General Comprehension (UPSC) (Part-V)

Total Questions: 50

1. Which of the following is the most crucial and logical inference that can be made from the above passage? [2018-11]

Cooking with biomass and coal in India is now recognized to cause major health problems, with women and children in poor populations facing the greatest risk. There are more than 10 lakh premature deaths each year from household air pollution due to polluting cooking fuels with another 1.5 lakh due to their contribution to general outdoor air pollution in the country.

Although the fraction of the Indian population using clean cooking fuels, such as LPG natural gas and electricity, is slowly rising, the number using polluting solid fuels as their primary cooking fuel has remained static for nearly 30 years at about 70 crore.

Correct Answer: (d) Access to cooking gas can reduce premature deaths in poor households.
Solution:The passage states the fact that household air pollution is hazardous to health of the people living in poor areas to such an extent that more than 10 lakh premature deaths occur every year due to it So, it would be appropriate to say that the access to cooking gas can reduce premature deaths in poor households.

2. Which one of the following is the most important implication of the passage? [2018-11]

Scientific knowledge has its dangers but so has every great thing.  Over and beyond the dangers with which it threatens the present, it opens up as nothing else can, the vision of a possible happy world; a world without poverty, without war, with little illness. Science, whatever unpleasant consequences it may have by the way, is in its very nature a liberator.

Correct Answer: (a) A happy world is a dream of science.
Solution:Scientific knowledge opens up the vision of a possible happy world. So, a happy world is a dream of science can be the most important implication of the passage. As far as science poses a threat, is not mentioned anywhere in the passage. Options (c) and (d) are also irrelevant.

3. Which one of the following is the most important implication of the passage? [2018-11]

The Arctic's vast reserves of fossil fuel, fish and minerals are now accessible for a longer period in a year. But unlike Antarctica, which is protected from exploitation by the Antarctic Treaty framed during the Cold War and is not subject to territorial claims by any country.

There is no legal regime protecting the Arctic from industrialization, especially at a time when the world craves for more and more resources. The distinct possibility of ice-free summer has prompted countries with Arctic coastline to scramble for great chunks of the melting ocean.

Correct Answer: (b) Melting of summer ice in the Arctic leads to changes in the geopolitics.
Solution:It is mentioned in the last sentence of the passage that the distinct possibility of ice-free summer has prompted countries with Arctic coastline to rush to get larger part of the Arctic which thereby leads to changes in the geopolitics.

4. What is the crucial message conveyed by the above passage? [2018-11]

Being a member of the WTO, India is bound by the agreements that have been signed and ratified by its members, including itself. According to Article 6 of the Agriculture Agreement, providing minimum support prices for agricultural products is considered distorting and is subject to limits.

The subsidy arising from 'minimal supports' cannot exceed 10 per cent of the value of agricultural production for developing countries. PDS in India entails minimum support prices and public stockholding of food grains. It is possible that, in some years, the subsidy to producers will exceed 10 per cent of the value of agricultural production.

Correct Answer: (c) For India, food security collides with trade.
Solution:The message that that appears to have been conveyed by the passage is that for India, food security collides with trade. Other options like India should revise its PDS and India should not be a member of WTO or India provides food security to its poor are off-topic.

5. With reference to the above passage, the following assumptions have been made: [2018-11]

1. India continues to be a developing country essentially due to its faulty education system.

2. Today's learners need to acquire new-age skill-sets.

3. A good number of Indians go to some developed countries for education because the educational systems there are a perfect reflection of the societies in which they function.

Which of the above assumptions is/are valid?

India's educational system is modelled on the mass education system that developed in the 19th century in Europe and later spread around the world. The goal of the system is to condition children as 'good' citizens and productive workers. This suited the industrial age that needed the constant supply of a compliant workforce with a narrow set of capabilities.

Our educational institutes resemble factories with bells, uniforms and batch-processing of learners, designed to get learners to conform. But, from an economic point of view, the environment today is very different. It is a complex, volatile and globally interconnected world.

Correct Answer: (b) 2 only
Solution:As per the last sentence of the passage, today's educational system is very different i.e. it is a complex, volatile and globally interconnected world; thus, in order to meet these, today's learners need to acquire new-age skill-sets. Assumptions 1 and 3 cannot be made from the passage.

6. What is the most logical and rational inference that can be made from the above passage? [2018-11]

The practice of dieting has become an epidemic; everyone is looking out for a way to attain that perfect body. We are all different with respect to our ethnicity, genetics, family history, gender, age, physical and mental and spiritual health status, lifestyles and preferences. Thereby we also differ in what foods we tolerate or are sensitive to.

So we really cannot reduce so many complexities into one diet or diet book. This explains the failure of diets across the world in curbing obesity. Unless the reasons for weight gain are well understood and addressed and unless habits are changed permanently, no diet is likely to succeed.

Correct Answer: (d) There is no perfect diet or one solution for obesity.
Solution:The passage conveys that individuals differ in many respects and 'we cannot reduce so many complexities into one copybook diet plan. So, there is no perfect solution. Options (a), (b) and (c) mention only one aspect each of the discussion and none qualifies as a rational inference.

7. Which of the following is the most logical, rational and crucial message given by the passage? [2018-11]

Monoculture carries great risks. A single disease or pest can wipe out swathes of the world's food production, an alarming prospect given that its growing and wealthier population will eat 70% more by 2050. The risks are magnified by the changing climate.

As the planet warms and monsoon rains intensify, farmlands in Asia will flood. North America will suffer more intense droughts, and crop diseases will spread to new latitudes.

Correct Answer: (a) Preserving crop genetic diversity is an insurance against the effects of climate change.
Solution:Crop genetic diversification consists in raising a variety of crops depending on suitability to seasonal variations of rainfall and temperatures; and reduces susceptibility to natural disasters like flooding and windstorm, etc., in case of monoculture.

Therefore, preserving crop diversity is an insurance against the effects of climate change. Sentence one declares that monoculture carries risk; so, (a) follows.

8. According to the passage, which of the following is/are of paramount importance under the Right to education? [2018-11]

1. Sending of children to school by all parents.

2. Provision of adequate physical infrastructure in schools.

3. Curricular reforms for developing child-friendly learning system.

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

It is no longer enough for us to talk about providing for universal access to education. Making available schooling facilities is an essential prerequisite, but is insufficient to ensure that all children attend school and participate in the learning process. The school may be there, but children may not attend or they may drop out after a few months.

Through school and social mapping, we must address the entire gamut of social, economic, cultural and indeed linguistic and pedagogic issues, factors that prevent children from weaker sections and disadvantaged groups, as also girls, from regularly attending and complementing elementary education. The focus must be on the poorest and most vulnerable since these groups are the most disempowered and at the greatest risk of violation or denial of their right to education.

The right to education goes beyond free and compulsory education to include quality education for all. Quality is an integral part of the right to education. If the education process lacks quality, children are being denied their right. The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act lays down that the curriculum should provide for learning through activities, exploration and discovery.

This places an obligation on us to change our perception of children as passive receivers of knowledge, and to move beyond the convention of using textbooks as the basis of examinations. The teaching-learning process must become stress-free; and a massive programme for curricular reform should be initiated to provide for a child-friendly learning system, that is more relevant and empowering.

Teacher accountability systems and processes must ensure that children are learning, and that their right to learn in a child-friendly environment is not violated. Testing and assessment systems must be reexamined and redesigned to ensure that these do not force children to struggle between school and tuition centres, and bypass childhood.

Correct Answer: (c) 3 only
Solution:The opening line of the passage says that 'universal access to education' is no longer enough. So, I is not of paramount importance. The second sentence says that 'facilities' or infrastructure is a prerequisite but 'insufficient' to fulfil the purpose of education So, 2 is not of paramount importance. 3 is mentioned in the second paragraph as being of paramount importance.

9. With reference to the above passage, the following assumptions have been made: [2018-11]

1. The Right to Education guarantees teachers' accountability for the learning process of children.

2. The Right to Education guarantees 100% enrolment of children in the schools.

3. The Right to Education intends to take full advantage of demographic dividend.

Which of the above assumptions is/are valid?

It is no longer enough for us to talk about providing for universal access to education. Making available schooling facilities is an essential prerequisite, but is insufficient to ensure that all children attend school and participate in the learning process. The school may be there, but children may not attend or they may drop out after a few months.

Through school and social mapping, we must address the entire gamut of social, economic, cultural and indeed linguistic and pedagogic issues, factors that prevent children from weaker sections and disadvantaged groups, as also girls, from regularly attending and complementing elementary education. The focus must be on the poorest and most vulnerable since these groups are the most disempowered and at the greatest risk of violation or denial of their right to education.

The right to education goes beyond free and compulsory education to include quality education for all. Quality is an integral part of the right to education. If the education process lacks quality, children are being denied their right. The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act lays down that the curriculum should provide for learning through activities, exploration and discovery.

This places an obligation on us to change our perception of children as passive receivers of knowledge, and to move beyond the convention of using textbooks as the basis of examinations. The teaching-learning process must become stress-free; and a massive programme for curricular reform should be initiated to provide for a child-friendly learning system, that is more relevant and empowering.

Teacher accountability systems and processes must ensure that children are learning, and that their right to learn in a child-friendly environment is not violated. Testing and assessment systems must be reexamined and redesigned to ensure that these do not force children to struggle between school and tuition centres, and bypass childhood.

Correct Answer: (a) 1 only
Solution:According to the passage teachers' accountability systems and processes must ensure that children are learning, and that their right to learn in a child-friendly environment is not violated. Hence, other assumptions like the Right to Education guarantees 100% enrolment of children in the schools and the Right to Education intends to take full advantage of demographic dividend are not valid.

10. According to the passage, which one of the following is critical in bringing quality in education? [2018-11]

It is no longer enough for us to talk about providing for universal access to education. Making available schooling facilities is an essential prerequisite, but is insufficient to ensure that all children attend school and participate in the learning process. The school may be there, but children may not attend or they may drop out after a few months.

Through school and social mapping, we must address the entire gamut of social, economic, cultural and indeed linguistic and pedagogic issues, factors that prevent children from weaker sections and disadvantaged groups, as also girls, from regularly attending and complementing elementary education. The focus must be on the poorest and most vulnerable since these groups are the most disempowered and at the greatest risk of violation or denial of their right to education.

The right to education goes beyond free and compulsory education to include quality education for all. Quality is an integral part of the right to education. If the education process lacks quality, children are being denied their right. The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act lays down that the curriculum should provide for learning through activities, exploration and discovery.

This places an obligation on us to change our perception of children as passive receivers of knowledge, and to move beyond the convention of using textbooks as the basis of examinations. The teaching-learning process must become stress-free; and a massive programme for curricular reform should be initiated to provide for a child-friendly learning system, that is more relevant and empowering.

Teacher accountability systems and processes must ensure that children are learning, and that their right to learn in a child-friendly environment is not violated. Testing and assessment systems must be reexamined and redesigned to ensure that these do not force children to struggle between school and tuition centres, and bypass childhood.

Correct Answer: (d) Inculcating learning through activities and discovery
Solution:It is clearly mentioned in the first half of the second paragraph of the passage.