The Computer Knowledge section of the NABARD Grade A Phase 1 exam doesn’t demand genius-level computing. It doesn’t bring merit marks, and yet it contributes to deciding, quietly but firmly, whether you land above the cutoff or fall right below it. And, so, this section deserves clarity, not guesswork. Therefore, in this blog, we’ll turn our attention towards the exact nature of questions NABARD Grade A asks on this subject. And more importantly, what these questions tell us about the mindset behind the section. Everything we’ll discuss here will come from past papers (especially 2023), plus general patterns observed from 2021–2024.
The Computer Knowledge section in NABARD Grade A Phase 1 is simple but decisive. It checks awareness, not deep theory. Questions come from shortcuts, full forms, internet safety, microprocessors, and memory hierarchy.
These areas repeat every year, and so, mastering them means easy marks. Here are the types of questions you must prepare yourself to face:
One thing NABARD never gets bored of is asking full forms—the direct kind. No logic, no elimination, no thinking gymnastics.
Example from past papers: “What is the full form of VFX?” Simple answer: Visual Effects.
These are binary questions:
You know it, great.
You don’t, move on.
Why this matters: Full forms are pure recall. And NABARD loves abbreviations from:
Just maintain a clean, minimal list and revise it. Don’t overcommit your time here.
If there is one zone where NABARD shows pure consistency, it is keyboard shortcuts. And not the CBSE-level ones, NABARD asks system shortcuts you actually use subconsciously.
Examples: “Shortcut to lock the screen?”
Answer: Windows + L
“Shortcut to toggle between open applications?”
Answer: Alt + Tab
Why this matters:
Shortcut questions are the easiest marks in the entire section, but only if you revise a curated list. Guessing shortcuts is dangerous; knowing them is effortless.
This is where many aspirants slip because they underestimate the topic. NABARD frequently asks about:
Example from 2023:
“Incognito mode does not store what?”
Correct answer: Cookies, browsing history, forms data—basically everything.
Another one:
“What is the benefit of parental control?”
Correct option: All of the above, screen-time limits, blocking sites, monitoring activity, etc.
Why this matters:
These questions test whether you understand the practical reality, not the textbook theory.
NABARD occasionally dips into computer history, but not the boring “1946, 1951…” type. It asks meaningful connections.
Example:
“Which device was used during World War II?”
Answer: Enigma
This automatically links to cryptography, Turing, and early computing.
Why this matters: Just know the important devices, not timelines.
NABARD doesn’t ask about ALUs, pipelines, or architecture diagrams. It asks clean awareness-based questions like:
“Which companies make microprocessors?”
Options generally include:
Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, MediaTek
Why this matters is that these questions filter out aspirants who bury themselves in theory but miss everyday industry basics.
A NABARD classic:
“Arrange memory units from fastest to slowest.”
You only need one order: Cache → RAM → Hard Disk → External/Optical Storage
Even if options are twisted, the concept remains intact.
Why this matters:
Memory hierarchy is timeless. Once understood, it stays with you.
Task Manager is another area NABARD taps into to test actual user familiarity.
Example: “Primary purpose of Task Manager?”
Correct answer usually includes:
(Not system-level access control—that’s OS/firewall work.)
Why this matters: Practical users score; rote-learners guess.
When you zoom out, NABARD’s Computer Knowledge isn’t random. It’s a carefully balanced mix of memory, usage, understanding, awareness, and foundation. Each pillar reflects how examiners think. They want practical clarity, not heavy theory.
Decode these five dimensions effectively, and you’ll find this section becomes scoreable and confidence‑boosting.
Full forms are NABARD’s favorite recall test. They don’t demand logic, just memory. Abbreviations from networking, multimedia, hardware, and everyday computing appear often.
The trick is to maintain a crisp two‑page list and revise weekly. This way, you secure easy marks without wasting hours, ensuring recall becomes effortless under pressure.
Shortcut keys and Task Manager questions reflect NABARD’s focus on everyday computer use. These aren’t textbook queries—they test whether you can operate a system smoothly.
From Alt+Tab to Windows+L, or monitoring processes via Task Manager, these practical checks reward aspirants who practice consciously.
Revise curated lists, and scoring becomes automatic.
Internet safety questions probe whether you grasp the reality of online behavior. Incognito mode, cookies, parental controls, and privacy settings are recurring themes.
The examiner wants clarity, not rote learning. If you understand what incognito hides and what it doesn’t, or how parental controls protect, you’ll answer confidently and correctly.
Microprocessor questions are awareness‑driven, not technical. NABARD asks about companies like Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, or MediaTek, ensuring aspirants know the industry basics.
You don’t need architecture diagrams, just a sense of who builds the chips powering devices.
This filters out rote learners and rewards those who stay updated with tech trends.
Memory hierarchy and historic devices form NABARD’s timeless foundation. Cache, RAM, hard disk, and external storage always appear in order‑based questions.
Similarly, iconic devices like Enigma link computing to history.
These basics never change, so once mastered, they stay with you. Strong foundations ensure you never stumble on predictable questions.
The Computer Knowledge section doesn’t demand endless hours, it demands precision. Since it’s qualifying, your aim is to clear the cutoff with minimal effort. Smart preparation means focusing on high‑yield areas, revising consistently, and practicing past papers. This way, you save energy for merit‑based sections while securing easy marks.
Here’s the preparation approach that actually works:
Keep a crisp list of common abbreviations from networking, multimedia, and hardware. Revise it twice a week. This ensures recall under exam pressure becomes automatic.
Don’t waste hours, just maintain a compact sheet that guarantees easy scoring when full‑form questions appear.
Shortcut keys are NABARD’s favorite. Group them by system, window management, browser, and file operations. Revise weekly until they become second nature.
Since shortcuts alone can form 15–25% of questions, mastering them ensures effortless marks without guesswork or wasted preparation time.
Here’s how to do it:
Understand what incognito mode hides, what cookies track, and how parental controls protect. Don’t memorize blindly—grasp the logic.
Your clarity over concepts will make sure you answer confidently when NABARD tests online privacy.
This area repeats often, rewarding aspirants who think practically instead of rote learning.
Skip boring timelines. Focus on iconic devices like Enigma, early computers, and Turing’s contributions. These connect computing history with practical awareness.
NABARD asks awareness‑based questions, not dates. Knowing these highlights ensures you score without drowning in unnecessary details or irrelevant theory.
Past papers reveal depth, tone, and recurring topics instantly. Solving them clarifies examiners’ mindset and highlights predictable areas.
This practice builds confidence, reduces surprises, and ensures your preparation stays targeted.
Two to three papers are enough to secure clarity and cutoff safety.
The Computer Knowledge section in NABARD Grade A isn’t tricky; it’s just broad. But once you decode the patterns, it becomes one of the most stabilising parts of the paper. You don’t need deep theory. You don’t need complicated notes. You need clarity, consistency, and a small, targeted list.
Prepare smartly, revise lightly but regularly, and walk into the exam knowing exactly what to expect.
NABARD Grade A Prelims includes Computer Knowledge as a qualifying section. Marks are not counted for merit ranking
Prelims has 200 questions total, with Computer Knowledge contributing 20 MCQs depending on the year.
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