General Knowledge and Current Affairs play a decisive role in CLAT and CUET. Whether it’s legal news, government policies, or international developments, staying updated daily is the simplest way to boost your GK section. Yet, most aspirants either read too much or skim too little — wasting time without improving scores.
At Career Launcher South Ex, Delhi, we train aspirants to develop a focused newspaper-reading habit that strengthens both knowledge and critical thinking. This blog explains how.
Why Newspaper Reading Matters
- CLAT: Static + Current Affairs questions frequently ask about legal changes, landmark judgments, and international events.
- CUET GK: A balanced mix of current and static GK appears, rewarding consistent awareness.
- Long-Term Benefit: Improves reading speed for comprehension sections too.
Step 1: Pick the Right Newspapers & Sections
Not all pages are equally useful. Focus on:
- Front Page: Key national and international events.
- Editorial / Op-Ed: Analysis of policies, judgments, and debates.
- Business / Economy: Budget, RBI policies, inflation, major deals.
- Legal News / Supreme Court Updates: Especially important for CLAT aspirants.
- Science & Tech: New innovations, Nobel Prizes, environmental updates.
Skip entertainment gossip and celebrity news — they rarely show up in exams.
Step 2: Develop a 30-Minute Daily Routine
- Scan Headlines (5 min): Circle or note important stories.
- Read In-Depth (15 min): Editorials + major events.
- Make Short Notes (10 min): Bullet points for revision.
This saves time and ensures retention.
Step 3: Build Your Own GK Notes
- Date-Wise: Maintain a notebook or digital doc with one page per day.
- Categorize: Legal, National, International, Awards, Economy, Sports.
- Update Weekly: Revise every Sunday and mark probable MCQs.
Step 4: Connect with Exam Patterns
- CLAT: Look for judgments, constitutional amendments, government schemes, major international organisations.
- CUET: Emphasise national policies, education initiatives, environmental issues, and global developments.
- Practice quiz questions weekly to reinforce memory.
Step 5: Use Active Recall & Quizzing
Simply reading isn’t enough. After finishing your daily paper:
- Try to recall 5 key news items without looking back.
- Create flashcards or use GK quiz apps.
- Discuss with peers or mentors to deepen understanding.
Mid-Month Self-Check
Ask yourself:
- Am I noting at least 10–15 GK items per week?
- Can I explain a Supreme Court judgment or policy change in 3–4 lines?
- Am I revising weekly to retain facts?
If not, adjust time and approach.
Sample Daily GK Snapshot
(Example of what you’d extract from a single day’s news):
- National: New Environment Bill introduced in Parliament.
- Legal: Supreme Court upholds Right to Internet as a fundamental right.
- International: UN Climate Summit agreements.
- Economy: RBI revises repo rate by 0.25%.
- Awards: Booker Prize announced for XYZ novel.
How Career Launcher South Ex, Delhi Helps CLAT & CUET Aspirants
- Daily GK Updates & Quizzes: Curated by exam experts.
- Weekly Legal Current Affairs Classes: Focus on judgments and important cases.
- Integrated Prep: Combine GK with Reading Comprehension practice.
- Revision Capsules: Monthly PDF of key news & MCQs.
Conclusion
Reading newspapers for CLAT & CUET GK is not about covering every column but about strategic selection, smart note-making, and consistent revision.
At Career Launcher South Ex, Delhi, we equip aspirants with a structured GK plan so that on exam day, you recall facts quickly and accurately. Build the habit today — and your scores will thank you tomorrow.