Sources, the twelve-month window, note-making, the durable-versus-dated distinction, and a revision method for CAPF current events
Current affairs in CAPF Paper I is an objective, recognition-based subject. The single most efficient strategy is to split your study into a durable layer (structural facts that do not change: which organisation exists, who publishes which index, how an award works) and a dated layer (this year's winners, ranks, and appointments, verified close to the exam). Build the durable layer once, then refresh the dated layer in the final months. This note sets out the sources, the time window to cover, a note-making format, and a revision cycle.
Most CAPF "current affairs" questions are static-GK questions with a current hook. The news event signals what to revise; the answer is usually a durable fact.
| Layer | Examples | When to study | Effort |
|---|---|---|---|
| Durable (structural) | UN organs and agencies, organisation headquarters, index publishers, award categories, sports terms, classical art forms, climate conventions | Once, early; revise repeatedly | High value, learn once |
| Dated (headline) | This year's award winners, current index rank, latest appointments, recent exercise editions, latest summit host | Refresh in the final three months | Verify the latest; do not memorise old values |
Practical rule: when a topic is in the news, ask "what is the durable fact behind this headline" and learn that. A summit in the news means revise the grouping's members and headquarters; a report in the news means revise who publishes it and what it measures.
CAPF current events are drawn broadly from the roughly twelve months before the exam, with a long tail of static GK that never expires. A workable coverage window:
| Period before exam | What to cover |
|---|---|
| The full preceding 12 months | Major national and international developments, summits, sports events, awards, defence exercises, key appointments |
| Static (timeless) | Organisations, indices and publishers, important days, capitals and currencies, national symbols, award categories, sports fundamentals |
| The latest Budget and Economic Survey | Currency-sensitive economic figures (see budget and fiscal policy) |
Do not over-invest in events older than a year unless they have become static GK.
Use primary and official sources. Do not rely on coaching compilations as authorities.
| Source | Use |
|---|---|
| PIB (Press Information Bureau) | Official government announcements, schemes, appointments |
| Official organisation websites (UN, IMF, World Bank, WTO, IOC, etc.) | Membership, headquarters, mandates |
| NCERT and standard static GK references | Timeless facts: symbols, geography, institutions |
| Ministry releases (Defence, External Affairs, Home) | Defence exercises, foreign policy, internal security |
| The latest Union Budget and Economic Survey | Economic numbers |
See sources index for the approved policy.
For each current-affairs item, capture only the durable spine in a fixed format so it slots into your static notes:
Keep the dated value (rank, winner, edition number) in a separate "verify the latest" column so it is easy to refresh without rewriting the note.
| Cycle | Action |
|---|---|
| Daily | Skim one reliable source; log only durable spines, not raw news |
| Weekly | Consolidate the week's spines into the relevant static topic notes |
| Monthly | Revise the full durable layer (organisations, indices, awards, sports) |
| Final 3 months | Refresh the dated layer; verify current ranks, winners, appointments |
| Final week | One-line recall sweep across all module notes |
The monthly durable-layer revision is what wins marks; the final dated refresh prevents the few "latest" questions from going wrong.
The exam rarely asks "what happened last Tuesday". It asks the durable fact that the week's news pointed to.