CSS Forums

CSS Forums (http://www.cssforum.com.pk/)
-   Subject Selection (http://www.cssforum.com.pk/beginners-guide/frequently-asked-questions/subject-selection/)
-   -   Subject Selection (http://www.cssforum.com.pk/beginners-guide/frequently-asked-questions/subject-selection/124359-subject-selection.html)

xona khan Wednesday, July 24, 2019 03:52 PM

Subject Selection
 
hello

Please help me in subject selection i have IT background but i don't want to chose any subject related to this.

Engr AS Chaudhry Wednesday, July 24, 2019 04:37 PM

[QUOTE=xona khan;1094139]hello

Please help me in subject selection i have IT background but i don't want to chose any subject related to this.[/QUOTE]

It is okay to choose subjects irrelevant to your degree. Download the revised syllabus from FPSC's website and review the contents. Then choose subjects according to your interests. To me, scoring trend is a myth, because ultimately it is you who is going to appear in the exam.

anzabb Wednesday, July 24, 2019 04:42 PM

[QUOTE=xona khan;1094139]hello

Please help me in subject selection i have IT background but i don't want to chose any subject related to this.[/QUOTE]
The first thing that you need to do for subject selection is to look at all the groups and subjects in the syllabus. Second things that you want to do is to make a list of subjects that you like. This could be based on your interests. Then go and have a look at their past papers. Once you have a list of subjects, then I can guide you more.
Just make a list, don't bother about combination or anything. For now you just want to know what subjects appeal you.
Also, remember that CSS is a leadership exam, and the final decision must be your own.

anzabb Wednesday, July 24, 2019 04:45 PM

[QUOTE=Engr AS Chaudhry;1094140]It is okay to choose subjects irrelevant to your degree. Download the revised syllabus from FPSC's website and review the contents. Then choose subjects according to your interests. To me, scoring trend is a myth, because ultimately it is you who is going to appear in the exam.[/QUOTE]
I think that scoring trend is a trap, this year academies are asking candidates to pick p ad, when last year they were telling people not to pick it. If there are more people taking 1 subject then either there will be a lot of success stories or failure stories

xona khan Wednesday, July 24, 2019 05:16 PM

Criminology
Political Science
Gender Studies
History of USA
Mass Com
International Relations
Sociology
Punjabi
Public Administration

help me with these subjects,what should i select..

anzabb Wednesday, July 24, 2019 05:31 PM

[QUOTE=xona khan;1094143]Criminology
Political Science
Gender Studies
History of USA
Mass Com
International Relations
Sociology
Punjabi
Public Administration

help me with these subjects,what should i select..[/QUOTE]
All of these subjects are good subjects and each one of them is challenging in its own way.
You have Political Sciences vs IR (select 1) 200
History of USA is done as one of the history subject is always good 100
P ad is again a good subject (I made a new tread about how to do p ad after 2016 syllabus change, do have a look at it) 100
Criminology is again a good subject 100
socio v punjabi v mass com (select 1)

Now I want you to look at some CSS forum treads and see what other people are advising. Just google 'criminology css forums' and there will be a lot of threads in front of you. Read them and then pick individual subjects

The decision has to be yours, so research thoroughly, and you can change these subjects in future if you don't like them.

xona khan Wednesday, July 24, 2019 08:29 PM

Thank you so much for advising me.

United Pakistan Saturday, July 27, 2019 11:03 AM

I have selected following subjects

>> International Relations
>> History of USA
>> Environmental Sciences

But Confused between

[B]1.[/B] International Law (less Syllabus) [B]vs[/B] Criminology (nice trend)

I have viewed course outline and have interest in both subjects and can prepare them easily [B]just help me pick one considering my combination[/B].


[B]2.[/B]Punjabi (finding its vocabulary difficult) [B]vs[/B] Psychology (lengthy syllabus) [B]vs[/B] Sociology (everyone is opting, lot of competition) [B]vs[/B] Public administration (I know nothing) [B]vs [/B]anthropology (I know nothing)


I'm really confused about my last subject please help me select any subject that can be prepared with reasonable effort and can be done with one book.

anzabb Saturday, July 27, 2019 11:48 AM

[QUOTE=United Pakistan;1094288]I have selected following subjects

>> International Relations
>> History of USA
>> Environmental Sciences

But Confused between

[B]1.[/B] International Law (less Syllabus) [B]vs[/B] Criminology (nice trend)

I have viewed course outline and have interest in both subjects and can prepare them easily [B]just help me pick one considering my combination[/B].


[B]2.[/B]Punjabi (finding its vocabulary difficult) [B]vs[/B] Psychology (lengthy syllabus) [B]vs[/B] Sociology (everyone is opting, lot of competition) [B]vs[/B] Public administration (I know nothing) [B]vs [/B]anthropology (I know nothing)


I'm really confused about my last subject please help me select any subject that can be prepared with reasonable effort and can be done with one book.[/QUOTE]
If you are confused then study chapter 1 of the syllabus of all these subjects and then study something from middle.
Have a look at past papers
then decide
this should be your personal call
You can latter change the subject if you don't like it

takhleeq Wednesday, July 31, 2019 12:59 PM

Hi, Anzabb.

I have read most of your posts and I'd like to let you know that you are doing commendable job helping a lot of aspirants. Kudos to you.

I am also confused about selecting a couple of subjects and decided to ask you.
I have a masters in diplomacy and strategic studies. I wasn't really a bright student so can't say that I have a strong grip but I can say that I have read IR, IL and foreign policy etc. and have a little understanding of them.

But I see that more than half of the candidates opt for IR and IL so there's a lot of competition. and also think that for IR I should have a really good writing expression and I should be able to use all those terminologies and words diplomats use. (correct me if I am wrong)
So I am thinking about switching to Pol. Science and P. Ad.
My other subjects are USA History, Gender Studies and Punjabi. Though I am thinking about Switching Punjabi with anthropology(again trying to go for something with relatively less competition)

I am not sure if I was able to comprehensively elaborate my query but I guess you've gotten the point.
Please share your opinion on this.
Thanks in advance. It means a lot. Really. Since I can't afford an academy, I want to use this forum for all my queries.

anzabb Wednesday, July 31, 2019 04:46 PM

[QUOTE=takhleeq;1094500]Hi, Anzabb.

I have read most of your posts and I'd like to let you know that you are doing commendable job helping a lot of aspirants. Kudos to you.

I am also confused about selecting a couple of subjects and decided to ask you.
I have a masters in diplomacy and strategic studies. I wasn't really a bright student so can't say that I have a strong grip but I can say that I have read IR, IL and foreign policy etc. and have a little understanding of them.

But I see that more than half of the candidates opt for IR and IL so there's a lot of competition. and also think that for IR I should have a really good writing expression and I should be able to use all those terminologies and words diplomats use. (correct me if I am wrong)
So I am thinking about switching to Pol. Science and P. Ad.
My other subjects are USA History, Gender Studies and Punjabi. Though I am thinking about Switching Punjabi with anthropology(again trying to go for something with relatively less competition)

I am not sure if I was able to comprehensively elaborate my query but I guess you've gotten the point.
Please share your opinion on this.
Thanks in advance. It means a lot. Really. Since I can't afford an academy, I want to use this forum for all my queries.[/QUOTE]
Thank you for your appreciation!
I will talk about three things in this post: misconceptions about IR, some basic subject selection tips, and your case

[B]Misconception about IR[/B]
[I]It will help you in Current Affairs and US history covers the history part[/I]: False, it does not help you in CA, in cat CA helps you in all the subjects. Watching news and reading paper will help in every subject, even EDS and Islamiat.
[I]You need to have a lot of prior knowledge [/I] Knowledge can be build with a lot of readings, it depends on how much effort you want to put in
[I]You need good expression and IR language[/I] True, again readings can help
[I]You need a degree in IR[/I] false because people from diverse background do it

[B]basic subject selection tips[/B]
Your background
Subjects that you like
Some of the mainstream subjects
Follow your heart

[B]Your Case[/B] (actual post)
What I get from reading your post is that you don't want to go for subjects with too much competition and you want to play safe. Then you are not very confident on your own abilities based on your past performance. I know this happens with everyone, and we all feel like that we may not be good enough for something because of what we did in Past. However, that does not mean that what we do in future depends on it. To tell you the truth, I feel like that people who pass their 2nd and 3rd attempt don't do it solely based on their academic ability, but the CSS process grooms their personality. Before making a subject selection choice you need a confidence boost!
Just because you were not the brightest student in your university, it doesn't mean that you will be unable to do CSS. Furthermore, If only bright students were to pass CSS then all the gold medalist would have qualified. I know people who were average students, but they passed CSS, but gold medalist from their class were left out. Here come the biggest problem with CSS results, our flawed education system. You see, when people say that what you did before CSS matters, they don't only mean your performance or background, but how you used your brain. So many Doctors and Engineers qualify because they have a habit of studying a lot from FCS/A levels. They are not doing anything CSS specific, like we social sciences students do, but they are constantly using their brain, and mostly outside classes, in entrepreneurship and clubs and societies. The point is that more than the knowledge of a subject, a critical mind and hardworking routine matters
I would also add that don't take CSS as you take your university exams. In conclusion you can do well in IR and Ilaw, even if you did not do well in them in University

Second point: competition
Now it is true that competition can make things hard, but it doesn't make a subject less hard. You still have to fulfill all the requirements of the subject to pass. And competition vary from year to year, 2017 was an year when IR was hit really hard, but after that it has been fairly scoring. Competition can be good as well, as you will find a lot more resources and books on IR than other subjects

[B]What to do?[/B]
First of all, whatever decision you make, it has to be yours. Poli Sci or IR, they will require the same amount of effort because they are making optional subjects more analytical
Trends are not reliable because they vary every year
CSP advice is also unreliable because only FPSC knows whats going on

Best way to make a decision is to see how your brain works. Open past papers and see which questions you are most comfortable in answering. Look at the past papers and the syllabus and see if they fit your mind. I was advice to go for IL and I wanted philosophy, and as an aspirant without much confidence I went for ILaw. Though I love the suject, but I am more of an opinion type of person, and phil would have suited me

So see which subjects and their past papers suit your personality, as css is an exam of your personality!

- Hope this helps

takhleeq Wednesday, July 31, 2019 08:59 PM

[B]Thank you so much[/B] for such a detailed response. I really appreciate that.
I am quiet confident that I can do CSS. I just wanted to take calculated decisions since I am 28 already. This would be my first attempt and I'd only have one attempt left after this one, obviously if I am unable to pass the 2020 exams. That is why I wanted to choose a subject which'll require me relatively less effort. But I got your point and I'll ponder over it.

I have a couple of more questions in my mind so I'll just share those with you and you can reply whenever it suits you. altogether or one by one. I just don't have many people around me who can guide me. That's why I am bugging you.

I was just a little bit concerned because I sometimes feel that I don't have enough time for preparation. I've just started like a week ago. I am doing a 7 hours a day, 5 days a week job. But I am able to allocate minimum 7 hours daily and more on my off days which are two in a week. I'll be taking leaves from 1st January onward. My plan is to cover the syllabus maximum by the mid of November and allocate the last 2 months for mocs and revision.
I have started GSA and it's already consuming a lot of time since I have a social sciences background and I've never studies science, not even in Matric.
As I've read your other posts where you've sharing strategies to cover syllabus and you suggest to read more and more. I have nothing against reading a lot. In fact I want to read as many resources and as many books as possible. But I don't believe I have the time in hand to read 5 different books (although I want to) since it would take almost a month for each subject (as far as I believe). I wish I'd have started preparation in January this year.

So keeping in view my scenario, how would you suggest me to go about covering the syllabus? How many resources I should consult? How much time should I allocate to each subject?

One thing more. I see you stress a lot on reading Dawn news. I am reading newspapers and reading columns since I was like 12,13 years old. I have been reading Dawn for the last two years. I used to read most of the opinions and editorials but again I am unsure about how that can help me since I don't remember what I've read and never made notes of those either. Please guide me about it.

[B]I know I should've been brief. Sorry about that. [/B]

anzabb Wednesday, July 31, 2019 10:06 PM

[B]Reading[/B]
Okay I see, first of all the reading can be converted into listening. You can just open the pdf in the internet explorer and listen to it. You will get comfortable to a robotic voice in a while
There are a lot of book reviews and summaries that can be consulted
If I find any then I will paste them here
You can switch to YouTube lectures as well
[B]Working person[/B]
People who work have a different way to study than those who don't have a job
Most of the advice that I give suits someone who is a fresh graduate
There are a lot of study videos on YT and Study blogs on tumblr that advice on how to study if you are working. Internet is your best friend
YT can be watched at 2x to save time
[B]About reading a bunch of books[/B]
I advice books because this is a personal preference
one way to shorten it is to use google scholar and read from pdfs found there
I personally like books
[B]NewsPaper[/B]
Dawn must be read in order to build analysis and not only knowledge. You will have the analytical ability, now all you need are facts. There are a lot of websites that have brief notes on it like the csstimes

Whatever I advice is based on my personal experience and that is not the only way to so it. A lot of people use the standard books in market and pass the exam, but I prefer quality content.

I am not the best person to advice you on this because I didn't have a job when I was doing CSS, so you must ask someone else. I would suggest making a new tread or looking at CSS Facebook groups. Standard advice can be found on tumblr and youtube (try crash course study skills)

I am so sorry that I can't be much of help for you.

anzabb Wednesday, July 31, 2019 10:09 PM

[QUOTE=takhleeq;1094520][B]Thank you so much[/B] for such a detailed response. I really appreciate that.
I am quiet confident that I can do CSS. I just wanted to take calculated decisions since I am 28 already. This would be my first attempt and I'd only have one attempt left after this one, obviously if I am unable to pass the 2020 exams. That is why I wanted to choose a subject which'll require me relatively less effort. But I got your point and I'll ponder over it.

I have a couple of more questions in my mind so I'll just share those with you and you can reply whenever it suits you. altogether or one by one. I just don't have many people around me who can guide me. That's why I am bugging you.

I was just a little bit concerned because I sometimes feel that I don't have enough time for preparation. I've just started like a week ago. I am doing a 7 hours a day, 5 days a week job. But I am able to allocate minimum 7 hours daily and more on my off days which are two in a week. I'll be taking leaves from 1st January onward. My plan is to cover the syllabus maximum by the mid of November and allocate the last 2 months for mocs and revision.
I have started GSA and it's already consuming a lot of time since I have a social sciences background and I've never studies science, not even in Matric.
As I've read your other posts where you've sharing strategies to cover syllabus and you suggest to read more and more. I have nothing against reading a lot. In fact I want to read as many resources and as many books as possible. But I don't believe I have the time in hand to read 5 different books (although I want to) since it would take almost a month for each subject (as far as I believe). I wish I'd have started preparation in January this year.

So keeping in view my scenario, how would you suggest me to go about covering the syllabus? How many resources I should consult? How much time should I allocate to each subject?

One thing more. I see you stress a lot on reading Dawn news. I am reading newspapers and reading columns since I was like 12,13 years old. I have been reading Dawn for the last two years. I used to read most of the opinions and editorials but again I am unsure about how that can help me since I don't remember what I've read and never made notes of those either. Please guide me about it.

[B]I know I should've been brief. Sorry about that. [/B][/QUOTE]
You don't have to apologize for asking for advice

anzabb Thursday, August 01, 2019 12:20 AM

These threads may help
[url]http://www.cssforum.com.pk/beginners-guide/frequently-asked-questions/113697-how-pass-css-job.html[/url]
[url]http://www.cssforum.com.pk/beginners-guide/frequently-asked-questions/26472-css-advice-preparation-along-job.html[/url]
[url]http://www.cssforum.com.pk/beginners-guide/frequently-asked-questions/115302-css-job.html[/url]

There are a lot of old threads, do have a look at them
Also have a look at this blog [url]https://cssstudy.tumblr.com/[/url]


03:29 PM (GMT +5)

vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.