Today’s Editorial/Columns/Opinions
- A surge in radical governments, the hope of democracy GS II (For Offline Students: Tomorrow’s Peer Learning Discussion Topic)
- Pyrrhic peace GS II
- Murder most foul GS II
- Recasting insolvency resolution GS III (For Offline Students: Tomorrow’s Peer Learning Discussion Topic)
Other Articles from Today’s Paper
- Poor demand hits investments by private sector in Q3 GS III
- How is TRAI and the govt. combating spam? GS III
- What did the ILO report state about international migrants? GS III
- The impact of H-1B visas on the tech industry in U.S. GS II & III
- Cylinder blast triggers fire at Maha Kumbh, 1 injured GS II
- India’s democracy has proven doubters wrong, says Modi GS II
- ‘Modi-Trump meet on Jaishankar’s 5-point agenda GS II
- Nine Navies hold joint drills in strategic straits between Indian Ocean and the Pacific GS III
- Drone survey of land in over 3 lakh villages completed GS III
- ‘India to work with EU on developing modern tech’ GS III
- Gaza truce takes hold with handover of first hostages GS II
Note
If you are a beginner in reading, prioritise articles from the start. Do not read for more than one hour; it is perfectly fine to read only one article per day in the initial months. Try to learn some vocabulary (3 to 5 words as discussed in the mentorship class), and then gradually increase your speed. Focus on quality over quantity; speed will naturally improve over time. For example, if you read only one or two articles per day for the first six months (180 days), you will cover 180 to 360 articles with quality and revisions. This number is sufficient to grasp the basics thoroughly. You will still have the remaining six months of the year, which will be ample time to increase your speed and cover more topics. So, be patient, avoid following the crowd, and adhere to the guidance provided in the class.

