Geography Optional Strategy by Pratham Kaushik Air 5 Cse 2017 327 Marks
Geography Optional Strategy by Pratham Kaushik Air 5 Cse 2017 327 Marks
Geography Optional Strategy by Pratham Kaushik Air 5 Cse 2017 327 Marks
1/10
My Marks:
Essay – 146
GS-1 – 112
GS-2 – 130
GS-3 – 144
GS-4 – 115
Geography – 1 – 166
Geography – 2 – 161
Interview – 143
Total – 1117
General overview:
Read the syllabus thoroughly and remember all the topics. It’ll be the lighthouse of
your preparation.
Read any topic from at most 2-3 sources (generally a textbook and a classroom
material) and then revise it multiple times. The more, the merrier.
After completing a unit from the syllabus, refer to the questions of previous years
(New Vishal topic wise questions) and try to frame answers. This way you can find
the focus areas of the examiner and your standing at that moment. Example: In
Geomorphology, the focus is on Exogenetic forces.
Do not make notes for every topic as it’ll be time consuming. Rather, refer to your
classnotes and add on to them in your class notebook only. For this, prepare
classnotes on either A4 sheets or leave enough margins in your notebook. Prepare
self notes for only those topics which you find very difficult to comprehend.
2/10
For Paper 1, have special focus on one section, either Physical Geography or
Human Geography. Know beforehand from which section you’ll attempt 3
questions. I had read extensively on Human Geography as I felt it was more
rewarding.
For Paper 2, make small bullet point notes for often repeated topics from standard
sources.
Prepare region wise maps of India from standard books in which all aspects of a
region are covered like terrain, drainage, resources, agriculture, industries etc.
Basically, this is the regional approach to study geography which can be adopted
for Paper 2.
Always try to link the subject matter of Paper 1 and Paper 2. For example, read
Climatology, Population and Settlement Geography, Regional Development and
Planning etc together for both papers and use examples from one paper in the
other while writing answers.
Geomorphology
Geomorphology by Savinder Singh ( You can skip the Geomorphology
portion of Physical Geography by Savinder Singh as it is well covered in this
book).
Prepare only those chapters which are there in the syllabus, focussing on
Chapter 2 ‘Fundamental Concepts in Geomorphology’ and Chapter 3
‘Theories of Landform Development’. This is an extensively written book on
Geomorphology which gives a poor cost benefit ratio. Hence, prepare it
selectively and make pointers to help you remember the material.
Classnotes or 500+ notes of Himanshu Sir (He covers the topics in excessive
detail, so again be selective in preparation)
Prepare topics like Concepts of geomorphic cycles and Landscape development,
Erosion surfaces, Slope development in great detail with ample diagrams.
(Example: In Slope Analysis question this year, I explained its limited application
by making diagrams for slope analysis of Davis, Penck and King and explaining
their drawbacks.)
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Biogeography and Environment Geography
500+ notes of Himanshu Sir
Classnotes and Test Series notes of Shabbir Sir
Prepare Ecology topics in great detail
Environmental Geography by Savinder Singh (stick to topics mentioned in
the syllabus)
Internet (prepare pointers for topics such as Social Forestry, Environmental
Management etc)
This was my strongest topic in the syllabus. In fact, it was this topic only which helped
me tackle the difficult Paper 1 and score 166 marks. I have seen that even in earlier
years, people with good marks unarguably had a strong grasp over this topic.
First, read the Test Series classnotes by Shabbir Sir. It’ll build a broad understanding
and chronology of evolution of geographical thought. Then, read Geographical Thought
by R D Dixit (Chapter 1-8, Chapter 11) and Fundamentals of Geographical Thought by
Sudeepta Adhikari (Chapter 11, Chapter 13-16). If required, refer to 500+ questions and
notes for this topic by Himanshu Sir.
This will equip you to write extremely good answers as you’ll have precise definitions,
theories, and lots of examples given originally by Geographers in their studies. Use the
original quotes by Hartshorne, Febvre, Semple etc alongwith the names of their thesis
or books. Use chronological flowcharts while answering questions.
Also prepare topics like Languages, Religions, Cultural Regions and HDI, and link these
with Geographical Thought. Example – Link HDI with Welfare Geography; Languages
and Religion with Diffusion and Cultural Landscape of American and German
Geographers.
I was well prepared for questions like “Explain the concept of Time Geography.” and
“Discuss the contemporary paradigms of Geography as I had made pointers for Time
Geography – a) Torsten Hagerstrand and Space Time Prism, b) Darwin’s Theory of
Evolution, c) Historical Geography of Radical Geographers; and answered along these
pointers only. I had similar pointers for Contemporary Paradigms – a) Post QR
Geographies, mainly Humanist Geography and its approaches, b) New Regional
Geographies, c) Offshoots like Environmentalism, Feminist Geography, New Radical
Geography.
This topic is crucial as it is scoring and easy but needs good presentation. Prepare exact
definitions of terms like Conurbation, Metropolitan region, Slums, Satellite towns, RUF
etc along with the Human Geographers who have given these concepts. Use diagrams in
settlement geography and maps in population geography as much as possible. Have
some statistics handy so as to make the answer on Population Geo more effective.
Terms in syllabus such as Social well-being and quality of life, Population as social
capital etc should be specifically prepared with names of thinkers, examples from
present world etc. with help from any classnotes and internet. Both Quality of life and
Social Capital were asked this year. Questions from these topics might be repeated and
diversified in coming years.
It is the second most important topic after Geographical Thought. It has ample scope to
be very presentable with lots of diagrams, flowcharts, maps in many questions (Rimland
Heartland Theories, Von Thunen, Boundaries and frontiers etc), names and books of
Geographers, few examples from the present world like CPT, Von Thunen, Rostow etc.
Read models and theories independently from Majid Husain and then try to link them
to their original sub topic.
Always, always attempt the question from this topic using all the above for better
presentation, as knowledge and content will be same with everyone. Prepare pointers
and short notes for each model and theory and learn each postulate by heart.
Systems Analysis is a becoming a favourite of UPSC and questions are getting more
diverse. Example: Geographical Systems, Application of System Analysis, Importance of
system analysis etc. Prepare these from any classnotes, the above mentioned book and
some help from internet. Once prepared, do not look for excessive value addition in
content and try to enrich your answer by flowcharts of systems.
5/10
Sources and preparation methodology for Paper 2:
Some ways to simplify are: a) Brackets such as Low, Medium and High, b) Below, At
and Above National Average, c) Shading a particular region, d) Flow maps depicting
migration, trade patterns, diffusion of language from its hearth etc. example – Make an
arrow of more width directed from China to India and an arrow of lesser width from
India to China depicting the trade deficit. Also you can use an opening arrow over the
map to show expansion of something and closing arrow to show reduction.
Maps in Geography are used for explanatory and indicative purposes. Maps made in
exam hall are crude, rough and indicative and can be made using the PEN itself. Try
practicing maps at home and draw partial maps wherever required (Example – To show
Indira Gandhi Canal, draw only western India, for Indo China border disputes draw
only the Northern and NE region.)
Always label maps and diagrams and try to replicate the original boundaries of the map
of India. Also have a look at the boundaries of states in case you need to draw a map of
any state. In that case Maharashtra and MP should not look like rectangles.
Have short notes ready for common topics mentioned in Paper 2 syllabus as
Contemporary Issues, such as floods and droughts, epidemics, deforestation, soil
erosion, river linking etc because it is difficult to explain such topics in 150-200
words in a lucid manner. If such notes are not there, you may end up with two
pages of ineffectively answered question.
6/10
How to enrich your answers?
First rule of presentation: Maps and Diagrams in every question. Sometimes one
map or diagram per page. Ensure that the diagrams are relevant, although maps
can be drawn in almost all questions where the scope of a diagram is not there.
Example: 1. In the question on religious minorities in border states, draw a map of India
shading the border states, UTs and cities in which there are religious minorities.
Third rule of presentation: Write answers along the lines of syllabus such as
terrain, drainage (Geomorphology), climate (Climatology), soil or vegetation
(Biogeography), environmental issues (Env Geo), Human geography parts such as
population and settlement, agriculture and industries (Economic Geography),
development and planning etc. Thus you can generate 7-8 points on a general
topic. This will not only help in incorporating the human angle but will also
provide enough diversity and content in most questions.
Example: Examine the role of small towns in the regional development process.
This question can easily be structured and answered by the above rule. If you start
writing without a structure, even such an easy question will not fetch good marks.
Pick the topics of the syllabus to write the role of small towns:
Population & Settlement – Small towns can act as counter magnets, reduce the burden
on big cities and reverse migration i.e. Small towns as solution to the problems of
Urbanisation
RDP – Small towns as centres of planning, planned sectors in small towns, small towns
for pilot projects, also, you can use growth foci concept of R P Misra.
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Resources – Small towns aiding in resource conservation.
Industries – MSME, footloose industries in small towns, availability of labour for small
enterprises in the town itself, relatively cheaper labour (I wrote the example of mini
steel plants in small towns for decentralisation of Iron and Steel industry, and found the
exact same question in Paper 2.)
Agriculture – Small towns as link between big cities and villages, agricultural markets in
small towns enable village farmers to sell their produce, food processing etc
Transport and Trade – Access to both raw material (agricultural and industrial) and
market through transport, role in road transport complementing rail transport, Trade
towns emerging into big cities such as Surat
(Here we have generated some good and some filler points using topics of Paper 2)
From Physical Geo part of Paper 1, write points on Environment (role of small towns in
environmental conservation) and Biogeography (Agroforestry and social forestry in
small towns).
Thus Rule 2 is also satisfied, as both human and physical dimensions are covered.
Add a map of NCR region showing the small towns in vicinity, draw arrows showing the
flow for, say migration, add some specific examples, and the answer will be diverse and
comprehensive.
There have been some unconventional questions in recent years but those are
unconventional for all. Write as much as you know and try to include a rough
diagram. You can’t have all the content. Just make sure you write little bit in each
question so that the examiner has an opportunity to award you marks. For
example in Pseudovulcanism question this year, I wrote on the lines of: Pseudo –
fake, thus it would have something to do with flow processes like earthflow, mud
flow, creep etc and gave a reference of geysers and hot springs, which are similar
to volcanic flow minus the endogenic lava. I didn’t know whether this is right or
not, just took an intelligent guess.
8/10
Even those questions which you don’t know, you need to think logically and write
few points. Obviously in those questions, you’ll not get excellent marks, but you’ll
not get a zero either. And this approach should be strictly limited to the
compulsory questions which seem out of syllabus. Questions where there is a
choice such as PAVE Theory of Environmental Management, if you don’t know,
attempt another question.
The core of my preparation has been standard books, Himanshu Sir’s (Guidance
IAS) 500+ program and Shabbir Sir’s (Vajiram) Test Series Classes. I worked on
content at both these places and did not write tests. Eventually I wrote 2-3 tests at
Shamim Sir.
Guidance 500+ program by Himanshu Sir which is integrated with test series.
Benefits – Excellent content coverage in 500+ program from each sub topic of the
syllabus, question paper closely resembles UPSC paper, answer booklet is in UPSC
format, easy for revision as approach is question – answer based, it can even substitute
your coaching class copy for most topics.
Cons – Answer copies are not checked by Sir himself though he reviews them, but you
can always go to him with the paper to ask anything.
Pros – Approach is excellent, the way he deals with certain topics is good, his test series
class notes are good (if you don’t attend the classes, find a way to get these from the
market and have an overview, certain topics will be well covered).
Cons – Answer copies are not checked by Sir himself though he will review them if you
meet him personally, specific topics of syllabus are covered only as the program is
meant as test series and not classroom coaching.
Pros – Shamim Sir checks the papers himself and marking is optimum, Simple
approach towards difficult questions.
Cons – Question paper resemblance to actual UPSC paper is low, does not build much
on content as the program is a test series and not classroom coaching.
I hope I have covered all aspects and my suggestions help you score good marks in
Geography. I can be reached at mpratham3@gmail.com for any specific queries. Please
mention Geography Query in the subject. All the best.
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