Introduction
Competitive
exams are meant for real-men and women. This is no country for crybabies, kids,
college teens. So first of all, you must get rid of the
following “loser” mindsets:
1. Yaar this maths is so
hard, I can’t do it.
2. I’m not from
science/engineering background hence this is not my cup of tea.
3. I’m poor in maths and I
cannot improve.
4. Thik hai, dekh lenge.
(alright, I’ll see).
- Maths is not difficult. All it requires is concept clarity + lot of practice. In SSC-CGL exam, you’ve to face Mathematics at two stages
Stage
|
Maths-Questions
|
Penalty
|
Tier-I (Prelims)
|
50 Qs
|
Negative 0.25
|
Tier-II (Mains) Paper
I: Arithmetical Ability
|
100 Qs worth 200 marks
|
Negative 0.50
|
- The Approach for Maths, stands on two pillars.
Pillars
|
How?
|
1. Conceptual clarity
|
1. NCERTs (Free
download links @bottom)
2. For some topics,
directly Quantitative aptitude books.
|
2. Lot of practice
|
·
From Quantitative aptitude books.
·
There are lot of books in market, the
question is, which one to refer? It is explained at the bottom of this
article.
|
#1:Getting the conceptual clarity
- We’ll divide Maths or Quantitative Aptitude, into topics and further into subtopics.Your task is to cover one topic at a time, first get conceptual-clarity and then solve maximum questions at home.
- Whenever you learn any shortcut technique, you note it down in your diary.
- Similarly, whenever you make any mistake while solving sums, you also note that down in your diary. Night before the exam, you review that diary of mistakes. (why do this? Because it is the “Art of Aptitude”
Topic
|
Subtopics
|
How to approach
|
Number theory
|
1. Divisibility,
remainders
2. LCM and HCF
3. Unknown numbers from
given conditiofor
4. Fractions-comparisions.
|
·
NCERT Class 7 Chap 2, 9 (fraction)
·
NCERT Class 10 Chap 1 (divisibility)
·
Finally your Quantitative aptitude book.
|
Basic Maths
|
1. Simplification (BODMAS)
|
·
NCERT Class 8 Chap 1
|
2. Surds, indices
|
·
NCERT Class 8 Chap 12
·
Then NCERT Class 9 Chap 1
|
|
3. Roots, squares, Cubes
|
·
Basics from NCERT Class 8 Chap 6 and 7.
|
|
Algebra
|
1. Linear equation
|
·
“Mother’s age was x and daughters age..”
·
“3 mangos and 5 bananas purchased for…”
·
X+1/2x+3=3/8 then find X.
·
^This type of stuff. Just practice and
you’ll get a hang of it.
·
Basics given in NCERT Class 8 Chap 2 and 9.
·
Then NCERT Class 9 Chap 4
·
Lastly NCERT Class 10 Chap 3.
|
2. Quadratic equations,
Polynomials
|
·
Factorization and roots. Heavily asked in
Tier-II.
·
NCERT Class 8 Chap 14
·
And then NCERT Class 9 Chap 2
·
Lastly NCERT Class 10 Chap 4
|
|
Avg and Ratios
|
1. Wine-Water mixture
(Alligations)
|
Can
be solved without formula. Go through
<<Link>>
|
2. Simple Average
|
Lolz
|
|
3. Ratio-Proportion-variations
|
For
ratio-proportion NCERT Class 8 Chap 13.
|
|
4. Partnership
|
||
STD
|
1. Time speed distance
2. Trains, platforms
3. Boats-streams
4. Time and Work
5. Pipes and Cisterns
|
All
of them can be solved with just one Universal STD formula. Explained in
<<link>>
|
Geometry
|
1. Angles, sides,
bisectors, circles etc
|
·
NCERT Class 9 Chap 6, 7, 8 and 10.
Quantitative aptitude book.
|
2. Mensuration (area and
volume).
|
·
Basics explained in NCERT Class 8 Chap 3,
11.
·
Then NCERT Class 9 Chap 9, 12, 13.
·
Lastly Lastly NCERT Class 10 Chap 13
|
|
3. Trigonometry
|
Understand
basics from NCERT Class 10 Chap 8 and 9. Then exam-oriented concepts from
your Quantitative Aptitude book.
|
|
%
|
·
Basic % (increase, decrease in consumption,
population)
|
Also
do NCERT Class 8 Chap 8.
|
·
Data-interpretation cases.
|
Mere
extention of % concept. Just practice.
For long division, use this approximation method: <<link>>
|
|
Profit,
loss, discount, marked price.
|
<<link>>
|
|
Simple
and compound interest rate
|
||
PCP
|
1. Permutation
2. Combination
3. Probability
|
·
Not asked as such.
·
But Sometimes a question or two comes in the
“Reasoning” portion of Tier-I. Hence not much attention necessary.
·
But again, they too can be solved without
mugging up formulas: go through various articles on
·
<<link>>
|
Misc.
|
1. Coordinate Geometry
|
·
Lately SSC has started asking 1-2 question
in each of Tier I and II. But they can be solved by merely plugging numbers
in the readymade formulas given in your Quantitative Aptitude book.
|
2. Progression:
Arithmetic+ Geometry
|
·
Again, rarely asked in SSC. Sometimes a question
or two comes in the “Reasoning” portion of Tier-I.
·
Basically you just have to plug in the
values in formulas. Basics of Arithmetic progression explained in NCERT Class
10 Chap 5.
|
|
3. Logerithms
|
Not
asked.
|
Breakup: SSC-CGL Tier I (2013, 2014, 2015)
Topic
|
2013
|
2014
|
2015
|
Ratio+Partnership
|
3
|
3
|
1
|
number theory
|
6
|
5
|
2
|
Avg+alligation
|
3
|
3
|
2
|
TSD
|
6
|
5
|
2
|
Misc.
|
3
|
0
|
2
|
basic math
|
11
|
11
|
5
|
algebra
|
6
|
0
|
5
|
DI
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
%
|
6
|
14
|
5
|
Trigonometry
|
0
|
0
|
9
|
Geometry
|
3
|
5
|
12
|
Total
|
50
|
50
|
50
|
The
2012’s Tier-I paper, is “trend-breaker”. Because
1. The conventional
questions from ratio-proportion, basic maths, time-speed-work are asked for
namesake only.
2. Otherwise, Out of 50
Maths questions in tier-I, almost 30 questions are from just Geometry+Trig+Percentage
application.
3. Earlier, they used to ask
mostly area-volume-perimeter type questions from Geometry segment. You just had
to plug-in values into the formulas and get the answer.
4. But This 2012’s paper has
mostly theory based geometry (angle, bisector, tangent, inequality of triangles
etc.)
5. Similarly the difficulty
level of algebra, number theory based questions is bit raised.
Breakup: SSC-CGL Tier II (2013, 2014, 2015)
Type
|
2013
|
2014
|
2015
|
basic math
|
11
|
4
|
3
|
Misc.
|
2
|
2
|
3
|
number theory
|
8
|
7
|
5
|
DI
|
10
|
20
|
5
|
Ratio+Partnership
|
6
|
4
|
6
|
Avg+alligation
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
TSD
|
7
|
12
|
7
|
Trigonometry
|
0
|
4
|
8
|
Algebra
|
10
|
13
|
10
|
%
|
27
|
18
|
19
|
Geometry
|
14
|
10
|
27
|
Total
|
100
|
100
|
100
|
- Here too, Geometry+Trigonometry have been given emphasis like never before.
- Almost 65% of the paper is made up of Geometry, Trig, Percentage and Algebra (and in that too, mostly Quadratic equations.)
#2: Practice
- Merely knowing the concepts or formulas won’t help. Because unless you practice different variety of questions, you won’t become proficient in applying those concepts flawlessly in the actual-exam.
- Second, despite knowing concept and formulas, people make silly mistakes either in calculation or in pluging the values.
- Third reason- Tier I has 200 questions in 120 limits. =not even 2 minutes per question. Plus, questions reasoning and comprehension might take more than 5 minutes! Therefore speed is essential. Since there is negative marking system, accuracy also matters.
- So it is beyond doubt that you have to practice excimer number of questions at home.
- The question is where to get the practice? Which book should be used for SSC exam?
Choice of Quantitative Aptitude Book?
- In all competitive exams, “uncertainity factor” is involved. Despite your best preparation, you might lose the success-train by 2-3 marks.
- Therefore you must never put all eggs in one basket.
- While you are preparing for SSC, you should also keep open mind and apply for other competitive exams, such as IBPS, ACIO, ONGC, Railways, LIC, CDS, Coast Guard etc. (Depending on your career-taste).
- Publication houses will come up with new books for each and every of ^these exams, but we have neither the time nor the money to buy a new book for every new exam.
- Such readymade books are only skimmed down version of original topicbooks. For example, if there is SSC-FCI exam, or ACIO exam, these people will combine a few topics of GK, maths, reasoning and english. And present you a book.
- Problem= you don’t get comprehensive understanding or coverage. Besides, given the population of India, competition level is always high, irrespective of exam. So half-hearted preparations with readymade “condensed” books don’t help much.Almost all of these exams follow same structure:
1. General awareness
2. Maths
3. Reasoning (Verbal,
Non-Verbal)
4. English vocabularly,
grammar and comprehension.
- How do they differ from each other?= number of questions, difficulty level and inclusion / exclusion of particular subtopics.
- So when you’re picking up books for the first time, you should choose the books, that have universal usefulness for similar exams. That way your time, effort and money will be saved.
Books for Maths/Quantitative Aptitude
DONOT use Quantitative Aptitude by R.S.Agarwal for SSC-CGL.Problems with RS Agarwal’s Math book:
1. The way SSC-CGL question
pattern is transforming, R.S.Agarwal’s book on Quantitative aptitude, is just
not ‘upto the mark’ to match this changing environment.
2. Its chapter on
Trigonometry (Height and Distance) is simply insufficient to handle SSC-CGL
level bombarding.
3. Similarly coverage of
algebra, quadratic equations and number theory is either absent or just for
namesake.
4. Geometry coverage is
mostly confined to area-volume-perimeter (=mensuration). But SSC-CGL is moving
towards Non-mensuration geometry (angle, bisectors, midpoint, circles,
triangles etc.)
5. The printing and
presentation is very “ cluttered”. He has written the book assuming that
you were already good at maths from school level.
6. If you’re already good at
basic concepts, use this book for practicing and improving your speed, else
don’t bother, there are better books in market.
Pricing factor
Author
|
|
R.S.Agarwal
|
|
Sarvesh Kumar
|
|
Rajesh Verma
|
- The point is, both books of Arihant Publication (Sarvesh or Rajesh) are way better than R.S.Agarwal, in terms of content, presentation, language and coverage, without being too expensive than R.S.Agarwal’s book.
- And both of them have universal application for almost all of the competitive exams in India (for maths segment).
- My advice, go with Kiren Publication.

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