When Financial Constraints Shouldn't Limit Constitutional Aspirations VAASTAVIKATHA's Commitment to Democratizing Civil Services Preparation
"We believe talent exists everywhere in Telugu states, but opportunity doesn't reach everywhere equally. This programme exists to bridge that gap — because your family's economic situation should never determine your ability to serve the nation."
Civil services preparation in India has traditionally been accessible only to those who can afford expensive coaching in metropolitan cities. A family invests ₹3-5 lakhs on average for quality UPSC preparation — an impossible amount for most middle-class Telugu families with dreams bigger than their bank balances.
THE HARSH REALITY:
OUR PROMISE: This programme provides Delhi-level coaching quality completely free of cost, ensuring that financial circumstances don't limit constitutional aspirations. We're not offering charity — we're offering opportunity. We're not doing social service — we're doing nation service by ensuring the brightest minds can prepare for civil services, regardless of economic background.
WHAT MAKES THIS DIFFERENT: This isn't just free study material dumped online. This is personal mentorship from Munesh Sir and Priyanka Madam — the same quality that paying students receive. The same attention, the same care, the same commitment to your success.
VAASTAVIKATHA’s Civil Services Programme provides complete UPSC preparation support — at zero cost. No registration fee. No hidden expenses. No fine print. Just pure opportunity.
Build conceptual clarity and essay-writing proficiency.
Focus on objective accuracy, test-taking strategy, and revision.
Analytical answer-writing, ethics, and contemporary issues.
Personalised mock interviews and board simulation for successful candidates.
— Munesh Kumar
| Paper | Type | Marks | Duration | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paper I: General Studies | Objective (MCQ) | 200 | 90 minutes | Tests conceptual understanding |
| Paper II: Analytical Writing | Essay/Descriptive | 50 | 30 minutes | Evaluates expression & analysis |
| TOTAL | — | 250 | 2 hours | — |
Tests conceptual understanding
Evaluates expression & analysis
—
Format: 100 questions × 2 marks each. Negative marking: 1/3 mark for wrong answers. Preparation tip: NCERT 6-12 cover ~70% of syllabus.
Format: One essay (500-600 words)
Evaluation criteria:
• Content relevance: 20 marks
• Analytical ability: 15 marks
• Language & expression: 10 marks
• Structure & presentation: 5 marks
Expected topics: Social issues, current affairs, ethical dilemmas, motivational themes.
You can choose ANY ONE center irrespective of your district of residence. Centers subject to minimum 25 candidates requirement.
“"This entrance examination is NOT designed to eliminate candidates. It's designed to identify those most likely to benefit from our programme and succeed in UPSC. We're looking for potential, determination, and basic preparedness — not perfection." ”
| Event | Date | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Notification Release | February 1, 2025 | — |
| Online Applications Open | February 5, 2025 | 10:00 AM |
| Last Date for Applications | March 5, 2025 | 11:59 PM |
| Application Correction Window | March 6-8, 2025 | — |
| Admit Card Download | March 15, 2025 | From 10:00 AM |
| Entrance Examination | March 23, 2025 | 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM |
| Answer Key Release | March 24, 2025 | 6:00 PM |
| Objection Submission Deadline | March 27, 2025 | 11:59 PM |
| Results Declaration | April 5, 2025 | 4:00 PM |
| Document Verification | April 10-12, 2025 | As per schedule |
| Final List Publication | April 15, 2025 | 6:00 PM |
| Programme Commencement | April 21, 2025 | 9:00 AM |
"We're giving you a valuable opportunity. We expect commitment, not perfection. We expect effort, not immediate results. We expect you to take this seriously — because 49 other deserving candidates didn't get this seat. Make it count." — Munesh & Priyanka Kumar
— VAASTAVIKATHA Selection Committee
"This FREE programme represents more than just free coaching. It represents our belief that constitutional service shouldn't be limited by economic privilege. It represents our commitment to ensuring that every talented young person from Telugu states gets a fair chance at their UPSC dreams. We're offering 50 seats. We wish we could offer 5,000. But we can't compromise on quality, attention, or care. So 50 families will get this opportunity this year. Will yours be one of them? The question isn't whether you're good enough. The question is whether you're willing to work hard enough. Because we've seen students from modest backgrounds outperform students from privileged backgrounds — when given equal opportunity and proper guidance. This is that opportunity. This is that guidance. Don't let it pass."