Civil Service Examinations




1920
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
No. 69

(5.) The principal vernacular language of the
province to which the candidate is
assigned .. .. .. .. 400
Optional [not more than one of the following
subjects]—
(1.) Hindu and Muhammadan law .. .. 450
†(2.) Sanskrit .. .. .. .. 400
†(3.) Arabic .. .. .. .. 400
(4.) Persian .. .. .. .. 400
(5.) Chinese (for candidates assigned to the
Province of Burma only) .. .. 400

In this examination, as in the open competition, the merit
of the candidates examined will be estimated by marks
(which will be subject to deductions in the same way as the
marks assigned at the open competition), and the number
set opposite to each subject denotes the greatest number of
marks that can be obtained in respect of it. The examination will be conducted on paper and vivâ voce, as may be
deemed necessary. This examination will be held at the
close of the year of probation, and will be called the “final
examination.”

If any candidate is prevented by sickness or any other
adequate cause from attending such examination, the Commissioners may, with the concurrence of the Secretary of
State for India in Council, allow him to appear at the
final examination to be held in the following year, or at a
special examination.

  1. The selected candidates will also be tested during
    their probation as to their proficiency in riding. The examinations in riding will be held as follows:—

(1.) Shortly after the result of the open competitive
examination has been declared, or at such time
or times as the Commissioners may appoint
during the course of the probationary year.

(2.) Again, at the time of the final examination, candidates who may fully satisfy the Commissioners of
their ability to ride well and to perform journeys
on horseback shall receive a certificate which
shall entitle them to be credited with 200 or 100
marks, according to the degree of proficiency
displayed, to be added to their marks in the final
examination.

(3.) Candidates who fail to obtain this certificate, but
who gain a certificate of minimum proficiency in
riding, will be allowed to proceed to India, but
will be subjected on their arrival to such further
tests in riding as may be prescribed by their
Government, and shall receive no increase to their
initial salary until they have passed such tests to
the satisfaction of that Government. A candidate who fails at the end of the year of probation
to gain at least the certificate of minimum proficiency in riding will be liable to have his name
removed from the list of selected candidates.

  1. The selected candidates who, on examination, shall
    be found to have a competent knowledge of the subjects
    specified in Regulation 9, and who shall have satisfied the
    Civil Service Commissioners of their eligibility in respect
    of nationality, age, health, character, conduct during the
    period of probation, and ability to ride, shall be certified by
    the said Commissioners to be entitled to be appointed to
    the Civil Service of India, provided they shall comply with
    the regulations in force at the time for that service.

  2. Persons desirous to be admitted as candidates must
    apply on forms which may be obtained from “The Secretary, Civil Service Commission, London, W.,” at any time
    after the 1st December in the year previous to that in which
    the examination is to be held. The forms must be returned
    so as to be received at the office of the Civil Service Commissioners on or before the 1st July (or, if that date should fall
    upon a Sunday or public holiday, then on or before the first
    day thereafter on which their office is open) in the year in
    which the examination is to be held.

The Civil Service Commissioners are authorised by the
Secretary of State for India in Council to make the following announcements:—

(1.) Selected candidates will be allotted to the various provinces upon a consideration of all the circumstances, including their own wishes; but the requirements of the public
service will rank before every other consideration.

(2.) An allowance amounting to £100 will be given to all
candidates who pass their probation at one of the universities or colleges which have been approved by the Secretary of State—viz., the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge,
Dublin, Glasgow, Edinburgh, St. Andrew’s, and Aberdeen;
Victoria University, Manchester; University College, London; and King’s College, London: provided such candidates
shall have passed the final examination to the satisfaction
of the Civil Service Commissioners, and shall in the opinion
of the Secretary of State have conducted themselves well,
and complied with such rules as may be laid down for
the guidance of selected candidates. The whole probation
must ordinarily be passed at the same institution. Migration
will not be permitted except for special reasons approved by
the Secretary of State.

(3.) The allowance of £100 will not be paid to any selected
candidate until he has been certified by the Civil Service
Commissioners to be entitled to be appointed to the Civil
Service of India; and every certified candidate must,
before receiving his allowance, give a written undertaking to
refund the amount in the event of his failing to proceed to
India.

(4.) All candidates obtaining certificates will be also required to enter into covenants by which, amongst other
things, they will bind themselves to make such payments
as under the rules and regulations for the time being in force
they may be required to make towards their own pensions or
for the pensions of their families. The stamps payable on
these covenants amount to £1.

(5.) The seniority in the Civil Service of India of the
selected candidates will be determined according to the
order in which they stand on the list resulting from the
combined marks of the open competitive and final examinations.

(6.) Selected candidates will be required to report their
arrival in India within such period after the grant of their
certificate of qualification as the Secretary of State may in
each case direct.

(7.) Candidates rejected at the final examination held in
any year will in no case be allowed to present themselves
for re-examination.

N.B.—A manua of rules and regulations applicable to
members of the covenanted Civil Service of India has been
compiled by permission of the Government of India, and
may now be procured either from Messrs. A. Constable and
Co., 2, Whitehall Gardens, S.W., or from Mr. E. A. Arnold,
37, Bedford Street, Covent Garden. Price, 2s. 6d.

The Commissioners have been requested by the Secretary
of State for India to draw the attention of selected candidates
to the prefatory note attached to this manual, as it is considered important that it should be clearly understood that
this compilation is not to be regarded in any other light
than that of a collection, made for facility of reference, of
certain information and rules, that it is by no means exhaustive, and that it is liable to such modifications as may
from time to time be sanctioned by competent authority.

CIVIL SERVICE OF INDIA; CLERKSHIPS (CLASS I.) IN THE
HOME CIVIL SERVICE; AND EASTERN CADETSIPS.

Syllabus showing the Extent of the Examination in certain
Subjects.

English Composition.—An essay to be written on one of
several subjects specified by the Civil Service Commissioners
on their examination paper.

English Language and Literature.—The examination will
be in two parts. In the one the candidates will be expected
to show a general acquaintance with the course of English
literature as represented (mainly) by the following writers
in verse and prose between the reign of Edward III. and
the accession of Queen Victoria :—Verse: Chaucer, Langland, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, Dryden, Pope, Gray,
Collins, Johnson, Goldsmith, Crabbe, Cowper, Campbell,
Wordsworth, Scott, Byron, Coleridge, Shelley, Keats. Prose:
Bacon, Sir Thomas Browne, Milton, Cowley, Bunyan, Dryden, Swift, Defoe, Addison, Johnson, Burke, Scott, Macaulay
(essays and biographies).

A minute knowledge of the works of these authors will not
be looked for in this part of the examination, which will,
however, test how far the candidates have studied the chief
productions of the greatest English writers in themselves,
and are acquainted with the leading characteristics of
their thought and style, and with the place which each
of them occupies in the history of English literature.
Candidates will also be expected to show that they have
studied in these authors the history of the English language
in respect of its vocabulary, syntax, and prosody.

The other part of the examination will relate to one of the
periods named below, which will follow each other year by
year in the order indicated.

*The principal vernacular language prescribed for each province
to which candidates are assigned is as follows:—
For the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh the Punjab, and
the Central Provinces—Hindustani
For Burma—Burmese
For Bombay—Marathi.
For Madras—Tamil or Telugu (at the option of the candidate).
For the Lower Provinces of Bengal—Hindustani or Bengali (at
the option of the candidate).

In Hindustani the candidate will be required to be acquainted with
both the Persian and the Nagari character; and in the case of the
last two provinces mentioned above, a candidate whose vernacular
language is either of the languages shown against his province
must offer the other for examination.

† These subjects may not be offered by any candidate who has
offered them at the open competition.*



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VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1903, No 69





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🎓 Civil Service of India; Clerkships (Class I.) in the Home Civil Service; and Eastern Cadetships (continued from previous page)

🎓 Education, Culture & Science
1 September 1903
Civil Service, Examinations, India, Clerkships, Eastern Cadetships, Regulations, Education Department, Syllabus, English Literature, Vernacular Languages
  • Civil Service Commissioners
  • Secretary of State for India in Council