Reading Comprehension 3
Mastering the Elimination Method to solve complex inference questions faster.
Speed Strategy: The Elimination Method
To solve RC questions faster, don't just look for the right answer. Often, it's faster to spot the wrong answers and eliminate them.
The 4 Common Traps to Eliminate:
- Too Extreme: Words like always, never, completely, unanimous are often wrong unless the passage explicitly supports them.
- Out of Scope: Options that mention true facts not found in the passage.
- Opposite: Options that state the exact reverse of the author's point.
- Distortion: Options that take a detail from the passage and twist its meaning.
Practice Passage 1 — Soil Health and Sustainable Farming in India
Directions: Read the following passage and answer the questions.
The Passage
In 2015, the Government of India launched the Soil Health Card (SHC) scheme under the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture, with the aim of issuing cards to every farmer in the country containing detailed information about the nutrient status of their soil and recommendations for appropriate fertiliser dosages. The initiative was born out of a pressing concern: decades of intensive farming, particularly in the wake of the Green Revolution, had left Indian soils severely depleted of macro and micro-nutrients. Farmers, largely unaware of this depletion, continued to apply fertilisers — especially urea — in excess, a practice that further damaged soil health and inflated input costs without proportionate yield gains.
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Speed Strategy: The Elimination Method
To solve RC questions faster, don't just look for the right answer. Often, it's faster to spot the wrong answers and eliminate them.
The 4 Common Traps to Eliminate:
- Too Extreme: Words like always, never, completely, unanimous are often wrong unless the passage explicitly supports them.
- Out of Scope: Options that mention true facts not found in the passage.
- Opposite: Options that state the exact reverse of the author's point.
- Distortion: Options that take a detail from the passage and twist its meaning.
Practice Passage 1 — Soil Health and Sustainable Farming in India
Directions: Read the following passage and answer the questions.
The Passage
In 2015, the Government of India launched the Soil Health Card (SHC) scheme under the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture, with the aim of issuing cards to every farmer in the country containing detailed information about the nutrient status of their soil and recommendations for appropriate fertiliser dosages. The initiative was born out of a pressing concern: decades of intensive farming, particularly in the wake of the Green Revolution, had left Indian soils severely depleted of macro and micro-nutrients. Farmers, largely unaware of this depletion, continued to apply fertilisers — especially urea — in excess, a practice that further damaged soil health and inflated input costs without proportionate yield gains.
The scheme called for soil samples to be collected at regular intervals from each farm plot, tested at soil testing laboratories, and the results communicated to farmers via the card. By 2022, over 22 crore soil health cards had been distributed across the country. However, the scale of distribution did not automatically translate into behavioural change. Field surveys in several states revealed that a significant proportion of farmers either did not understand the recommendations printed on the cards or lacked access to the specific fertilisers and bio-inputs suggested. In states like Punjab and Haryana, where the habit of heavy urea use is deeply entrenched, adoption of balanced fertilisation remained low.
The scheme also exposed deeper structural challenges. The country's network of soil testing laboratories was found to be grossly inadequate relative to the number of farms, leading to delays in testing and, in some cases, inaccurate results due to overloaded facilities. Agricultural extension workers — the crucial link between laboratory findings and farmer practice — were understaffed and unevenly distributed, with remote areas receiving the least support. Critics pointed out that a scheme of this ambition required not just technology and data, but sustained investment in human capacity: agronomists, extension agents, and trained village-level workers who could sit with farmers and translate soil science into actionable decisions.
Supporters of the scheme argue that it has nonetheless laid a vital foundation. For the first time, India possesses a granular, district-level dataset on soil nutrient status — a resource that can guide policy, direct subsidy allocation, and inform the design of location-specific crop advisories. Whether this foundation is built upon meaningfully depends on the political will to invest in the unglamorous but essential infrastructure of agricultural extension.
Questions
1. Based on the passage, which of the following statements about the Soil Health Card scheme is/are CORRECT?
(I) The scheme was launched in response to widespread soil degradation caused by excessive fertiliser use over several decades. (II) Over 22 crore soil health cards were distributed, and this led to a significant and widespread change in fertiliser use behaviour. (III) The scheme has generated a valuable national dataset on soil nutrient status that can inform future agricultural policy.
(a) Only I and II (b) Only II and III (c) Only I and III (d) Only III (e) All I, II, and III
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
Reasoning:
- (I) Correct: The passage explicitly states the scheme was "born out of a pressing concern" about soil depletion caused by "decades of intensive farming" and excessive fertiliser use.
- (II) Incorrect: The passage directly states that wide distribution "did not automatically translate into behavioural change" — surveys showed many farmers did not act on the recommendations.
- (III) Correct: The passage notes that the scheme has given India "a granular, district-level dataset on soil nutrient status" that can "guide policy, direct subsidy allocation, and inform... advisories."
2. What specific challenge regarding soil testing laboratories does the passage highlight?
(a) Laboratories were shut down in remote areas due to lack of funding, leaving entire districts without access to testing. (b) The number of soil testing laboratories was far too few relative to the volume of farms, causing delays and accuracy issues. (c) Laboratories produced accurate results but failed to communicate them to farmers in a timely manner. (d) The government prioritised distribution of cards over investing in laboratory quality, rendering the data unreliable. (e) Laboratories functioned well in northern states but were absent in southern and eastern India.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Reasoning:
- The passage explicitly states: "The country's network of soil testing laboratories was found to be grossly inadequate relative to the number of farms, leading to delays in testing and, in some cases, inaccurate results due to overloaded facilities."
- This directly matches Option (b).
- Options (a), (c), (d), and (e) all introduce details not found in the passage — classic Out of Scope or Distortion traps.
3. Identify the INCORRECT statement based on the passage.
(a) Agricultural extension workers were described as a critical link between laboratory findings and farmer practice. (b) Farmers in Punjab and Haryana readily adopted balanced fertilisation practices after receiving soil health cards. (c) The passage argues that long-term success of the scheme depends on investment in agricultural extension infrastructure.
(d) Both (a) and (c) (e) Only (b)
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (e)
Reasoning:
- (b) is Incorrect: The passage says exactly the opposite — "In states like Punjab and Haryana... adoption of balanced fertilisation remained low." Stating they "readily adopted" is the Opposite trap.
- (a) is Correct: The passage describes extension workers as "the crucial link between laboratory findings and farmer practice."
- (c) is Correct: The passage states that success "depends on the political will to invest in... the essential infrastructure of agricultural extension."
- Since only (b) is incorrect, the answer is (e).
4. Identify the correct meaning of the word "entrenched" as used in the passage ("habit of heavy urea use is deeply entrenched").
(a) Newly introduced (b) Officially prohibited (c) Firmly established and difficult to change (d) Economically profitable (e) Scientifically endorsed
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
Reasoning:
- "Entrenched" refers to a practice or belief that is so deeply rooted it resists change — derived from the image of soldiers dug into trenches.
- In the passage, it describes the deeply ingrained habit of heavy urea use that persists despite the scheme's recommendations.
- Firmly established and difficult to change is the correct meaning.
5. Which of the following statements is/are correct according to the passage?
(I) The Soil Health Card scheme was launched under the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture in 2015. (II) The primary reason for low card adoption in some states was that farmers were unaware the cards had been issued to them. (III) The passage identifies a shortage of trained extension workers as a structural gap in the scheme's implementation.
(a) Only (I) (b) Both (I) and (III) (c) Both (II) and (III) (d) All (I), (II), and (III) (e) Only (III)
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Reasoning:
- (I) Correct: The passage explicitly states the scheme was launched "In 2015... under the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture."
- (II) Incorrect: The passage says farmers either "did not understand the recommendations" or "lacked access to the specific fertilisers" — not that they were unaware the cards existed. This is a Distortion trap.
- (III) Correct: "Extension workers... were understaffed and unevenly distributed" directly supports this.
6. What risk to the scheme's long-term success does the passage emphasise most strongly?
(a) The possibility that district-level soil data will be misused by private fertiliser companies for commercial gain. (b) The scheme's dependence on political will to fund agricultural extension — an area that receives little public attention or prestige. (c) The growing resistance among farmers who distrust government-issued recommendations on fertiliser use. (d) The technical obsolescence of soil testing methods currently used by Indian laboratories. (e) The financial burden on small and marginal farmers who cannot afford the bio-inputs recommended by the cards.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Reasoning:
- The passage concludes: "Whether this foundation is built upon meaningfully depends on the political will to invest in the unglamorous but essential infrastructure of agricultural extension."
- The word "unglamorous" signals that this infrastructure does not attract attention or political enthusiasm — making the risk one of under-investment due to low political salience.
- Options (a), (c), (d), and (e) introduce concerns not mentioned in the passage — all Out of Scope traps.
7. Based on the passage, how does the author characterise the overall outcome of the Soil Health Card scheme so far?
(a) A complete failure that wasted public resources without producing any tangible benefit. (b) A scheme that achieved its core objective of changing farmer behaviour at scale across all states. (c) A partially successful initiative that built a valuable data foundation but fell short on translating data into behavioural change. (d) A success in data collection and extension delivery, hampered only by a shortage of fertiliser supply. (e) A politically motivated scheme with no scientific basis, criticised uniformly by agricultural experts.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
Reasoning:
- The author acknowledges both sides: the scheme "has... laid a vital foundation" (the data asset) but implementation gaps — inadequate labs, low adoption, understaffed extension — prevented full behavioural change.
- This balanced assessment aligns with Option (c).
- Option (a) is the Opposite trap — the author explicitly credits the scheme's achievements.
- Option (b) is Too Extreme — the passage directly states behavioural change was limited.
Practice Passage 2 — Microfinance and Women's Empowerment in Rural India
Directions: Read the following narrative passage and answer the questions.
The Passage
When Kamla Devi joined a Self-Help Group in her village in Rajasthan in 2009, she had never held a bank passbook in her name. Her husband managed all financial transactions; she contributed labour, both domestic and agricultural, but possessed no formal economic identity of her own. Within two years of joining the group, she had taken a small loan, purchased a second-hand sewing machine, and was earning an income independent of the household. By the time her daughter was ready for secondary school, there was no discussion about whether she would attend — the question was only which school.
The story of microfinance in India is inseparable from the story of women like Kamla. Since the 1990s, the Self-Help Group–Bank Linkage Programme, driven largely by NABARD, has brought millions of rural women into the formal financial system. At its peak, the programme linked over one crore SHGs to banks, with women's groups accounting for more than 85 percent of all groups. The premise was straightforward: small, regular savings pooled within the group, combined with access to institutional credit, could give women the economic foothold needed to challenge their dependence on informal moneylenders and, in many cases, on controlling household structures.
Yet the empowerment narrative, while real, is uneven. Academic studies tracking SHG outcomes across states have found that economic participation does not automatically translate into decision-making power within the household. In regions where patriarchal norms run deep, women often manage group finances and repay loans diligently, yet continue to seek permission for major household decisions. In some documented cases, male relatives appropriated loan amounts — the woman bore the repayment burden while the man directed the spending.
Economists and gender researchers increasingly argue that credit access is a necessary but insufficient condition for genuine empowerment. What it must be paired with — legal literacy, access to grievance redressal mechanisms, and social norm change — is harder to deliver through a programme and cannot be quantified on a balance sheet. The passbook in Kamla's name was a beginning, not an endpoint.
Questions
1. What is the central argument the passage makes about microfinance and women's empowerment?
(a) The SHG–Bank Linkage Programme has completely transformed gender relations in rural India. (b) Microfinance is an ineffective tool for women's empowerment because it is routinely captured by male relatives. (c) Access to credit is an important first step toward empowerment, but it is not sufficient on its own to bring about genuine social change. (d) NABARD's programme succeeded economically but failed to meet its financial inclusion targets. (e) Women's empowerment in India depends primarily on education, not economic access.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
Reasoning:
- The passage concludes: "credit access is a necessary but insufficient condition for genuine empowerment" and must be paired with legal literacy and social norm change.
- Kamla's story illustrates the beginning of empowerment — but the passage is clear that it is "a beginning, not an endpoint."
- Option (a) is Too Extreme — the passage explicitly says empowerment is "uneven."
- Option (b) is Too Extreme in the other direction — the passage does not say microfinance is ineffective, only that it is insufficient alone.
2. Why did Kamla Devi initially lack a formal economic identity?
(a) She was illiterate and therefore ineligible to open a bank account under existing regulations. (b) Her village had no bank branch, making formal financial access physically impossible. (c) Financial transactions were entirely managed by her husband, leaving her without any formal economic standing. (d) She had chosen to prioritise agricultural work over financial participation in the household. (e) Cultural norms prohibited women from engaging in any economic activity outside the home.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
Reasoning:
- The passage states directly: "Her husband managed all financial transactions... she possessed no formal economic identity of her own."
- Option (c) matches this exactly.
- Options (a), (b), and (e) introduce reasons not stated in the passage — Out of Scope traps.
- Option (d) distorts the passage; she contributed labour but was excluded from formal financial identity, not by choice.
3. What concern about SHG outcomes in patriarchal regions does the passage raise?
(a) Women in such regions refused to join SHGs, rendering the programme ineffective in conservative areas. (b) Women managed group finances and repaid loans but loan funds were sometimes directed by male relatives rather than the women themselves. (c) Banks in patriarchal regions refused to lend to women's SHGs due to concerns about repayment reliability. (d) Women's SHGs in these regions had higher default rates due to social pressure from family members. (e) The government's monitoring mechanisms failed to detect fraud in SHGs located in conservative states.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Reasoning:
- The passage states: "In some documented cases, male relatives appropriated loan amounts — the woman bore the repayment burden while the man directed the spending."
- It also notes women in such regions "manage group finances and repay loans diligently, yet continue to seek permission for major household decisions."
- Option (b) accurately captures this dynamic.
- Options (a), (c), (d), and (e) are not mentioned — all Out of Scope traps.
4. Which of the following best reflects the tone of the concluding sentence: "The passbook in Kamla's name was a beginning, not an endpoint"?
(a) Dismissive — the author believes the passbook had little real significance. (b) Celebratory — the author is proud of how far the programme has come. (c) Cautiously optimistic yet incomplete — acknowledging progress while insisting more remains to be done. (d) Pessimistic — the author implies that the programme ultimately failed Kamla. (e) Neutral and clinical — a factual observation without editorial intent.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
Reasoning:
- "A beginning" acknowledges real progress — the tone is not dismissive or pessimistic.
- "Not an endpoint" signals incompleteness — more is required beyond credit access.
- This is characteristic of cautious optimism — acknowledging achievement while maintaining that more is needed.
- Option (b) is Too Extreme — the passage spends considerable space on limitations, ruling out pure celebration.
5. What is the tone of the passage as a whole?
(a) Polemical (b) Analytical and measured (c) Nostalgic (d) Alarming (e) Enthusiastically advocacy-driven
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Reasoning:
- The passage presents both achievements (Kamla's story, scale of SHG linkage) and limitations (uneven empowerment, loan appropriation) without emotional extremes.
- It draws on academic studies, programme data, and anecdote — the hallmarks of analytical and measured writing.
- Option (a) "Polemical" would require an angry, one-sided argument. Option (e) would mean the author ignores all criticism, which the passage clearly does not.
6. Which word from the options below is closest in meaning to "appropriated" as used in the passage ("male relatives appropriated loan amounts")?
(a) Donated (b) Borrowed with consent (c) Seized or took for one's own use without permission (d) Invested productively (e) Officially sanctioned by the lending institution
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
Reasoning:
- In context, male relatives taking loan amounts that were meant for the women borrowers — without their consent or benefit — fits the meaning of "appropriated" as seized or taken without permission.
- Options (a), (b), and (d) all imply voluntary or positive intent, which contradicts the passage's critical framing of the situation.
7. What does the passage suggest must accompany credit access for empowerment to be genuine?
(a) Mandatory financial literacy tests before women can access SHG credit. (b) Replacement of the SHG model with individual bank accounts for all rural women. (c) Legal literacy, access to grievance redressal systems, and broader social norm change. (d) Higher loan amounts to make women financially independent faster. (e) Male family members must be excluded from all SHG-related activities by law.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
Reasoning:
- The passage states explicitly: "What it must be paired with — legal literacy, access to grievance redressal mechanisms, and social norm change — is harder to deliver through a programme..."
- Option (c) is a direct match.
- All other options introduce solutions not mentioned in the passage — Out of Scope traps.
Summary Cheat Sheet
| Concept / Topic | Key Details / Explanation |
|---|---|
| Elimination Method | Faster than finding the right answer — spot and remove the wrong ones first |
| Trap 1 — Too Extreme | Words like always, never, completely, unanimous → almost always wrong unless passage explicitly states them |
| Trap 2 — Out of Scope | Factually possible but NOT mentioned in the passage → wrong answer |
| Trap 3 — Opposite | States the exact reverse of the author's point → wrong answer |
| Trap 4 — Distortion | Uses a real passage detail but twists or exaggerates its meaning → wrong answer |
| Soil Health Card scheme | Launched 2015, NMSA; 22+ crore cards distributed; built data foundation but limited behavioural change |
| Soil testing labs | Grossly inadequate in number → delays + inaccuracies (passage detail, not general knowledge) |
| Extension workers | "Crucial link" between lab data and farmer practice; understaffed, unevenly distributed |
| "Entrenched" meaning | Firmly established and difficult to change (not new, not prohibited) |
| SHG–Bank Linkage Programme | NABARD-driven; 85%+ groups are women's groups; brought rural women into formal finance |
| Uneven empowerment finding | Economic access ≠ decision-making power, especially in patriarchal regions |
| Loan appropriation issue | Male relatives sometimes directed loan spending; woman bore repayment burden |
| "Necessary but insufficient" | Credit access alone cannot deliver empowerment — needs legal literacy + social norm change |
| Tone of microfinance passage | Analytical and measured — balanced between achievements and limitations |
| Statement I/II/III format | Treat each sub-statement as true/false against the passage; eliminate options with any false sub-statement |
| Central theme questions | Find the explicit thesis or turning point; usually stated near the start or end of the passage |
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