Last-Moment Tips (Essay + Comprehension Only)
Because there is no letter now, your focus should be confined to:
- Essay (≈15 marks)
- Reading passage + questions (Comprehension) (≈10 marks)
Here’s how you should re-adjust your strategy:
1. Understand the New Pattern & Its Weightage
- Descriptive paper = 2 tasks: Essay + Comprehension.
- Total time = 30 minutes for both tasks combined.
- The essay is typically the major chunk (higher marks) while comprehension carries fewer marks.
- The evaluation is done (at least partially) by an automated / computer system, which checks for grammar, spelling, relevance, word count etc.
Hence, your priority is precision, clarity, and relevance — not trying to overdo variety or extra parts.
2. Do’s & Don’ts (Refined for This Pattern)
Here’s what you must zero in on tonight and tomorrow morning:
| ✅ DO | ❌ DON’T | Why / How It Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Read the comprehension passage carefully (twice) before answering | Don’t jump into answers before fully digesting the passage | Missing a nuance or misinterpreting a line can cost you marks |
| For essay: plan 2–3 body points + intro + conclusion in 1 minute | Don’t just start flinging ideas | A plan gives you control and prevents repetition |
| In essay, directly address the topic — do not wander | Don’t add irrelevant content | Irrelevance gets penalised even if grammar is good (automated check) |
| Use simple, correct English | Don’t overuse complex words you’re unsure of | Misused vocabulary is worse than ordinary but correct language |
| Keep sentences short to medium | Don’t write very long, convoluted sentences | Easier to maintain correctness and reader clarity |
| In comprehension answers, paraphrase in your own words (not copy) | Don’t quote entire sentences of the passage | Examiners prefer your understanding, not direct lifts |
| Respect the word limit (for essay) | Don’t overshoot too much or go extremely short | Overshoot risks truncation or penalty; too short = underdevelopment |
| Leave 2–3 minutes for proofreading both the essay and your comprehension answers | Don’t submit without a review | You’ll catch small errors—missing articles, typos, verb mismatch |
| Time management: allocate enough time for both tasks | Don’t spend too much on one and rush the other | Balanced attempt wins over perfect essay + zero comprehension |
3. Suggested Time Split (for 30 Minutes)
Here’s a strategy to distribute time smartly:
| Task | Suggested Time |
|---|---|
| Read comprehension passage & understand | 2–3 minutes |
| Answer comprehension questions | ~7–8 minutes |
| Plan essay (structure + points) | ~2 minutes |
| Write essay | ~13–14 minutes |
| Proofread both (essay + comprehension) | ~2–3 minutes |
If the comprehension is longer or heavier, adjust a bit (for example, spend 8 minutes on it, 12 on essay). But always leave buffer for checking.
4. What to Emphasize in Essay
- Strong introduction: define the issue / context in 2–3 lines
- Balanced body paragraphs: each with a main point + example / fact
- Examples / data: Use what you know (govt scheme names, recent events) only if you are confident
- Transitions: Use linking words like “however”, “moreover”, “on the other hand” — but don’t overdo
- Conclusion: summarise key ideas + provide a forward-looking line or recommendation
5. Comprehension Tips
- Read entire passage fully first; then reread quickly scanning for main ideas
- For each question, think of the line / paragraph from which it arises
- Answer in your own words (about 30–50 words depending on marks)
- Be concise; don’t drag your answer
- If asked for “central idea”, “author’s tone”, “summary”, etc., be precise and direct
