11-04-2017, 09:28 AM
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093/2016
(Page : 1)
Maximum : 100 marks
Time for Dictation : 5 minutes Time for transcription : 1 hour
Instructions:
1.The given matter should be dictated at the rate of 80 words per minute to the candidates loudly and distinctly and only once.
2.Speed should be regulated at every quarter of a minute.
3.Before commencement at the dictation, the candidate should be asked to take down the matter in shorthand and transcribe into longhand in ink
In the first place you are studying for some purpose. Perhaps it is solely to pass an examination or a / series of examinations. You may be a student in an institution or may be working on your own. If you ii arc attending to educational institution or taking a correspondence course, you are being helped by teachers. It is important in III the first place for a student to understand what a teacher can do for him. The teacher cannot get you (1) through your examination if you do not do any work for yourself. You have to attend to him whether he / is talking to you by lecturing or giving private tuition. Therefore, the first thing you have to do is to (f take note carefully of everything that he says. It is impossible to stop a teacher to ask questions. The least HI you can do is to remember those things you have found difficult and to make up your mind in some (2) way or other, either by asking questions or looking the matter up in books.
It is not sufficient just to / listen to the teacher to take a careful note of what he says, and then try to learn the material // later. A Student gets more out of his teachers, the more work he is prepared to do entirely on his Hf own. In the first place he needs to think about what his teacher has said. A student has to put (3) some questions which he feels necessary and then try to obtain answers from the teacher. In addition the students reading / should be related to the lessons or lectures that he hears so that his reading reinforces what he learns orally // from his teacher. An ideal student is one who has already read carefully the subject with which his teacher is III dealing. He can then listen attentively und take particular note of these points that have not come before him earlier. (4) What all this amounts to is that the student should fully engage himself with his subject. A basic student is / a student without any assistance other than his own efforts on the subject he is studying. He works at these If and masters them. This is what study really should be and everything else that may be obtained from lessons. The U! lectures from teachers are additions to the basic equipment at the student disposal. (5)