If you are preparing for NABARD Grade A Phase 2, then Descriptive English is not a side paper. It is a decision paper. And within this paper, the essay decides the direction of your final score. Every year, aspirants underestimate this section. Not because it is difficult, but because it feels unpredictable. That unpredictability is exactly why understanding expected essay themes matters. Not to guess questions, but to prepare with structure. In this blog, we’ll not only discuss the structure of an effective essay but also the topics you need to practice to fetch maximum marks in essay writing.
The Descriptive English paper in Phase 2 is common across all streams. Whether you belong to General, IT, or any specialist post, this paper remains the same.
Here is what the paper looks like:
The questions are:
Among these, the essay alone carries 40 marks. That is nearly half the paper.
Precis and letter writing are format-driven. Once you learn the structure, they become manageable. The essay does not work that way. It tests clarity of thought, balance, and your ability to connect ideas logically.
Essay topics in NABARD are not random. They follow a pattern, but that pattern is broad.
The examiner is not testing vocabulary. They are testing:
Because the syllabus is indicative and not exhaustive, essay preparation cannot be narrow. It must be theme-based.
And that brings us to trends.
If you look at the last three years, a clear picture emerges.
This tells us one thing clearly:
You are expected to think like a development professional, not like a newspaper columnist.
Instead of listing random topics, it makes sense to group them by themes. NABARD does not think in silos. Neither should you.
This remains the most dominant area.
Expected focus is not on farming techniques, but on systems and resilience.
Likely directions:
These essays demand balance. Extreme optimism or extreme criticism both fail. NABARD looks for realism.
This is where NABARD’s institutional role is reflected directly in essay choices.
Here are some of the most important expected angles:
Here, examples matter more than definitions. One relevant scheme explained well beats five named poorly.
Many rural policies fail not at design, but at execution. Essays are increasingly probing this gap.
Probable themes:
These essays reward structure. Clear subheadings in your mind, even if not written explicitly.
Technology essays are no longer celebratory. They are cautious.
Expected discussion points:
Avoid technical jargon. Focus on outcomes, access, and governance.
These topics connect rural India with global forces.
Likely areas:
Here, the international context should support your argument, not dominate it.
A few topics usually come from wider current developments.
High-probability areas:
These essays test maturity. Emotional language weakens them.
Preparing 30–35 essays word by word is inefficient. Preparing themes is efficient.
Here is a better approach:
Remember, essays are not memorised answers. They are rehearsed thinking.
In NABARD Grade A Phase 2, Descriptive English is not about English alone. It is about how clearly you see rural India.
The essay section rewards candidates who think patiently, write sparingly, and argue logically. If you prepare themes instead of topics, and structure instead of stories, you give yourself a real advantage.
At this stage, preparation is not about adding more content.
It is about sharpening what you already know and expressing it with control.
That is where marks are decided.
Grab NABARD Grade A Online Revision Course
Join our unique Telegram group immediately to skyrocket your preparation for Regulatory exams via expert guidance, top tips, perfect feedback, and much more!
[ Click Here to join the PracticeMock Telegram Group! ]
| Related Blogs: | |
| NABARD Grade A Syllabus | NABARD Grade A Cut Off |
| NABARD Grade A Salary | NABARD Grade A Preparation Strategy |
| NABARD Grade A Documents Required | NABARD Grade A Handwritten Declaration |
The essay carries 40 marks out of 100, making it the most important part of the Descriptive English paper and a key factor in the final merit.
Based on recent trends, the expected word limit is around 500 words. Candidates should practice writing clear, structured essays within this limit.
Topics are mainly based on agriculture, rural development, climate change, rural finance, governance, technology, and important current affairs with policy relevance.
No. Essays require a mix of static understanding and current relevance. Relying only on current affairs without conceptual clarity often leads to shallow answers.
Prepare theme-wise. Build clear arguments, examples, and conclusions for each theme, and practice writing full essays to improve flow, balance, and time management.
Understand all types of banking licences in India—Universal Banks, SFBs, Payments Banks, RRBs & more.…
Scared of the vast SSC CGL General Awareness syllabus? Discover the best books to score…
Read The Hindu Editorial Vocabulary to know difficult words with its meanings. We provide monthly…
Preparing for banking exams in 2026? Discover the top 10 most important banking reforms from…
Read the latest current affairs today for banking, SSC & govt exams. Stay updated with…
RBI’s anti-fraud proposals decoded: delays, kill switch, and risks of blunt regulation in India’s fast-growing…