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						Question 1 of 601. Question1- Verbal guidance is least effective in the learning of: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 2 of 602. Question2- Which is the most important aspect of the teacher’s role in learning? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 3 of 603. Question3- The most appropriate purpose of learning is: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 4 of 604. Question4- The students who keep on asking questions in the class should be: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 5 of 605. Question5- Maximum participation of students is possible in teaching through: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 6 of 606. Question6- Generalised conclusion on the basis of a sample is technically known as: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 7 of 607. Question7- The experimental study is based on: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 8 of 608. Question8- The main characteristic of scientific research is: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 9 of 609. Question9- Authenticity of a research finding is its: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 10 of 6010. Question10- Which technique is generally followed when the population is finite? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 11 of 6011. Question11- Read the following passage and answer the question: Gandhi’s overall social and environmental philosophy is based on what human beings need rather than what they want. His early introduction to the teachings of Jains, Theosophists, Christian sermons, Ruskin and Tolstoy, and most significantly the Bhagavad Gita, were to have profound impact on the development of Gandhi’s holistic thinking on humanity, nature and their ecological interrelation. His deep concern for the disadvantaged, the poor and rural population created an ambience for an alternative social thinking that was at once far-sighted, local and immediate. For Gandhi was acutely aware that the demands generated by the need to feed and sustain human life, compounded by the growing industrialization of India, far outstripped the finite resources of nature. This might nowadays appear naive or commonplace, but such pronouncements were as rare as they were heretical a century ago. Gandhi was also concerned about the destruction, under colonial and modernist designs, of the existing infrastructures which had more potential for keeping a community flourishing within ecologically-sensitive traditional patterns of subsistence, especially in the rural areas, than did the incoming Western alternatives based on nature-blind technology and the enslavement of human spirit and energies. Perhaps the moral principle for which Gandhi is best known is that of active non-violence, derived from the traditional moral restraint of not injuring another being. The most refined expression of this value is in the great epic of the Mahabharata, (c. 100 BCE to 200 CE), where moral development proceeds through placing constraints on the liberties, desires and acquisitiveness endemic to human life. One’s action is judged in terms of consequences and the impact it is likely to have on another. Jainas had generalized this principle to include all sentient creatures and biocommunities alike. Advanced Jaina monks and nuns will sweep their path to avoid harming insects and even bacteria. Non-injury is a non-negotiable universal prescription. Which one of the following have a profound impact on the development of Gandhi’s holistic thinking on humanity, nature and their ecological interrelations? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 12 of 6012. Question12- Read the following passage and answer the question: Gandhi’s overall social and environmental philosophy is based on what human beings need rather than what they want. His early introduction to the teachings of Jains, Theosophists, Christian sermons, Ruskin and Tolstoy, and most significantly the Bhagavad Gita, were to have profound impact on the development of Gandhi’s holistic thinking on humanity, nature and their ecological interrelation. His deep concern for the disadvantaged, the poor and rural population created an ambience for an alternative social thinking that was at once far-sighted, local and immediate. For Gandhi was acutely aware that the demands generated by the need to feed and sustain human life, compounded by the growing industrialization of India, far outstripped the finite resources of nature. This might nowadays appear naive or commonplace, but such pronouncements were as rare as they were heretical a century ago. Gandhi was also concerned about the destruction, under colonial and modernist designs, of the existing infrastructures which had more potential for keeping a community flourishing within ecologically-sensitive traditional patterns of subsistence, especially in the rural areas, than did the incoming Western alternatives based on nature-blind technology and the enslavement of human spirit and energies. Perhaps the moral principle for which Gandhi is best known is that of active non-violence, derived from the traditional moral restraint of not injuring another being. The most refined expression of this value is in the great epic of the Mahabharata, (c. 100 BCE to 200 CE), where moral development proceeds through placing constraints on the liberties, desires and acquisitiveness endemic to human life. One’s action is judged in terms of consequences and the impact it is likely to have on another. Jainas had generalized this principle to include all sentient creatures and biocommunities alike. Advanced Jaina monks and nuns will sweep their path to avoid harming insects and even bacteria. Non-injury is a non-negotiable universal prescription. Gandhi’s overall social and environmental philosophy is based on human beings’: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 13 of 6013. Question13- Read the following passage and answer the question: Gandhi’s overall social and environmental philosophy is based on what human beings need rather than what they want. His early introduction to the teachings of Jains, Theosophists, Christian sermons, Ruskin and Tolstoy, and most significantly the Bhagavad Gita, were to have profound impact on the development of Gandhi’s holistic thinking on humanity, nature and their ecological interrelation. His deep concern for the disadvantaged, the poor and rural population created an ambience for an alternative social thinking that was at once far-sighted, local and immediate. For Gandhi was acutely aware that the demands generated by the need to feed and sustain human life, compounded by the growing industrialization of India, far outstripped the finite resources of nature. This might nowadays appear naive or commonplace, but such pronouncements were as rare as they were heretical a century ago. Gandhi was also concerned about the destruction, under colonial and modernist designs, of the existing infrastructures which had more potential for keeping a community flourishing within ecologically-sensitive traditional patterns of subsistence, especially in the rural areas, than did the incoming Western alternatives based on nature-blind technology and the enslavement of human spirit and energies. Perhaps the moral principle for which Gandhi is best known is that of active non-violence, derived from the traditional moral restraint of not injuring another being. The most refined expression of this value is in the great epic of the Mahabharata, (c. 100 BCE to 200 CE), where moral development proceeds through placing constraints on the liberties, desires and acquisitiveness endemic to human life. One’s action is judged in terms of consequences and the impact it is likely to have on another. Jainas had generalized this principle to include all sentient creatures and biocommunities alike. Advanced Jaina monks and nuns will sweep their path to avoid harming insects and even bacteria. Non-injury is a non-negotiable universal prescription. Gandhiji’s deep concern for the disadvantaged, the poor and rural population created an ambience for an alternative: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 14 of 6014. Question14- Read the following passage and answer the question: Gandhi’s overall social and environmental philosophy is based on what human beings need rather than what they want. His early introduction to the teachings of Jains, Theosophists, Christian sermons, Ruskin and Tolstoy, and most significantly the Bhagavad Gita, were to have profound impact on the development of Gandhi’s holistic thinking on humanity, nature and their ecological interrelation. His deep concern for the disadvantaged, the poor and rural population created an ambience for an alternative social thinking that was at once far-sighted, local and immediate. For Gandhi was acutely aware that the demands generated by the need to feed and sustain human life, compounded by the growing industrialization of India, far outstripped the finite resources of nature. This might nowadays appear naive or commonplace, but such pronouncements were as rare as they were heretical a century ago. Gandhi was also concerned about the destruction, under colonial and modernist designs, of the existing infrastructures which had more potential for keeping a community flourishing within ecologically-sensitive traditional patterns of subsistence, especially in the rural areas, than did the incoming Western alternatives based on nature-blind technology and the enslavement of human spirit and energies. Perhaps the moral principle for which Gandhi is best known is that of active non-violence, derived from the traditional moral restraint of not injuring another being. The most refined expression of this value is in the great epic of the Mahabharata, (c. 100 BCE to 200 CE), where moral development proceeds through placing constraints on the liberties, desires and acquisitiveness endemic to human life. One’s action is judged in terms of consequences and the impact it is likely to have on another. Jainas had generalized this principle to include all sentient creatures and biocommunities alike. Advanced Jaina monks and nuns will sweep their path to avoid harming insects and even bacteria. Non-injury is a non-negotiable universal prescription. Colonial policy and modernisation led to the destruction of: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 15 of 6015. Question15- Read the following passage and answer the question: Gandhi’s overall social and environmental philosophy is based on what human beings need rather than what they want. His early introduction to the teachings of Jains, Theosophists, Christian sermons, Ruskin and Tolstoy, and most significantly the Bhagavad Gita, were to have profound impact on the development of Gandhi’s holistic thinking on humanity, nature and their ecological interrelation. His deep concern for the disadvantaged, the poor and rural population created an ambience for an alternative social thinking that was at once far-sighted, local and immediate. For Gandhi was acutely aware that the demands generated by the need to feed and sustain human life, compounded by the growing industrialization of India, far outstripped the finite resources of nature. This might nowadays appear naive or commonplace, but such pronouncements were as rare as they were heretical a century ago. Gandhi was also concerned about the destruction, under colonial and modernist designs, of the existing infrastructures which had more potential for keeping a community flourishing within ecologically-sensitive traditional patterns of subsistence, especially in the rural areas, than did the incoming Western alternatives based on nature-blind technology and the enslavement of human spirit and energies. Perhaps the moral principle for which Gandhi is best known is that of active non-violence, derived from the traditional moral restraint of not injuring another being. The most refined expression of this value is in the great epic of the Mahabharata, (c. 100 BCE to 200 CE), where moral development proceeds through placing constraints on the liberties, desires and acquisitiveness endemic to human life. One’s action is judged in terms of consequences and the impact it is likely to have on another. Jainas had generalized this principle to include all sentient creatures and biocommunities alike. Advanced Jaina monks and nuns will sweep their path to avoid harming insects and even bacteria. Non-injury is a non-negotiable universal prescription. Gandhi’s active non-violence is derived from: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 16 of 6016. Question16- DTH service was started in the year: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 17 of 6017. Question17- National Press day is celebrated on: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 18 of 6018. Question18- The total number of members in the Press Council of India are: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 19 of 6019. Question19- The right to impart and receive information is guaranteed in the Constitution of India by Article: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 20 of 6020. Question20- Use of radio for higher education is based on the presumption of: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 21 of 6021. Question21- Find out the number which should come at the place of question mark which will complete the following series: 5, 4, 9, 17, 35, ? = 139 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 22 of 6022. Question22- HTML stands for CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 23 of 6023. Question23- SMTP is an acronym for CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 24 of 6024. Question24- In the series 3, 11, 23, 39, 59, ________ The next term will be CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 25 of 6025. Question25- Which number is missing in the following series? 2, 5, 10, 17, 26, 37, 50, ? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 26 of 6026. Question26- The function of measurement includes: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 27 of 6027. Question27- Logical arguments are based on: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 28 of 6028. Question28- Insert the missing number: 4 : 17 : : 7 : ? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 29 of 6029. Question29- Choose the odd word: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 30 of 6030. Question30- Choose the number which is different from others in the group: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 31 of 6031. Question31- Probability sampling implies: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 32 of 6032. Question32- Insert the missing number: 36/62 , 39/63, 43/61, 48/64, ? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 33 of 6033. Question33- At what time between 3 and 4 O’clock will the hands of a watch point in opposite directions? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 34 of 6034. Question34- Mary has three children. What is the probability that none of the three children is a boy? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 35 of 6035. Question35- If the radius of a circle is increased by 50 per cent. Its area is increased by: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 36 of 6036. Question36- CD ROM stands for: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 37 of 6037. Question37- The ‘brain’ of a computer which keeps peripherals under its control is called: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 38 of 6038. Question38- Data can be saved on backing storage medium known as : CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 39 of 6039. Question39- RAM means: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 40 of 6040. Question40- www represents: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 41 of 6041. Question41- Deforestation during the recent decades has led to: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 42 of 6042. Question42- Which one of the following natural hazards is responsible for causing highest human disaster? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 43 of 6043. Question43- Which one of the following is appropriate for natural hazard mitigation? CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 44 of 6044. Question44- Slums in metro-city are the result of: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 45 of 6045. Question45- The great Indian Bustard bird is found in: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 46 of 6046. Question46- The first Indian Satellite for serving the educational sector is known as: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 47 of 6047. Question47- Exclusive educational channel of IGNOU is known as: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 48 of 6048. Question48- The head quarter of Mahatma Gandhi Antarrashtriya Hindi Vishwavidyalaya is situated in: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 49 of 6049. Question49- Match List – I with List – II and select the correct answer using the codes given below: List-I List-II (Institutes) (Locations) (a) Central Institute of English (i) Chitrakoot and Foreign Languages (b) Gramodaya Vishwavidyalaya (ii) Hyderabad (c) Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies (iii) New Delhi (d) IGNOU (iv) Dharmasala CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 50 of 6050. Question50- The aim of vocationalization of education is: CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 51 of 6051. Question51 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 52 of 6052. Question52 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 53 of 6053. Question53 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 54 of 6054. Question54 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 55 of 6055. Question55 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 56 of 6056. Question56 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 57 of 6057. Question57 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 58 of 6058. Question58 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 59 of 6059. Question59 CorrectIncorrect
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						Question 60 of 6060. Question60 CorrectIncorrect