Interview
Even though the interview carries 300 marks with no minimum
qualifying marks, it is the deciding factor at many times of your being
within the services or out of it and in the least matters in which
service you get.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 you so take your personality development
rather seriously and make sure to attend some mock interviews at leading
institutes.
UPSC Interview Questions
UPSC 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
posibility. 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.
Tips to improve your performance at the UPSC Interview
- There are generally 5 members at the board with the
Chairperson seated at the center. Enter confidently and greet the
Chairperson, who will probably welcome you, and pleasantly nod at other
members. Wait till you are asked to sit.
- Intelligent listing is the mantra, and for this
maintaining eye contact is very important. You should not glare but all
the same appear attentive and do not glance at other members, it can be
very distracting for the interviewer. However if some other member asks
you anything, look at that member and answer and turn back to the first -
this is what we do in normal attentive listening.
- Do not fidget or throw your hands around, or shake your
head. Less amount of movement does not mean you should sit unnaturally
stiff. Your posture should be attentive and relaxed at the same time. Do
not crouch/bend forward or place your hands on the table.
- Cut your answer short to the required patience shown by
the member talking to you. They usually like to talk more, so listen
carefully and think for a few seconds before you start answering the
question. This will show that you are organising your thoughts in mind
before starting to speak.
- Leave some room for difference in opinion. Do take a
stand, but do not look adamant or unwilling to appreciate the board's
opinion.
- Use couple of words from the question while answering any
question. It shows you have listened to the question carefully. But at
the same time limit the use the technical jargon.
- Listen very carefully. Come to the central issue of the enquiry immediately. Wild guessing or speculation are a complete no no.
- Do not start evaluating your performance while still
inthe interview. Even if you have committed mistakes in the beginning,
do not think that you have already lost the game. They are looking for
warm, sensitive respectful and attentive youngsters. They know you are
good or you would not have come so far.
- Talk humbly about your achievements and hobbies. You may
have mentioned some hobbies in the form without serious background in
them, but before the interview it would be useful to pick up some basic
info on the hobby.
- Say less to convey more. Less is more these days as per
the minimalist creed. Argue logically and generalise correctly. Do not
try to read too much between the lines.
- Remember, while answering any question, what is easy to
see is easy to miss. We often tend to miss the obvious and go for some
non-crucial aspect of the subject.
- Get up to leave only when the chairperson asks you to,
not because you think everyone has asked a question. Similarly, even if
someone has not asked a question and the chairperson asks you to leave
then please leave. Some members do not ask questions at all, due to
various reasons like limited time.
- Before leaving politely thank the chairperson and nod at
the others politely. Avoid saying "Have a good day sir". A "Thank you
Sir/Madam" is enough.
Types of questions asked at the UPSC interview.
- Relating to your name. Any famous personality who has a similar or same name or surname.
- Your career choice. Why you want to opt for the civilservices.
- Your Hobbies. Why you pursue such a hobby or questions related to your hobby. So reasearch well on your hobby.
- Hot topics of recent days like the Bird Flu and Tamiflu,
Office of Profit, Sahara airlines deal and the growing airlines,Terror
attacks in India, India US Nuclear deal, Commonwealth games, Saurav
Ganguly etc. Keep reading and watching the news. If the recent
headlines have something to do with your subject then specially revise
those portions. For example if you are a veterinary doctor, Bird flu may
go on to other animal diseases that can infect men. If you are an MBBS,
then you might be asked about human to human spread of epidemics or any
other epidemics and precautions etc. You may even be asked about the
influence of MNC or drug manufacturers responsible for the spread of
fear etc. If you are from an economy background, the same topic will
veer towards the economic implications of the Bird flu.
- How you are going to use your specific knowledge(like if you are a doctor, lawyer, engineer etc) in the services.
- Situational questions. Like If you were the collector/SP of Varanasi, what would you do after the Bomb Blast?
- Choice of services. The order of your choice of services can raise questions too.
- About your institution and related.If you have studies at IIM you may be asked about the rising salaries, if from IGNOU then even about Indira Gandhi and so on.
- From your form. You must go through the form you have
filled because most questions will arise from there. If you have changed
subjects, mentioned anything out of the way, watch out for questions on
them. Interviewers take cue from the form you have filled.
Some actual questions asked of UPSC candidates.
- Don't you think you can serve your country better by remaining a
doctor and treating poor patients? Why do you want to be a civil
servant?"
It would be best to answer this question very practically rather than
emotionally saying you want to serve the country, because even a doctor
serves the people. A doctor from Kerala was asked this Question and her
reply was - "Because I want to treat the primary malady that afflicts
our country, that creates so many poor in India. As a doctor I can treat
only secondary maladies." She even came up with exact statistics and
suggestions on a rubber plantation for poverty alleviation indicating
that she had spent considerable time and thoughts on her future plans.
She was awarded a score of 85 per cent.
- "What are the problems faced by wheat cultivators in your state?"
an M.Sc. (Agriculture) student from Palanpur was once asked. "The
problem is not so much to do with agronomy but with the lack of a seed
bank in Palanpur," came the reply and the candidate walked away with an
80 per cent score.
- "Is there a law in physics, which is relevant to administration?"
a law graduate was prompted. "Yes. Newton's third law of motion: for
every action there is an equal and opposite reaction." He scored a cool
80 per cent.
The above questions can give you an idea of how relevant questions
are asked from your subjects even as they are not directly from the
syllabus.
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