Introduction: The Real Reason Most Aspirants Lose Marks
Many IBPS PO aspirants believe that descriptive paper is about:
- Good English
- Fancy vocabulary
- Lengthy answers
Yet, even after writing “good” answers, they score poorly.
The reason is simple:
They write what they think is good, not what the examiner is actually looking for.
Understanding the examiner’s expectation is the most important step to improving your descriptive score.
The Core Truth: IBPS Does Not Reward Writing — It Rewards Thinking
IBPS descriptive paper (Essay + Comprehension) is designed to test:
- Clarity of thought
- Logical structure
- Relevance of content
- Ability to analyse
- Precision in expression
The examiner is not impressed by:
- Complex words
- Long paragraphs
- Memorised content
The examiner is evaluating:
“Can this candidate think clearly and communicate effectively?”
What IBPS Examiner Actually Wants
1. Clarity of Thought (Most Important Factor)
Your answer must reflect:
- Clear understanding of the topic
- No confusion or contradiction
- Direct and meaningful expression
What Clarity Looks Like
- Simple and direct sentences
- One idea at a time
- Logical flow
What Lack of Clarity Looks Like
- Vague statements
- Repetition
- Over-complicated sentences
2. Proper Structure (Non-Negotiable)
Every high-scoring answer is structured.
For Essay
- Introduction → Body → Conclusion
- Each paragraph = one idea
For RC Answers
- Direct answer
- No unnecessary explanation
- Logical sequencing
Why Structure Matters
A structured answer:
- Is easy to evaluate
- Shows organised thinking
- Increases readability
3. Relevance of Content
Every line you write must:
- Address the question
- Add value
What Examiner Rejects
- Generic content
- Off-topic writing
- Unnecessary expansion
What Examiner Rewards
- Direct answers
- Focused content
- Meaningful points
4. Analytical Ability (Game Changer)
This is where most aspirants fail.
IBPS expects you to:
- Think beyond surface level
- Analyse issues
- Connect ideas
Example
Instead of writing:
- “AI is important in banking”
Write:
- How AI improves efficiency
- Its risks
- Its future impact
In RC
- Explain
- Compare
- Interpret
Not just repeat.
5. Precision in Expression
You are given only 30 minutes.
So your writing must be:
- Concise
- To the point
- Free from unnecessary words
What Precision Means
- Say more in fewer words
- Avoid repetition
- Avoid long explanations
6. Logical Flow
Your answer should feel like a connected thought process.
How to Maintain Flow
- Use proper paragraphing
- Maintain sequence
- Connect ideas logically
What IBPS Examiner Does NOT Want
1. Fancy Vocabulary
- Simple English is preferred
- Clarity matters more than complexity
2. Memorised Content
- Easily identifiable
- Often irrelevant
- Reduces marks
3. Length Without Value
- Writing more ≠ scoring more
- Quality matters more than quantity
The Hidden Scoring Logic
The examiner is subconsciously checking:
- Is the answer easy to read?
- Is the thought process clear?
- Is the content relevant?
- Does the candidate understand the topic?
If yes → High marks
If no → Average or low marks
How Top Scorers Align with Examiner Expectation
Top aspirants:
- Think before writing
- Maintain structure
- Focus on clarity
- Avoid unnecessary content
- Write with purpose
🔴 Reality Check: Are You Writing What Examiner Wants?
Ask yourself:
- Do your answers have a clear structure every time?
- Are your points actually relevant or just written to fill space?
- Can someone easily understand your answer in one reading?
- Have you ever seen how an examiner would score your answer?
Most aspirants assume they are writing well.
Very few actually match examiner expectations.
⚡ The Gap That Stops Improvement
The biggest problem is:
You never see your answer from examiner’s perspective.
You:
- Write answers
- Feel satisfied
- Move on
But you don’t know:
- Where you lost marks
- What needs improvement
- How your answer was actually evaluated
🚀 Understand How Your Answers Are Evaluated
To improve, you need to:
- Write under exam conditions
- Get your answers evaluated
- See your mistakes clearly
- Align with real scoring criteria
Even one properly evaluated mock can show:
- Structural gaps
- Clarity issues
- Content problems
Most serious aspirants realise their actual level only after seeing detailed feedback.
Conclusion
IBPS descriptive paper is not about writing impressive answers.
It is about writing effective answers.
The examiner is looking for:
- Clarity
- Structure
- Relevance
- Analysis
- Precision
If your answers reflect these qualities, scoring high becomes achievable.
Final Insight
The difference between average and high score is not English.
It is:
Understanding what the examiner wants—and writing exactly that.
Once you align with this, your descriptive score will change significantly.
