The
All India Services Act, 1951 provides that the Central Government may make
rules for regulating the recruitment and the conditions of service of persons
appointed to the All India Services.
Recruitment
to these services is made under the corresponding AIS Recruitment Rules and may
be done by-
·
Direct Recruitment
(through Competitive Examinations)
·
By promotion from the
State Service (through a Committee convened by the UPSC).
Under Article 320 of the Constitution of
India, the Commission are required to be consulted on all matters relating to
recruitment to civil services and posts.
DIRECT
RECRUITMENT
The competitive examination conducted by
the Union Public Service Commission for direct recruitment to the All India
Services is known as the ‘Civil Service Examination’.
-Application Procedure-
The Application Procedure for the Civil
Services Examination has been completely digitized at the preliminary level and
applications can be made only online. No more the forms that need to filled and
posted to UPSC. Even admit cards will be issued online and candidates are
expected to download their copies between fixed days.
-Eligibility Conditions for Civil Service
Examination-
(i)
Academic Eligibility-
·
The candidate
must hold a degree of any of Universities incorporated by an Act of the Central
or State Legislature in India or other educational institutions established by
an Act of Parliament or declared to be deemed as a University Under Section-3
of the University Grants Commission Act, 1956,
·
Posses an
equivalent qualification
(ii)
Nationality:
- For the Indian Administrative Service and the Indian Police
Service, a candidate must be a citizen of India.
- For other services, a candidate must be either :—
a.
a citizen of
India, or
b.
a subject of
Nepal, or
c.
a subject of
Bhutan, or
d.
a Tibetan
refugee who came over to India before 1st January, 1962 with the intention of
permanently settling in India, or
e.
a person of
Indian origin who has migrated from Pakistan, Burma, Sri Lanka, East African
countries of Kenya, Uganda, the United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia, Malawi,
Zaire, Ethiopia and Vietnam with the intention of permanently settling in
India.
Candidate belonging to categories (b), (c), (d) and (e) shall be a
person in whose favour a certificate of eligibility has been issued by the
Government of India. Candidates belonging to categories (b), (c) and (d)
above will not be eligible for appointment to the Indian Foreign Service.
(iii)
Age Limits:
- A candidate must have attained the age of 21 years and must not
have attained the age of 30 years on 1st August that year.
- The upper age limit prescribed above is relaxable under certain
circumstances, some of which are-
·
upto a maximum
of five years if a candidate belongs to a Scheduled Caste or a Scheduled Tribe.
·
upto a maximum
of three years in the case of candidates belonging to Other Backward Classes
who are eligible to avail of reservation applicable to such candidates.
(iv)
No. of Attempts:
A
maximum of 4 attempts is permitted to every candidate and 7 to those belonging
to Other Backward Classes. There is no restriction on the number of attempts in
the case of SC/ST candidates. All this, provided you are still under the age
limit. A physically handicapped person will get as many attempts as any other
non-handicapped candidate of his/her community, but if they are from the
general category they will get 7 attempts. If you do qualify you may want to
attempt again to improve your ranking and therefore your service allotment.
It must be noted that:
(i) An attempt at a Preliminary Examination shall be
deemed to be an attempt at the Examination.
(ii) If a candidate actually appears in any one paper in the Preliminary Examination, he/she shall be deemed to have made an attempt at the Examination.
(iii) Notwithstanding the disqualification/ cancellation of candidature, the fact of appearance of the candidate at the examination will count as an attempt.
(ii) If a candidate actually appears in any one paper in the Preliminary Examination, he/she shall be deemed to have made an attempt at the Examination.
(iii) Notwithstanding the disqualification/ cancellation of candidature, the fact of appearance of the candidate at the examination will count as an attempt.
-Stages
of the Examination-
The successive stages of examination are:
The successive stages of examination are:
·
Preliminary Examination for the
selection of candidates for the Main Examination
·
Main Examination (Written) for
the selection of candidates for interview for a Personality Test.
·
Interview (Personality Test)
(i)
Preliminary
Examination:
This
examination is meant to serve as a screening test only and the marks obtained
in the Preliminary Examination by the candidates who are declared qualified for
admission to the Main Examination will not be counted for determining their
final order of merit. The number of candidates to be admitted to the Main Examination
will be about twelve to thirteen times the total approximate number of
vacancies to be filled in the year in the various Services and Posts. Only
those candidates who are declared by the Commission to have qualified in the
Preliminary Examination in the year are eligible for writing the Main
Examination of that year.
Papers
|
No. of questions
|
Marks
|
Duration
|
Paper I
General Studies
|
150
|
200
|
2 hours
|
Paper
II General Aptitude
|
120
|
200
|
2 hours
|
Total
|
270
|
400
|
|
The
CSAT is the second paper of General Studies that was introduced in 2011. With
the introduction of the CSAT, the UPSC now intends to choose Civil Servants who
not only have the knowledge but also the aptitude for reasoning and analytical
brain.
(ii)
Main Examination-
The
Civil Services Main examination is designed to test the academic talent of the
aspirant, also his/her ability to present his/ her knowledge in a clear and
coherent manner. The main Examination is intended to assess the overall
intellectual traits and depth of understanding of candidates rather than merely
the range of their information and memory.
The
UPSC has revised the pattern of Civil Services Main examination from 2013.
Summary of the
Latest Pattern of Civil Services (Mains) Examination
|
Paper1
Essay - 250 Marks
Can
be written in the medium or language of the candidate's choice
|
|
Paper - II Language -300 Marks Candidate can take any Modern Indian language but this paper is of qualifying nature |
|
Paper - III English -300 Marks
This
paper is of qualifying nature
|
|
Paper-IV General Studies-I 250 Marks (Indian Heritage and Culture, History and Geography of the World and Society) |
|
Paper-V General Studies -II: 250 Marks (Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice and International relations) |
|
Paper-VI
General Studies -III 250 Marks (Technology, Economic Development, Bio-diversity, Environment, Security and Disaster Management) |
|
Paper-VII General Studies -IV 250 Marks (Ethics, Integrity and Aptitude) Marks carried by General Studies was 4X 250=1000 |
|
Paper-VIII Optional Subject - Paper 1 -250 Marks |
|
Paper-IX Optional Subject - Paper II -250 Marks
Candidate
is allowed to take up literature as an optional subject without the
conditionality of having to do his/her graduation in that language's
literature
|
|
Sub Total (Written test) 2350 Marks
Marks
of English and Language will not be counted so total marks for Written exam
will be 2350- 600 = 1750 Marks
|
|
Interview/Personality Test - 275 marks |
|
Grand Total - 2025 Marks |
|
A candidate is allowed to use any one language from the Eighth Schedule
of
the Constitution or English as the medium of writing the examination.
|
Even though
the interview carries 275 marks with no minimum qualifying marks, it is the
deciding factor at many times of a candidate being within the services or out
of it and in the least matters in which service a candidate gets. However since
the interview is so personal and variable it is most desirable to do very well
in the written mains. But an Interview can make or break a candidate so take
personality development rather seriously and one could also attend some mock
interviews at leading institutes.
Questions-
Interview questions range from
questions about your choice of subject to why you want to join the civil
services. It is good to answer honestly but at the same time avoid cliches like
wanting to do service to the nation etc. Questions on your hobbies are imperative
so prepare well as they expect some indepth knowledge on that. Questions
relating to your name, your college or school name are also a big possibility.
If someone well-know shares one of these names please also prepare on that.
Also learn up about important events on the year or date of your birth. As you
can see, UPSC Interview questions are mainly from what you have filled in your
form including your subject but here it is more a test of logic and
presentation and awareness rather than pure subject knowledge. In the UPSC
interview many questions are situational like what will you do if a Tsunami
strikes your district and you are the DM/Collector/SP. Questions on your choice
of service preference also need to be prepared. Current affairs analysis is
important too.
(Above is
a picture of a mock interview in progress)
PROMOTION
The Personnel Ministry had in May 2013 written to all states seeking their views to make
changes in existing rules to select officers from states for three All India
Services - IAS, IPS and IFoS. Till now, the selection of state services
officers into the three All India Services (Indian Administrative Service,
Indian Police Service and Indian Forest Service) was being done on the basis of
review of their seniority and Annual Confidential Reports (ACRs).
The Ministry of Personnel recently changed the rules for promotion from state services. State civil services officers will now have to face a Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) test and interview for their promotion to the three All India Services. The move has come on the recommendation of Administrative Reforms Commission and the UPSC which suggested changes in the existing system.
The selection to IAS, IPS and IFoS from states' services will be made through a 1000 marks four-stage process including a written exam and interview. As per new norms, a state civil service officer will have to face the written examination comprising two papers –
The Ministry of Personnel recently changed the rules for promotion from state services. State civil services officers will now have to face a Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) test and interview for their promotion to the three All India Services. The move has come on the recommendation of Administrative Reforms Commission and the UPSC which suggested changes in the existing system.
The selection to IAS, IPS and IFoS from states' services will be made through a 1000 marks four-stage process including a written exam and interview. As per new norms, a state civil service officer will have to face the written examination comprising two papers –
·
Paper I on
Aptitude test
·
Paper II on
General Studies and state specific questions.
·
An
interview
·
Assessment
of ACR by a board for such officers.
There will be a third written paper on essay, comprehension and
precise type only for non state civil services officers in addition to two
papers. A final merit list shall be prepared taking into account all the marks
obtained in four components.
The weightage of-
The weightage of-
·
Written
examination– 30%
·
Length of service-
25%
·
ACR- 25%
·
Interview-
20%
An officer should have eight years of a 'Group A' service in a state for all categories (IAS, IPS and IFoS) and must be less than 54 years of age. However, there has not been any cap on the number of attempts. The rule also leaves to the discretion of authorities to consider bringing down the maximum age for taking the examination by interested candidates. "The scheme could be reviewed after its implementation for three years," the rules said.
-
No comments:
Post a Comment