৰীয়া দেশৰ পৰা আৰম্ভ কৰি স্থানীয় বজাৰলৈকে সংযোগ অধিক শক্তিশালী হোৱাৰ লগতে অসম দক্ষিণ এছিয়াৰ সৈতে ভাৰতক সংযোগ কৰা এক গুৰুত্বপূৰ্ণ দুৱাৰ হিচাপে আত্মপ্ৰকাশ কৰিব।
The Multi-Modal Logistics Park at Jogighopa is set to redefine connectivity and trade across Eastern Bharat, while strengthening Assam’s linkages with neighbouring countries and regional markets.
A testament to the vision of Hon'ble Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi and the leadership of HCM Dr. Himanta Biswa Sarma, this landmark initiative will enhance multimodal transport, boost cross-border trade and position Assam as a strategic gateway connecting India with the broader South Asian region.
The Multi-Modal Logistics Park at Jogighopa is set to redefine connectivity and trade across Eastern Bharat, while strengthening Assam’s linkages with neighbouring countries and regional markets.
A testament to the vision of Hon'ble Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi and the leadership of HCM Dr. Himanta Biswa Sarma, this landmark initiative will enhance multimodal transport, boost cross-border trade and position Assam as a strategic gateway connecting India with the broader South Asian region.
APSC Focus:-
#NationalPanchayatAwards | Dr. B. Kalyan Chakravarthy, Additional Chief Secretary, Panchayat & Rural Development, Government of Assam, expressed happiness over the outstanding performance of #Assam's Gram Panchayats at the National Panchayat Awards. He noted with satisfaction that New Napam Gaon Panchayat, Sonitpur, secured the prestigious Nanaji Deshmukh Sarvottam Panchayat Satat Vikas Puraskar and achieved Rank 1 at the national level.
He also congratulated Hoogrijan Gaon Panchayat, Dibrugarh, and Jumarmur Gaon Panchayat, Nagaon, for securing second position nationally under the Self-Sufficient Infrastructure and Clean & Green Panchayat themes respectively. Dr. Chakravarthy thanked the Ministry of Panchayati Raj, Government of India, for recognizing #Assam's exemplary Panchayats and their contributions to grassroots governance and sustainable development.
#NationalPanchayatAwards | Dr. B. Kalyan Chakravarthy, Additional Chief Secretary, Panchayat & Rural Development, Government of Assam, expressed happiness over the outstanding performance of #Assam's Gram Panchayats at the National Panchayat Awards. He noted with satisfaction that New Napam Gaon Panchayat, Sonitpur, secured the prestigious Nanaji Deshmukh Sarvottam Panchayat Satat Vikas Puraskar and achieved Rank 1 at the national level.
He also congratulated Hoogrijan Gaon Panchayat, Dibrugarh, and Jumarmur Gaon Panchayat, Nagaon, for securing second position nationally under the Self-Sufficient Infrastructure and Clean & Green Panchayat themes respectively. Dr. Chakravarthy thanked the Ministry of Panchayati Raj, Government of India, for recognizing #Assam's exemplary Panchayats and their contributions to grassroots governance and sustainable development.
Hemen Sarma's study routine for UPSC-CSE 2027 :-
Prelims Date: 23th May/2027
Target:-
1)Prelims(GS+ CSAT)
2)Mains(Optional+ GS-1,2,3,4)
Remember:-
i) June/July/August/September/October/November/December: 2.5 Hours daily for Optional Subject.(Reading+ Note making).
Optional should be finished before 31/12/2026.
ii)You should have a good hold over answer writing before 31/12/26.
iii)March/April/May will be dedicated to Prelims only.
Your Study Plan Daily:
1)Reading& Note making from News Paper= 180 mins Daily.
2)Optional= 2.5 Hrs daily
3)Other Time= Static Part(NCERT & all)+ answer writing(Daily minimum 2 Nos) etc.
Study Calendar:
i)You are supposed to underline while reading. Use internet for vocabulary,research on topics, map reading etc.
1)10/06/26 to 13/06/26- :Class 6/Social Science:Exploring Society India and Beyond
2)14/06/26 to 16/06/26:- Class 6/Arts/Kriti-1
3)17/06/26 to 19/06/26:- Class 7/Social and Political Life
4)20/06/26 to 22/06/26:- Class 7/Our Past-1
5)23/06/26 to 25/06/26:- Class 7/Our Environment
6)26/06/26 to 30/06/26:- Revision of above.
7) 01/07/26:- Rest
7)02/07/26 to 04/07/26: Class 8/Social and Political Life
8)05/07/26 to 07/07/26:- Class 8/Our past-2
9)08/07/26 to 10/07/26:- Class 8/Our environment
10)11/07/26 to 15/07/26:- Optional/Reading/Notemaking& Revision & memorising
11)16/07/26 to 18/07/26:- Newspaper Topic Revision (From your own notes)
12)19/07/26 to 21/07/26:- Class 9/Democratic Politics
13)22/07/26 to 24/07/26:- Class 9/Contemporary India
14)25/07/26 to 27/07/26:- Class 9/Economics
15) 28/07/26:- Rest
16) 29/07/26 to 31/07/26:- Class 9/India and Contemporary World-1
17) 01/08/26 to 03/08/26:- Class 10/Contemporary India
18) 04/08/26 to 06/08/26:- Class 10/Understanding Economic Development
19) 07/08/26 to 09/08/26:- Class 10/India and the contemporary World 2
20) 10/08/26 to 12/08/26:- Class 10/Democratic Politics
21) 13/08/26 to 19/08/26:- Revision& Pending Course to be completed.(One CSAT PYQs of UPSC-CSE)
22)20/08/26 to 23/08/26:- Class 11/Fundamental of Physical Geography
23)24/08/26 to 27/08/26:- Class 11/India Physical Environment
24)28/08/26 to 31/08/26 :- Class 11/India Constitution at work
25) 01/09/26 to 04/09/26:- Class 11/Themes in world History
26)05/09/26 to 08/09/26:- Class 11/Indian Economic Development
27) 09/09/26:- Holiday
28) 10/09/26 to 13/09/26:- Class 12/Themes in Indian History-1
29) 14/09/26 to 17/09/26:- Themes in Indian History-2
30) 18/09/26 to 24/09/26: Revision
31) 25/09/26 to 28/09/26:- Themes in Indian History-3
32) 29/09/26 to 02/10/26:- Fundamentals of Human Geography
33) 02/10/26 to 05/10/26:- India-People and Economy
34) 06/10/26 to 09/10/26:- Indian Society
35) 10/10/26 to 13/10/26:- Social change and Development in India
36) 14/10/26 to 20/10/26:- Optional Revision+ One CSAT PYQs.
37)21/10/26 to 24/10/26:- Contemporary World Politics
38)25/10/26 to 28/10/26:- Politics in India Since Independence
39)29/10/26 to 01/11/26:- Introductory Micro Economics
40) 02/11/26 to 05/11/26:- Introductory Macroeconomics
From 06/11/26 to 28/02/27,You will try to complete the following books as much as you can.
i) Indian Polity by M Laxmikant(Specifically First 10 Chapters)
ii) Modern India by Spectrum Publication
iii) Environment Book by Shankar IAS.
iv) Certificate Physical and Human Geography by Goh Che Leong
v) Facets of Indian Culture by Spectrum Publication
Study of the Followings Should go hand in hand with NCERT& News Paper& Oxford Atlas(it is replaced by Internet now):-
i) For CSAT:- Solve 15 Years of PYQs.
ii) Monthly Magazine:- Yojana and Kurukshetra
iii) Economic Survey 2025-26
iv) Budget 2026-27
v) India Year Book,2026 published by publication division of Ministry of Information and broadcasting.
Very Important Websites:-
i) https://www.pib.gov.in/indexm.aspx?reg=48&lang=1
ii) https://prsindia.org/
iii) https://culture.gov.in/
iv) https://www.mea.gov.in/
During March,April & May,you will concentrate only on Prelims. No mains centric study or Optional Subject during this period.
Prelims Date: 23th May/2027
Target:-
1)Prelims(GS+ CSAT)
2)Mains(Optional+ GS-1,2,3,4)
Remember:-
i) June/July/August/September/October/November/December: 2.5 Hours daily for Optional Subject.(Reading+ Note making).
Optional should be finished before 31/12/2026.
ii)You should have a good hold over answer writing before 31/12/26.
iii)March/April/May will be dedicated to Prelims only.
Your Study Plan Daily:
1)Reading& Note making from News Paper= 180 mins Daily.
2)Optional= 2.5 Hrs daily
3)Other Time= Static Part(NCERT & all)+ answer writing(Daily minimum 2 Nos) etc.
Study Calendar:
i)You are supposed to underline while reading. Use internet for vocabulary,research on topics, map reading etc.
1)10/06/26 to 13/06/26- :Class 6/Social Science:Exploring Society India and Beyond
2)14/06/26 to 16/06/26:- Class 6/Arts/Kriti-1
3)17/06/26 to 19/06/26:- Class 7/Social and Political Life
4)20/06/26 to 22/06/26:- Class 7/Our Past-1
5)23/06/26 to 25/06/26:- Class 7/Our Environment
6)26/06/26 to 30/06/26:- Revision of above.
7) 01/07/26:- Rest
7)02/07/26 to 04/07/26: Class 8/Social and Political Life
8)05/07/26 to 07/07/26:- Class 8/Our past-2
9)08/07/26 to 10/07/26:- Class 8/Our environment
10)11/07/26 to 15/07/26:- Optional/Reading/Notemaking& Revision & memorising
11)16/07/26 to 18/07/26:- Newspaper Topic Revision (From your own notes)
12)19/07/26 to 21/07/26:- Class 9/Democratic Politics
13)22/07/26 to 24/07/26:- Class 9/Contemporary India
14)25/07/26 to 27/07/26:- Class 9/Economics
15) 28/07/26:- Rest
16) 29/07/26 to 31/07/26:- Class 9/India and Contemporary World-1
17) 01/08/26 to 03/08/26:- Class 10/Contemporary India
18) 04/08/26 to 06/08/26:- Class 10/Understanding Economic Development
19) 07/08/26 to 09/08/26:- Class 10/India and the contemporary World 2
20) 10/08/26 to 12/08/26:- Class 10/Democratic Politics
21) 13/08/26 to 19/08/26:- Revision& Pending Course to be completed.(One CSAT PYQs of UPSC-CSE)
22)20/08/26 to 23/08/26:- Class 11/Fundamental of Physical Geography
23)24/08/26 to 27/08/26:- Class 11/India Physical Environment
24)28/08/26 to 31/08/26 :- Class 11/India Constitution at work
25) 01/09/26 to 04/09/26:- Class 11/Themes in world History
26)05/09/26 to 08/09/26:- Class 11/Indian Economic Development
27) 09/09/26:- Holiday
28) 10/09/26 to 13/09/26:- Class 12/Themes in Indian History-1
29) 14/09/26 to 17/09/26:- Themes in Indian History-2
30) 18/09/26 to 24/09/26: Revision
31) 25/09/26 to 28/09/26:- Themes in Indian History-3
32) 29/09/26 to 02/10/26:- Fundamentals of Human Geography
33) 02/10/26 to 05/10/26:- India-People and Economy
34) 06/10/26 to 09/10/26:- Indian Society
35) 10/10/26 to 13/10/26:- Social change and Development in India
36) 14/10/26 to 20/10/26:- Optional Revision+ One CSAT PYQs.
37)21/10/26 to 24/10/26:- Contemporary World Politics
38)25/10/26 to 28/10/26:- Politics in India Since Independence
39)29/10/26 to 01/11/26:- Introductory Micro Economics
40) 02/11/26 to 05/11/26:- Introductory Macroeconomics
From 06/11/26 to 28/02/27,You will try to complete the following books as much as you can.
i) Indian Polity by M Laxmikant(Specifically First 10 Chapters)
ii) Modern India by Spectrum Publication
iii) Environment Book by Shankar IAS.
iv) Certificate Physical and Human Geography by Goh Che Leong
v) Facets of Indian Culture by Spectrum Publication
Study of the Followings Should go hand in hand with NCERT& News Paper& Oxford Atlas(it is replaced by Internet now):-
i) For CSAT:- Solve 15 Years of PYQs.
ii) Monthly Magazine:- Yojana and Kurukshetra
iii) Economic Survey 2025-26
iv) Budget 2026-27
v) India Year Book,2026 published by publication division of Ministry of Information and broadcasting.
Very Important Websites:-
i) https://www.pib.gov.in/indexm.aspx?reg=48&lang=1
ii) https://prsindia.org/
iii) https://culture.gov.in/
iv) https://www.mea.gov.in/
During March,April & May,you will concentrate only on Prelims. No mains centric study or Optional Subject during this period.
You will read in March/April/May:-
i)Only Revision of Previous Study.
ii)3000 MCQs.
iii)Science & Technology programmes from Govt websites.
May-22(No Study/No Stress/Good Sleep)
May-23 (D-Day)/Prelims Exam Day
May-24: Rest Day
May-25: Preparation start for Mains.
Anyway,noone can complete 100% of the syllabus.
For Main Centric Study,I will come up with another post.
Success is 90% hard work and 10% luck. If you are lucky enough after hard work is done,you will sail through UPSC-CSE. But there are always a better option at the other side of the journey.
Best wishes, Hemen
*****
i)Only Revision of Previous Study.
ii)3000 MCQs.
iii)Science & Technology programmes from Govt websites.
May-22(No Study/No Stress/Good Sleep)
May-23 (D-Day)/Prelims Exam Day
May-24: Rest Day
May-25: Preparation start for Mains.
Anyway,noone can complete 100% of the syllabus.
For Main Centric Study,I will come up with another post.
Success is 90% hard work and 10% luck. If you are lucky enough after hard work is done,you will sail through UPSC-CSE. But there are always a better option at the other side of the journey.
Best wishes, Hemen
*****
Prelims and Mains Focus:-
Make a good note on Great Nicobar Project. Pros/Cons/Way Forward. Give flow chart, diagrams,statistics.
Very important topic.
Make a good note on Great Nicobar Project. Pros/Cons/Way Forward. Give flow chart, diagrams,statistics.
Very important topic.