IBPS PO 2025: Descriptive Paper Strategy for Top Scores

IBPS PO 2025: Descriptive Paper Strategy for Top Scores

Scoring high in the Descriptive English section is no longer optional—it’s essential. With 25 marks up for grabs and a tight 30-minute window for Essay + Comprehension, you must be strategic, precise, and practiced. Below is a battle-tested strategy to help aspirants aim for top scores.


1. Understand the Terrain First

  • The descriptive paper now comprises Essay + Comprehension (Letter writing has been dropped).
  • You will type your responses on a computer. Speed, accuracy, and editing comfort all matter.
  • Essay usually expects 250–300 words.
  • The comprehension will test your ability to understand a passage, infer, summarise, interpret tone, and answer focused questions.
  • The evaluation considers relevance, structure, grammar, spelling, word count, and paraphrasing (especially in comprehension).

Knowing this, your strategy must align with what is scored.


2. Pre-Exam Strategy: What You Must Build Before the Day

Skill / AssetWhy It MattersHow to Build
Typing fluency + comfortYou’ll lose precious time fumbling on keys or fixing small errorsPractice essays & passages on a computer daily; aim for ~35–45 WPM with minimal errors
Topic bank across themesThe essay topic might come from economy, tech, social, environment or policyPrepare 20–30 essay topics (with points & examples) across those areas
Reading & comprehension muscleHelps you finish the RC quickly + write crisp answersDaily reading of editorials, reports; summarise and answer inference questions
Error log & iterative correctionKeeps you from repeating known mistakesMaintain a log of grammar mistakes, weak transitions, off-topic sentences. In each new write-up, consciously avoid those
Timed full mocksBrings all skills together under exam pressureTake 2–3 full 30-minute mocks per week; mimic test environment

3. 30-Minute Game Plan: Time-Wise Execution

This plan should become instinctive in your mocks so that on exam day your fingers and mind “auto-pilot”.

Time SlotWhat to DoKey Focus / Notes
0:00 – 1:00Read prompt & passage; decide which to start firstSometimes comprehension seems easier—go with your strength
1:00 – 2:30Outline essay: thesis, 2–3 key points, conclusionKeeps your writing focused
2:30 – 14:30Write essay (first 3–4 paragraphs)Keep paragraphs short, transitions clear
14:30 – 18:30Write remaining part of essay (solutions / conclusion)Ensure your essay has closure
18:30 – 26:30Solve comprehension: read carefully, answer questions in your own wordsBe precise, quote minimally if required
26:30 – 30:00Final proofreading & cleanupCheck grammar, spelling, remove redundancies, confirm word count

If you fall behind, don’t panic. Drop less critical embellishments and ensure core content + correctness.


4. Essay Strategy: Content + Presentation

A. Choose wisely

  • If 2 or more essay options are given, pick the one on which you have clearer points and examples.
  • Don’t pick something exotic unless you’re very confident.

B. Structure matters

A 5-paragraph structure works well:

  1. Introduction (define + thesis)
  2. Body 1 (first pillar, with example or logic)
  3. Body 2 (second pillar or counterargument + rebuttal)
  4. Solutions / Way forward (actionable steps)
  5. Conclusion (summarise + forward outlook)

C. Use examples & clarity

  • Limit examples to 1–2, but explain their relevance.
  • Use simple, correct English over flashy vocabulary.
  • Avoid dangling sentences, overlong constructions.

D. Language control

  • Be wary of grammar errors, article usage, subject-verb agreement.
  • Use transition words (However, Moreover, In contrast, Therefore, Consequently).
  • If you mention data, use approximate or rounded figures (unless you know with certainty).

5. Comprehension Strategy: Precision & Paraphrasing

  • Read the passage fully first, then again underlined for key statements.
  • Identify the central idea, tone, supporting arguments, and author’s stance.
  • For each question, answer with your own words. Avoid copying large chunks from passage.
  • Be concise: 2–4 lines per question (unless longer is demanded).
  • Use linking words in your answers: “The author suggests…”, “In contrast…”, “Because…”, “Therefore…”
  • For summary questions, combine main ideas into a logical paragraph—don’t add your own opinions.

6. Proofreading & Final Polish

In the last 2–3 minutes, run a mini-check:

  • Did I stay close to the word limit in essay?
  • Are there any grammatical slips, spelling errors, or subject-verb mismatches?
  • Do paragraphs flow logically?
  • Any redundant or irrelevant sentences that can be dropped?
  • Did I answer exactly what was asked in comprehension and not deviate?

Make quick cuts or corrections—not full rewrites.


7. Common Mistakes to Avoid (so you don’t lose marks)

  • Diverting from the topic or writing off-topic sentences
  • Using vocabulary or terms you don’t fully control
  • Copy-pasting sentences in comprehension
  • Writing extremely long paragraphs with no structure
  • Skipping final proofreading or rushing through it
  • Ignoring time splits and overshooting one task
  • Repeating the same point just to fill the word count
  • Introducing unsupported or wrong data just for show