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Thursday 9 February 2017

On yearbook

[Originally posted in Feb 2016, on other blog which was too large and had to be deleted. Pasting it here, as it is.]

On yearbook

The YearBook Plan
Again IYB has come out and it is time to look at how the govt is structured and how it is handling governance. IYB is one stop source for general info on a variety of topics. Much of it is generic and does not change over the years but comparative study shows how policies change(if they change), besides you get to know the details of all schemes being run all in one place and one is better placed to then take in all gyaan from Yojana which focuses on specific issues like health/ edu/ livelihood/ vulnerable sections.
A structure approach is helpful here to filter out faltu ka gyan and only take that which will help us in prelims and in mains.
We have to group related chapters together and swiftly go thru them.

First, one should take up the very first chapter as many straight questions come from here, and it is like a kick between the legs to make a mistake in such Qs. Also, immediately one should take a round tour of India by taking on Ch30. Diverse questions are possible from this chapter and also it covers the fine details of state economy, culture and nature(places of importance). Go wild with internet, search as much as possible on facts/figures/names in these and you will see your GS rise to a whole new level.
1.Land and people + 30.States and UTs
Now, we have gone thru much of economic data of states, so one can go back to national level
6.Basic Economic Data + 13.Finance
then quickly transition to sectoral study
4.Agriculture  19.Industry 14.Corporate affairs
Now we go after the infrastructure which is the driver of progress
8.CIT + 22.Mass communication + 11.Energy +26.Transport
Then comes basic social services and welfare
15.Food and Civil supplies + 16.Health and family welfare 10.Education 17.Housing
Remains of a command structure
23.planning 24.rural and urban development
Then the essentials
12.Environment 27.water resources
Then the efforts towards justice
20.law and justice 21.labour, skill development and employment 28.welfare
Things that make us great
25.scientific and tech developments 5.culture and tourism 29.youth affairs and sports
Looking beyond our borders
7.commerce 18.India and world 9.defence
Last but not the least a recap of Laxmikanth and more, esp the structure of executive(ministries, depts.)
3.polity

Now, I know I speak here as if I have topped the exam or am slam dunking 150+ in every prelims, neither of which I have done yet. But same goes for the babajis in the market. So, I thought let my idea/plan also float on the neutral internet and let people benefit(if they find any worth in it)
Besides, the economic survey is structured in similar manner, and as a matter of fact, so is the syllabus. So it makes sense to read the year book in above mentioned manner(instead of the alphabetically ordered chapters)
I suppose I could open up another tab on the blog for yearbook crisp structured chapter wise notes, but right now, I dont have the incentive or inclination. Maybe later, after survey comes out, I could extract all of it and place into GS2, GS3 post entries directly. Till then, Cheers!

GS1 History

History for mains has not only Indian history but also world history. Basic timeline, facts etc are good for prelims, but mains needs thematic study of history. It requires zooming in on turning points and zooming out to look at progression of movements/events etc. This is what makes it challenging.

Largely, we study art and culture part only for ancient and medieval part. Modern India is studied in detail. World history is also to be studied in fast forward(so many centuries to cover, with so many names, details, concepts). It is very difficult, but if one looks at it like a story, it is indeed interesting. I am not preaching, but I do feel that history can get boring only if perspective is lost. If one tries to live those times, live those obstacles people faced in those times, then it makes sense as to why certain things happened. This helps us come to terms with our own deeds, take lessons from past, and to understand that it is easier to judge in retrospect.

For art and culture of ancient and medieval times, there is of course ncert, old and new, with pictures, tables, point wise description. To revise and to fill in details, there is ccrtindia website.
For modern India, struggle for independence by Bipin Chandra is good, but for mains it has to be studied thematically. Besides, if one goes thru NCERT by Bipin Chandra, it is better(mains point of view). So, I had made notes for mains based on this book and I want to share it to save people the pain of going thru the whole book. Also, Ive made it in point format, leaving out excess detail, so that one can go thru it quickly and get ready to put down at least some basic points on paper.

Link: modern India ncert hand written notes for mains
[its a heavy file, so those with slow connections, careful... 57 pages 24MB]
There are many other books one can read to get more analysis and details for modern India. There is spectrum, Grover Mehta, Plassey to partition, Sumit Sarkar etc. But I found that I used to bite too much, and could not chew, let alone digest these texts. So, I decided to stick to the old ncert by Bipin Chandra and added some notes from above books, so as to cover some missing portions and I was done with subject. I have left some portions blank in above file, due to lack of time to cover those portions. This won;t affect the overall coverage of notes, and one can read up on those(2) sections separately from any source.

For world history there are many books again.. BV Rao, Jain, Norman Lowe, Arjun Dev, Baliyan notes etc. All of the above are alright. But many of these take up too many words to explain same thing, which caused lot of pain to remember. Some dont cover from Renaissance, some do but then go too deep. So, I found that there is an NCERT Contemporary world history class XII 2003 edition that is spot on for the mains world history syllabus. It covers all relevant timeframes, is written in simple language, with less of extra ramblings.