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Old Sunday, October 19, 2014
asamad786 asamad786 is offline
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Default Why do thousands of students fail the CSS exam?

While I have yet to appear in the CSS exams( the next attempt, CSS 2015, being my first), I have noticed a few general trends that I feel the need to share on this forum. It is my understanding that educational background(both primary schooling and college) plays a very crucial role in your chances of passing the exam, if one were to factor out, for the time being, luck and hard work. I have seen students in the library, who are preparing for the exam, cramming in notes and reading elementary books on English grammar, when they should be covering material for the more dense optional subjects. If you do not have a solid grasp of English grammar, it comes as no surprise that you shall find the essay and the précis challenging. I might be wrong here, but I also feel many aspirants rely excessively on academy notes or guidebooks, and instead of assimilating concepts, simply resort to rote learning from these. It is not possible to widen your knowledge base and by extension, improve the analytical quality of your answer, by perusing a few books on say, International Law or American history. One needs to read widely so as to cite from diverse sources in the exam. Read as much as you can, there is no shortcut, no detour, no solution; other than reading eclectically. Read, read, read!

My point is, the educational structure in Pakistan has failed to produce graduates who are able to converse, read and write in the English language. So when a student is not able to write down a cohesive essay of 3,000 words, one wonders where the fault truly lies? While there always must be an emphasis on individual competency, the question shifts when tens of thousands of students literally struggle to pen a coherent essay on what are rather straightforward topics. You have students from all over Pakistan, with a poor educational background and little or no grasp of the English language, working endlessly to improve their written expression and knowledge base, to little effect, and it's simply heartbreaking, when does that happen. The CSS, because it is so comprehensive, is a difficult exam that demands a certain level of English proficiency as a given. It is hence tragic to see so many struggle because of the larger failings of the system. Those, coming from such mediocre schools and universities, who do manage to eventually clear the exam, do so with extreme hard and will-power, often putting in more than 12 hours on a daily basis. It is not 'fair', if one can indeed talk about justice in this context, to have these students compete with graduates of English language institutions, when a level playing field does not exist. I do not have the answer as to how FPSC could rectify this, because the large number of failures in the past two attempts are a testament to the degeneration of the Pakistani educational system. So, if you do work hard, and yet fail to clear the exam, know that there are structural factors at play here, and that it is the government and society's fault that you have a weak base in the English language, the medium in which the exams are conducted. The sad truth is that not everyone has the same opportunity to master English, which creates discrepancies among the applicants and dashes the hopes of many hard-working students, who are capable and intelligent, in their own right. So, who is to blame in all of this, the student(s) or the educational system? Would appreciate feedback here.
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