What the Descriptive Paper Typically Tests
The paper usually contains Essay, Précis, and Reading Comprehension. Exact word limits and marks are announced in the paper. The evaluator looks for: clarity of thought, structure, accuracy, coverage of the prompt, grammar & vocabulary control, and adherence to word/time limits.
Section A: ESSAY — Do’s & Don’ts (with examples)
DO’s
- Decode the prompt fully. Identify the theme, scope, and task (explain/argue/recommend).
- Prompt type cues: “Discuss/Examine” (balanced view), “Argue/Justify” (take a position), “Recommend/Way forward” (solutions).
- Open with a one-sentence thesis that previews your 2–3 core points.
- Template: “This essay argues that X, because A, B, and C, and proposes Y as the way forward.”
- Use a clean 4-paragraph structure:
- P1: Hook + Context + Thesis
- P2: Point 1 (evidence/example)
- P3: Point 2 (evidence/example)
- P4: Counterpoint + Way Forward + Closure
- Anchor to financial/regulatory context where relevant: pensions, NPS, PFRDA’s role, financial inclusion, risk management, governance, digital public infrastructure.
- Write within ±5–7% of word limit. Trim adjectives, keep sentences 15–22 words on average.
- Demonstrate balance: acknowledge trade-offs, then conclude firmly.
- Use signposting: “First… Next… However… Therefore…”
DON’Ts
- Don’t mis-scope. If asked about “pension inclusion for unorganised workers”, don’t drift into generic financial literacy for students.
- Don’t data-dump without context or source type (“official estimates suggest…” is safer than random numbers).
- Don’t write chatty or colloquial English. No emojis, slang, or bullet-only essays.
- Don’t end abruptly. Always tie back to the thesis with a forward-looking close.
- Don’t contradict the prompt. If it asks for policy options, give them—don’t only diagnose problems.
Mini Example (Bad vs Better)
Prompt (illustrative): “Strengthening old-age income security in India: challenges and solutions.”
- Weak Opening:
“Old age is tough. India is a developing country with many problems. This essay discusses some issues and gives ideas.”
Problems: Vague, no thesis, no scope. - Strong Opening:
“India’s old-age income security faces coverage gaps in the unorganised sector, low contribution density, and longevity risks; the essay argues for targeted incentives, portable, low-friction digital enrolment, and annuity design improvements to build resilient retirement incomes.”
Why it works: Clear thesis, 3 concrete challenges, 3 solution pillars.
Section B: PRÉCIS — Do’s & Don’ts (with examples)
DO’s
- Target length asked in the paper (often ~⅓ of the passage).
- Capture the central idea + main arguments only. Omit anecdotes, examples, and decorative phrases unless crucial.
- Use your own words (indirect speech, neutral tone), preserve the author’s intent.
- Maintain logical order of the original passage.
- Create a brief, accurate title after you finish.
DON’Ts
- Don’t insert opinions/evaluations or new facts.
- Don’t copy sentences verbatim—paraphrase concisely.
- Don’t distort the tone. If the source is analytical, your précis must also be analytical.
- Don’t under- or overshoot the length by more than ~5–7%.
Illustrative Précis Example (compressed)
Source idea (hypothetical, regulatory-style): Passage explains why portable, low-cost pension products with digital KYC and auto-debit can raise participation among gig workers, but warns about volatility in contributions and behavioural inertia, proposing nudges and matching incentives.
Possible Title: Portable Micro-Pensions for the Gig Economy
Précis (sample):
“The passage argues that portable, low-fee pensions integrated with digital KYC and auto-debits can expand retirement savings among gig workers. However, irregular incomes and behavioural frictions depress contribution regularity. To sustain participation, the author suggests well-timed nudges, simple defaults, and modest matching incentives.”
Section C: READING COMPREHENSION — Do’s & Don’ts (with examples)
DO’s
- Skim first (30–45 sec) for structure (intro, argument blocks, conclusion).
- Underline/mentally tag keywords tied to each question stem (names, years, cause-effect terms).
- Answer in your words—concise, to the point, aligned with the passage.
- Quote only if the question says “as per the passage” and the phrase is pivotal.
- Use the passage’s logic. If it’s not in the passage, don’t assume it.
DON’Ts
- Don’t lift long lines as your answer—evaluators penalise verbatim copying.
- Don’t over-infer. RC is an evidence game—stick to what’s stated/implied.
- Don’t ignore directive words: “explain,” “list,” “contrast,” “why/how.”
- Don’t write essays for 1–2 mark sub-questions. Brevity wins.
Micro Example (stylised)
Q: Why does the author favour default auto-debit for small savers?
Good: “Because automatic, low-friction deductions raise contribution regularity by bypassing procrastination.”
Weak: “Auto-debit is modern and helpful.” (Vague, no link to behaviour.)
Grammar & Usage: High-Yield Fixes for the Final Day
- Subject–Verb Agreement:
- Wrong: “Policies aims at inclusion.”
- Right: “Policies aim at inclusion.”
- Articles (a/an/the):
- Prefer “the PFRDA”, “the NPS” when referring to the institution/program.
- Modifiers near the noun:
- Wrong: “Designed for gig workers, regulators must ensure portability.”
- Right: “Regulators must ensure portability for products designed for gig workers.”
- Parallelism:
- Wrong: “The scheme seeks to enrol, awareness, and to retain.”
- Right: “The scheme seeks to enrol, to raise awareness, and to retain contributors.”
- Concise prepositions:
- Replace “in order to” → “to”; “due to the fact that” → “because.”
- Active voice where possible:
- “The Authority introduced guidelines” (clearer than “guidelines were introduced”).
- Comma splices:
- Wrong: “Coverage is low, incentives can help.”
- Right: “Coverage is low, and incentives can help.” / “Coverage is low; incentives can help.”
- Tense consistency:
- Keep analysis in present; history/past decisions in past.
- Precise verbs over adjectives:
- Use “incentivise, calibrate, diversify, hedge, monitor” instead of “good/bad/very useful.”
- Avoid clichés & inflated diction:
- Cut “paradigm shift,” “game-changer,” unless you justify them.
What Examiners Penalise (From Real Evaluation Patterns Across Regulator Exams)
- Missing the task word (e.g., giving pros/cons when asked for recommendations).
- Word-limit breaches and rambling conclusions.
- Verbatim lifting in RC answers.
- Précis that adds opinions or omits the central thesis.
- Grammar slips that obscure meaning.
- Overuse of bullets in essays without narrative flow.
(Note: Specific PFRDA prompts vary year to year; examples above are exam-style and reflect what evaluators commonly reward/penalise in comparable regulatory descriptive papers.)
Fast Templates You Can Use Tomorrow
1) Essay Opening (choose one)
- Problem–Solution: “India’s [problem] persists due to [cause1/cause2]; this essay proposes [solution1/solution2] anchored in [principle/regulatory goal].”
- Balanced View: “While [X] promises [benefit], concerns around [risk] remain; a calibrated approach—[A/B/C]—is essential.”
2) Paragraph Core (PEEL)
- Point → Evidence/Example → Explanation → Link back to the thesis.
3) Conclusion Formula
- Synthesis: “Therefore, [restate stance]; with [2–3 crisp measures], India can [measurable outcome] in [domain].”
4) Précis Steps (1-minute recall)
- Read → Mark main idea & pillars → Draft in your words → Count & trim → Add title last.
5) RC Answer Frame
- Stem term + passage idea → direct, short sentence (10–16 words).
Presentation & Time Management
Suggested split (adapt to actual paper):
- Essay: ~40–45% time (planning 3–4 min, writing, 2–3 min edit)
- Précis: ~30–35% time (mapping 2 min, drafting, 1–2 min count/trim)
- RC: ~20–25% time (skim, answer to the point)
Formatting tips
- Paragraphs of 5–7 lines; leave a one-line gap between paragraphs.
- Underline sparingly (if allowed) for headings like Way Forward, not every key term.
- Keep a 2–3 minute final proofread for grammar and word-limit.
Quick “Do–Don’t” Tables
Essay
- Do: Thesis first line | 2–3 pillars | Balanced & evidence-led | Tight close
- Don’t: Vague openings | Wandering mid-sections | Data dumps | No conclusion
Précis
- Do: ⅓ length | Neutral tone | Own words | Title at end
- Don’t: Opinions | Quotes | Re-ordering logic | Length violations
RC
- Do: Use passage logic | Key words | Crisp answers
- Don’t: Copy-paste | Over-inference | Long, unfocused responses
Last-Minute Checklist (Print/Save)
- ☐ Read every prompt twice; ring the task word.
- ☐ Write a one-line thesis before paragraphing the essay.
- ☐ Keep sentences clear; average 15–22 words.
- ☐ Watch subject–verb agreement & articles.
- ☐ Précis = central idea + pillars, your words, right length, title last.
- ☐ RC = answer only what is asked, from the passage.
- ☐ Leave 2–3 minutes to proofread and trim to limit.
- ☐ Stay calm; structure beats ornamentation.
Final Note
If you follow the task-first, structure-always, grammar-clean approach above, you’ll avoid the most common traps and present exactly what evaluators want to reward. All the best for PFRDA Grade A 2025 – Mains!
