SSC CGL Mathematics or Quantitative Aptitude
SSC
CGL Tier-1 2014 exam is not far away now. If you really want to score good
marks in this exam, you must follow a proper plan for that. As you all know,
SSC CGL Tier-1 Paper contains 200 Questions each of one mark. Mathematics
Section has 50 Questions in CGL TIER I Exam. Mathematics is not too difficult.
It requires the concept clarity and practice. In SSC-CGL exam, Mathematics is
the part of both Tier I and Tier II.So you need more focus
on Maths.
Stage
|
Questions
|
Negative
Marking
|
Tier
I
|
50
Questions (01 marks each)
|
-
0.25 marks each
|
Tier
II Quantitative aptitude
|
100
Questions (02 marks each)
|
-
0.50 marks each
|
Approach
First see the topics of
Quantitative aptitude in SSC notification, and divide it into topics, and try
to practice one topic a day. Please don’t try to do topic of another chapter
before completing a particular chapter.
Learn all the basic
formulas, learn conceptual clarity and try to solve maximum questions of each topic.
Try to learn short cut
of each topic, otherwise you will not able to solve all question during your
examination quickly.
Always jot down the short cuts so you will not forget them.
Please give at least
one to two hours daily to mathematics.
Try to solve mock
practice paper (all 04 sections) of Tier I on daily basis.
Recommended book Arihant
Fast Track Objective Arithmetic by Rajesh Verma.
- The point is, both books of Arihant Publication (Sarvesh or Rajesh)
are way better than R.S.Agarwal, in terms of content, presentation,
language and coverage, without being too expensive than R.S.Agarwal’s
book.
- And both of them have universal application for almost all of the competitive exams in India (for maths segment).
- My advice, go with either Rajesh Verma or Sarvesh Kumar. Then the question, which one to pick up?
Chapters
and Topics for SSC CGL TIER I Exam
Chapter
|
Topics
|
Strategy
|
Number
System
|
1.
Divisibility & Remainders
2.
LCM and HCF
3.
Unknown numbers from given conditions.
4.
Fractions comparisons.
|
NCERT
Class 7 Chap 2, 9
NCERT
Class 10 Chap 1
Quantitative
aptitude book
|
Basic
Mathematics
|
1.
Simplification (BODMAS)
|
NCERT
Class 8 Chap 1
|
2.
Surds and indices
|
NCERT
Class 8 Chap 12
NCERT
Class 9 Chap 1
|
3.
Roots, squares & Cubes
|
NCERT
Class 8 Chap 6 and 7.
Quant
book & short tricks
|
Algebra
|
1.
Linear equation
|
NCERT
Class 8 Chap 2 and 9.
NCERT
Class 9 Chap 4
NCERT
Class 10 Chap 3.
Quantitative
aptitude book
|
2.
Quadratic equations and
Polynomials
|
NCERT
Class 8 Chap 14
NCERT
Class 9 Chap 2
NCERT
Class 10 Chap 4
Quantitative
aptitude book
|
Average
& Ratio
|
Allegation
& mixture
|
|
Simple
Average
|
Quantitative
aptitude book
|
Ratio
& proportion
|
NCERT
Class 8 Chap 13
|
Partnership
|
Quantitative
aptitude book
|
Time
& Distance
|
1.
Time, speed & distance
2.
Problem on trains
3.
Boat & stream
4.
Time and Work
5.
Pipes and Cisterns
|
To
clear the concept, solve first by using STD formula from your aptitude book,
Then use Short tricks. All question based on these topics can be solved by
trick within few seconds.
|
Geometry
|
1.
Angles, sides, bisectors & circles etc
|
NCERT
Class 9 Chap 6, 7, 8 and 10. Quantitative aptitude book.
|
2.
Mensuration (Area and
Volume)
|
NCERT
Class 8 Chap 3 & 11.
NCERT
Class 9 Chap 9, 12, 13.
NCERT Class 10 Chap 13
|
3.
Trigonometry
|
NCERT
Class 10 Chap 8 and 9
Quantitative
Aptitude book
Our Website Study Material
Notes
|
Percentage
|
(increase,
decrease in consumption, population)
|
NCERT
Class 8 Chap 8
|
Data
interpretation
|
DI
|
Quantitative
Aptitude book & DI notes from our study material section
|
Profit
& Loss
|
1.
Profit & Loss
2.
Discount & Marked Price
3.
SI & CI
|
Quantitative
Aptitude book & Notes from our study material section
|
Miscellaneous
|
1.
Coordinate Geometry
|
Asked in SSC 2012, Can be
solved through formulas given in Quantitative Aptitude book.
|
2. Progression (AP + GP)
|
NCERT
Class 10 Chap 5
Quantitative Aptitude book
|
è Mathematics Class 10 Download
In the SSC exam, you have to face English at two stages
Tier I (prelims) |
50 questions
(other 150 question will come from GK, Maths and Reasoning) |
2 hours |
Tier II (mains)
Paper II |
200 questions |
2 hours |
Topic-wise breakup for SSC-English (tier I and II)
Vocabulary
|
Tier I |
Tier II |
|
2010 |
2011 |
2010 |
2011 |
2010 |
2011 |
Antonym |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
3 |
Synonym/Substitution |
10 |
5 |
10 |
10 |
10 |
15 |
Idioms |
0 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
10 |
Spelling |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
3 |
Fill In Blanks |
0 |
15 |
5 |
30 |
20 |
10 |
Vocab Subtotal |
20 |
35 |
30 |
55 |
45 |
41 |
Grammar
|
Tier I |
Tier II |
|
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
Sentence Correction |
5 |
5 |
5 |
20 |
20 |
20 |
Sentence Improvement |
5 |
5 |
5 |
20 |
20 |
22 |
Direct-Indirect |
5 |
5 |
0 |
25 |
25 |
27 |
Active-Passive |
5 |
0 |
0 |
20 |
20 |
20 |
Grammar Subtotal |
20 |
15 |
10 |
85 |
85 |
89 |
Sentence Arrangement + Comprehension
|
Tier I |
Tier II |
|
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
Sentence Arrangement |
5 |
0 |
0 |
10 |
20 |
20 |
Comprehension |
5 |
0 |
10 |
50 |
50 |
50 |
Subtotal |
10 |
0 |
10 |
60 |
70 |
70 |
Overall: SSC-English (Tier 1 And 2)
|
|
Tier I |
Tier II |
|
|
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
Vocabulary
|
- Synonyms
- Antonyms
- Fill in the blanks (single statement)
- Fill in the blank (huge paragraph)
- Spelling mistake
- Idioms and phrases
- One word substitution (similar to synonyms)
|
20 |
35 |
30 |
55 |
45 |
41 |
Grammar
|
- Sentence improvement
- sentence correction
- Active passive
- Direct-indirect
|
20 |
15 |
10 |
85 |
85 |
89 |
Comprehension
|
- Comprehension
- Sentence Arrangement
|
10 |
0 |
10 |
60 |
70 |
70 |
Total |
Grand Total |
50 |
50 |
50 |
200 |
200 |
200 |
- The SSC exams, the English questions usually come in the multiple of
“fives” e.g. 5 question on synonyms, then 5 on antonyms and so on.
(tier 1)
- Similarly in tier-ii, 10 questions on fill in the blanks, 20 questions on active passive and so on.
- Please do not live in overconfidence that “SSC is a “pappu” exam and I’m a master of English. so I don’t need to prepare anything for vocabulary or grammar.“
- If you observe the previous SSC papers particularly the tier-II
papers of English, the vocabulary portion is not “pappu” at times, they
ask meaning of words that are not used in the day to day English.
- Similarly, a lot of things that we say and write in English in our
day-to-day life, are not grammatically correct. So you may not be able
to tick the right choice in sentence correct/ improvement question.
First of all, get a fullscape notebook / diary. Divide it into two parts
- Grammar
- Vocabulary. (last 50 pages)
Vocabulary?
Vocabulary is of critical importance in SSC exam because of following reasons
- There are direct questions on synonyms, antonyms, idioms and phrases.
- You can read the passage faster, if your vocabulary is good, else you’ll have to pause and think.
- In comprehension passages, some questions are in the format of “what is the meaning of XYZ word in the sentence”
Apart from SSC, if you’re planning to appear for CAPF , LIC or PSU
exams – they usually have a descriptive paper (précis, letter writing,
essay etc.)
- If you’re planning for UPSC, or State PSC, both have compulsory
English paper during Mains. Again (précis, letter writing, essay etc.)
- So, you’ll have to write English essay someday and without good vocabulary you can’t write a decent essay.
How to improve vocabulary?
- There is no dearth of ready-made books in the market for “vocabulary”.
- Any Tom Dick or Harry can download a list of synonyms, antonyms, idioms and phrases from Google search and publish a book.
- But such books are useless because unfamiliar words don’t stay long-term memory.
Vocab: Basics
|
- Most of the “so-called” books on English vocabulary, written by
Indian authors, and merely rephrasing the concept of Norman Lewis’s book
“Word Power made easy”+ copy pasting some synonyms-antonym list from
google search.
- My advice: Use this book called Word Power made easy by
-
- Norman Lewis
-
- This book does not merely contain meaning of words but also helps you “guestimate” answers and probable meanings of unfamiliar words.
- Because Norman Lewis explains how English vocabulary has evolved from certain roots. He has also explained the spelling rules.
- Once you’re selected in some exam, gift this book to your siblings,
friends or cousin. Really helpful for everyone, irrespective whether
he/she is appearing in some competitive exam / not.
|
How-to approach Norman Lewis?
From outside, the book looks very thick and heavy just like Manorama
yearbook. But actually this book is written in a very lucid, easy,
reader friendly language. You can read it like a storybook after-dinner.
Structure of the book
Basics of vocabulary
|
- This is subdivided into About 40 sessions (mini-chapters).
- Try to finish 3-4 sessions per day. Complete all the exercises given at the end of each session.
|
Appendix
|
- In the appendix, he has given meaning of all the words you learned in above sessions.
- I suggest you go through this list at least three times.
- Why? Because while going through old papers of SSC, I realized that
sometimes they’ve directly lifted words from this book in synonyms
question!
|
Vocabulary: Advanced
- Download free software called “WordWeb”: http://wordweb.info/free/
- It is also available for android phones, tablets etc. for free (links on the same site).
- Keep a habit of reading in English on daily basis- be it English-newspaper, magazine or some web-article.
- While reading such things, whenever you come across any difficult
word- note down in your diary, along with the sentence in which it
appeared. (please keep in mind that absolute words do not stay long-term
memory. You have to connect them with a sentence or context.)
- Then lookup for its meaning in the Wordweb software, and write down the meaning back in your diary/notebook.
- Repeat this exercise, until you’re selected in some exam.
This pretty concludes the approach for Vocabulary.
Moving to the next topic:
English Grammar: Approach
In the SSC exam, you have to face English grammar in following areas
- Sentence correction
- Sentence improvement.
- Active passive
- direct indirect speech
Approaching Grammar
Task #1: Active Passive (voice) and Direct-Indirect (speech)
- This is no-excuse topic. Because it relies on a set of simple rules, almost like math formulas.
- And usually Tier I has 10 questions on Voice+speech
- and tier-II has almost 40-45 questions on these two topics alone.
- Understand the grammar rules and practice maximum questions.
- In your “diary” note down any special/odd rules you come across- including example sentences.
Task #2: Sentence Correction+Improvement
To master sentence correction, you’ve to master two subtopics:
- Grammar rules
- Phrasal verbs
Grammar Rules
- First of all you need to know the grammar rules. But you don’t need to know all grammar rules!
- Because in competitive exam, sentence correction relies on certain specific mistakes only.
For example: The topic “verb” has lot of theory and classifications.
But for “sentence correction”, it boils down to very few rules for example
- Either, Neither, none, each and every is singular.
Wrong |
Each of the soldiers are disciplined |
Right |
Each of the soldiers is disciplined. |
Your task = first go through your grammar book, and note down such
rules with example statements, in your note book. Revise these rules
often (along with example sentences).
Phrasal Verbs
- Grammar rules are like maths. Universal valid.
- But Phrasal verbs are different game altogether. You need to know memorize the correct usage- case to case basis. For example:
Correct phrasal verb |
Wrong Usage |
Dispose of= sell. |
He has decided to dispose off his property. |
Dispose to= willing, interested. |
He is disposed in discussing that business proposition. |
- Both statements are wrong because phrasal verbs are incorrectly used.
- Many a times, candidates know the grammar rules very well, but they
fail to detect the error in sentence because they’ve not prepared the
phrasal verbs.
- Standard English has truckload of phrasal verbs. But you should at
least know the top/common 200 of them. (can be goggled and also
available in various grammar books).
- You next task: revise the list often and write down the very confusing ones into your diary: with example sentence.
Once this is done, try to solve as many practice questions as you can.
Comprehension + Sentence Arrangement
- Just one word: Practice.
- The best source for practice= old papers of SSC, IBPS.
Recommended Book for English Grammar
|
- There is no dearth of books on in English-grammar in the market.
- Some people might even advise you to use
-
- “Wren and Martin”
-
- etc. but such books are written from board exams/ academic point of
view. And for the competitive exams, we don’t need to study everything
of English grammar, we just need a set of rules and practice questions.
- If you already have some IBPS Manual/ some English grammar book (R.S.Agarwal, A.P.Bhardwaj) etc. use it.
- If you don’t have any book, I suggest you go for
- Objective general English by SP Bakshi (Arihant Publication).
- He has given direct “rules” and example-sentences from competitive
exam point of view. =makes it easy to handle sentence correction.
- Plus, the book also contains good list of phrasal verbs, idioms and vocabulary.
- While most English grammar books cost for around Rs.300, SP Bakshi
is half that price. (Around 150) and yet coverage is same, including
number of pages. And it has Universal application for all exams: IBPS,
LIC, PSU, CDS etc.
|
Note: Arihant publication has released multiple
books on English grammar and two of them have similar sounding names. So
please donot mixup.
|
Author |
Pages (approx.) |
Comment |
General English for All Competitive Examinations by S.C.Gupta |
S.C.Gupta |
370 |
Not recommended because it contains mostly practice tests and very few rules on grammar= not comprehensive enough. |
Objective general English by SP Bakshi. |
S.P.Bakshi |
730 |
This is the recommended book. |