CTET Social Science Notes –
Civics & Polity Complete Guide
+ PYQ-Based MCQs
From the Preamble to Panchayati Raj — everything you need to score full marks in CTET Paper 2 Civics, with 60 exam-pattern MCQs drawn from actual previous year papers.
Introduction – Why Civics is a Game-Changer in CTET Paper 2
Of all the subjects in CTET Paper 2 Social Science, Civics — officially called Social and Political Life — is the most predictable and the highest-scoring. Unlike History, which demands memorisation of dates and events, Civics tests conceptual understanding: how India's government works, how rights protect citizens, and how local democracy functions on the ground.
What is CTET Social Science Civics? CTET Social Science Civics covers Social and Political Life as taught in NCERT Classes 6–8. It includes the Indian Constitution, Fundamental Rights and Duties, Directive Principles, Parliament, Judiciary, Panchayati Raj, federalism, the electoral system, gender equality, and social justice. It also includes Social Science Pedagogy — methods and principles of teaching SS in upper primary classrooms.
For the CTET September 6, 2026 exam, Civics questions will continue to draw directly from NCERT Social and Political Life books (Classes 6, 7, and 8). Candidates who study these three NCERT books thoroughly — combined with dedicated pedagogy preparation and PYQ practice — can realistically score 18–20 out of 20 in this component.
This guide covers every Civics topic, important constitutional articles, NCERT-mapped notes, and 60 MCQs drawn directly from previous year CTET papers — structured exactly as they appear in the actual exam.
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(Paper 2)
Questions
Questions
Marking
(Full Paper)
| Subject Area | Approx. Questions | Marks | NCERT Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| History | ~20 | 20 | Our Pasts Part I, II, III (Class 6–8) |
| Geography | ~20 | 20 | Earth Our Habitat; Resources & Development (Class 6–8) |
| Civics / Social & Political Life | ~20 | 20 | Social and Political Life I, II, III (Class 6–8) |
| Social Science Pedagogy | ~20 | 20 | CTET syllabus + NCF 2005/2023 |
| Total | ~80 | 80 | — |
⚠️ Important: CTET 2026 Exam Date Update
CTET 2026 exam is scheduled for September 6, 2026. Last date to apply online is June 10, 2026. The exam follows the CBSE pattern and is now based on NCERT books aligned with NEP 2020 and NCF 2023. Read full CTET 2026 notification details →
Complete Civics Syllabus – Topic-Wise Breakdown
The CTET Paper 2 Civics syllabus is directly mapped to NCERT Social and Political Life (SPL) books for Classes 6, 7, and 8. Here is a full topic-wise breakdown:
| # | Topic | NCERT Class | PYQ Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Diversity & Discrimination | Class 6 SPL Ch.1–2 | ★★★☆☆ |
| 2 | Government & Democracy | Class 6 SPL Ch.3–4 | ★★★★☆ |
| 3 | Local Self-Government – Rural & Urban | Class 6 SPL Ch.5–6 | ★★★★★ |
| 4 | State Government & Legislature | Class 7 SPL Ch.1–4 | ★★★★☆ |
| 5 | Gender Equality | Class 7 SPL Ch.5 | ★★★☆☆ |
| 6 | Media & Democracy | Class 7 SPL Ch.6 | ★★★☆☆ |
| 7 | Markets & Social Justice | Class 7 SPL Ch.7–9 | ★★★☆☆ |
| 8 | Indian Constitution – Features & Preamble | Class 8 SPL Ch.1 | ★★★★★ |
| 9 | Parliament & Legislative Process | Class 8 SPL Ch.3 | ★★★★★ |
| 10 | Judiciary – Supreme Court, High Courts | Class 8 SPL Ch.5 | ★★★★☆ |
| 11 | Social Justice & Marginalised Communities | Class 8 SPL Ch.7–9 | ★★★☆☆ |
| 12 | Fundamental Rights & Duties | Class 8 SPL Ch.1–2 | ★★★★★ |
| 13 | Secularism | Class 8 SPL Ch.2 | ★★★☆☆ |
| 14 | Social Science Pedagogy | CTET Syllabus / NCF 2005 | ★★★★★ |
Indian Constitution – Key Features & Important Articles MOST IMPORTANT
What is the Indian Constitution? The Constitution of India, adopted on November 26, 1949 and enacted on January 26, 1950, is the supreme law of the land. It establishes the framework of government, defines fundamental rights, and lays down duties of citizens and the state. It is the longest written constitution in the world.
Key Features of the Indian Constitution
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Lengthiest Written Constitution | Originally 395 Articles, 8 Schedules; currently 448 Articles, 12 Schedules, 25 Parts, 105 Amendments |
| Federal with Unitary Bias | Power divided between Centre and States, but Centre stronger in emergencies |
| Parliamentary Form | Executive is responsible to Legislature (Westminster model) |
| Fundamental Rights | Part III — Justiciable rights against state action |
| DPSP | Part IV — Non-justiciable guidelines for state policy |
| Independent Judiciary | Supreme Court as guardian of Constitution; power of judicial review |
| Universal Adult Franchise | Every citizen 18+ can vote; equal voting rights regardless of caste/gender |
| Single Citizenship | Every Indian is a citizen of India only (unlike USA's dual citizenship) |
| Secular State | No state religion; equal respect for all religions; added by 42nd Amendment 1976 |
Constitution-Making — Key Dates
The Preamble – Decoded for CTET PYQ Favourite
🔑 Key Words in the Preamble — What They Mean
Fundamental Rights (Articles 12–35) TOP 5 MARKS
Fundamental Rights are guaranteed under Part III of the Constitution. They protect citizens from arbitrary state action and are enforceable in courts.
⚖️ 5 Constitutional Writs — Very Frequently Tested in CTET
- Habeas Corpus: "Have the body" — to produce an illegally detained person before court
- Mandamus: "We command" — directs a public authority to perform its duty
- Prohibition: Issued to lower courts to stop proceedings outside jurisdiction
- Certiorari: Higher court calls for records of a lower court to review a decision
- Quo Warranto: "By what authority" — challenges a person's right to hold public office
Directive Principles of State Policy (Articles 36–51)
DPSP vs Fundamental Rights: Fundamental Rights are justiciable (enforceable by courts). DPSPs are non-justiciable (cannot be directly enforced in courts) but are fundamental in governance. DPSPs represent socio-economic rights — the "positive" duties of the state. This distinction is the most frequently tested DPSP question in CTET.
| Classification | Key Articles | Content |
|---|---|---|
| Gandhian Principles | Art. 40, 43, 46, 47, 48 | Panchayati Raj, cottage industries, welfare of SC/ST, prohibition, cattle protection |
| Socialist Principles | Art. 38, 39, 41, 42, 43A | Social order, equal pay, right to work, maternity relief, worker participation |
| Liberal/Intellectual | Art. 44, 45, 48A, 50, 51 | Uniform Civil Code, early childhood care, environment protection, separation of judiciary |
Fundamental Duties (Article 51A)
Added by the 42nd Amendment (1976) based on the Swaran Singh Committee's recommendations. India now has 11 Fundamental Duties (10 original + 1 added by 86th Amendment 2002). These apply to every citizen and include: respecting the Constitution, defending the country, promoting harmony, protecting the environment, and providing education to children aged 6–14 years.
Parliament of India – Structure & Functions HIGH MARKS
Parliament is the supreme legislative body of India. It consists of three parts: the President, the Rajya Sabha (Council of States), and the Lok Sabha (House of the People).
| Feature | Lok Sabha (Lower House) | Rajya Sabha (Upper House) |
|---|---|---|
| Members | 543 elected + 2 nominated (Anglo-Indian, now discontinued) | 238 elected by States + 12 nominated by President |
| Term | 5 years | Permanent body; 1/3 retires every 2 years; member serves 6 years |
| Dissolution | Can be dissolved by President | Cannot be dissolved |
| Speaker | Speaker of Lok Sabha (elected by members) | Vice-President of India is ex-officio Chairman |
| Money Bills | Can introduce and pass alone | Can only delay by 14 days; cannot amend |
| No-Confidence Motion | Can pass (brings down government) | Cannot pass no-confidence motion |
| Special Powers | Controls executive (government) | Can create All-India Services; declare national emergency |
Legislative Process — How a Bill Becomes Law
📋 Step-by-Step: Bill to Act
- First Reading: Bill introduced in Parliament; title read; no discussion
- Second Reading: General discussion; may be referred to Select/Joint Committee
- Committee Stage: Detailed clause-by-clause examination
- Third Reading: Final vote on the Bill
- Other House: Bill passed to the other House; repeats same process
- Joint Sitting: If Houses disagree, President may call a joint sitting (Lok Sabha majority prevails)
- Presidential Assent: Bill sent to President for assent — becomes an Act
🔑 Important Parliamentary Terms for CTET
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🎯 Start Free PracticeThe Indian Judiciary
What is the structure of the Indian Judiciary? India has a unified, integrated judicial system. At the apex is the Supreme Court of India (New Delhi), followed by High Courts in each state/UT, and below them District Courts and subordinate courts. The judiciary is independent of the executive and legislature, with the power of judicial review to strike down laws violating the Constitution.
| Feature | Supreme Court | High Court |
|---|---|---|
| Established by | Article 124 of the Constitution | Article 214 |
| Jurisdiction | Original, Appellate, Advisory (Art.143) | Original, Appellate, Supervisory |
| Chief Justice | Chief Justice of India (CJI) | Chief Justice of High Court |
| Appointment | By President on advice of collegium | By President on advice of CJI & Governor |
| Key Power | Judicial Review; Guardian of Constitution; Writ Jurisdiction | Writ jurisdiction under Article 226 |
| Writs | Under Article 32 (Fundamental Rights only) | Under Article 226 (broader scope) |
🔍 Public Interest Litigation (PIL) — CTET Favourite
PIL allows any citizen to approach the Supreme Court or High Court in the interest of the public — not just when their own rights are violated. PILs have been instrumental in protecting environmental rights, prisoners' rights, and education rights in India. The concept of PIL was developed by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer and Justice P.N. Bhagwati in the late 1970s and 1980s.
Local Self-Government – Panchayati Raj HIGHEST PRIORITY
What is Panchayati Raj? Panchayati Raj is the system of rural local self-government in India. The 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 gave constitutional status to Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs), adding Part IX (Articles 243–243O) and the 11th Schedule (29 subjects) to the Constitution. It is one of the most frequently tested topics in CTET Social Science Civics.
| Level | Name | Area |
|---|---|---|
| Village Level | Gram Panchayat | One or more villages |
| Block Level | Panchayat Samiti / Block Panchayat | A block (group of villages) |
| District Level | Zila Parishad | Entire district |
73rd vs 74th Constitutional Amendment
| Feature | 73rd Amendment (1992) | 74th Amendment (1992) |
|---|---|---|
| Covers | Rural Local Self-Government (Panchayati Raj) | Urban Local Self-Government (Municipalities) |
| Added Part | Part IX (Art. 243–243O) | Part IX-A (Art. 243P–243ZG) |
| Schedule | 11th Schedule (29 subjects) | 12th Schedule (18 subjects) |
| Body | Gram Panchayat, Panchayat Samiti, Zila Parishad | Nagar Panchayat, Municipal Council, Municipal Corporation |
| Election Commission | State Election Commission for PRIs | State Election Commission for ULBs |
| Finance Commission | State Finance Commission for PRIs | State Finance Commission for ULBs |
| Reservation | Not less than 1/3 for women; SC/ST proportionate reservation | Same as 73rd Amendment |
✅ Key Provisions of 73rd Amendment — CTET Checklist
- 3-tier Panchayat system mandatory for states with population > 20 lakh
- Gram Sabha — foundation of Panchayati Raj; meets periodically
- Reservation for women: not less than 1/3 of total seats (many states have 50%)
- SC/ST reservation proportionate to their population in the district
- 5-year term for all Panchayat bodies
- State Election Commission conducts elections
- State Finance Commission for financial review every 5 years
- Disqualification: minimum age 21 years for Panchayat membership
Federalism in India
India has a federal system with strong unitary features, often described as a "Quasi-Federal" state (K.C. Wheare) or "Co-operative Federalism" in modern context. Power is distributed between the Central Government and State Governments through three legislative lists.
| List | Schedule | Subjects (Count) | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Union List | 7th Schedule | 98 subjects | Defence, foreign affairs, atomic energy, railways, currency |
| State List | 7th Schedule | 59 subjects | Police, public health, agriculture, irrigation, local government |
| Concurrent List | 7th Schedule | 52 subjects | Education, marriage, bankruptcy, forests, electricity, labour |
Electoral System & the Election Commission of India
India uses the First-Past-the-Post (FPTP) system for Lok Sabha and State Assembly elections — the candidate with the most votes in a constituency wins, regardless of majority. The Election Commission of India (ECI) is an autonomous constitutional body established under Article 324 of the Constitution.
📋 Key Electoral Facts — CTET Quick Reference
- Voting Age: 18 years (lowered from 21 by 61st Amendment, 1989)
- ECI established: January 25, 1950 (celebrated as National Voters Day)
- Article 324: Constitutes the Election Commission
- EVM: Electronic Voting Machines used since 1999 Goa elections; nationwide from 2004
- NOTA: "None of the Above" option introduced in 2013
- Model Code of Conduct: Guidelines for political parties during elections
- Proportional Representation: Used for Rajya Sabha elections by state legislatures
Social Science Pedagogy – CTET Paper 2 Notes 20 MARKS
What is Social Science Pedagogy in CTET? SS Pedagogy in CTET Paper 2 covers how Social Science should be taught in Classes 6–8. It includes the nature of SS as a discipline, inquiry-based learning, critical pedagogy, constructivist approaches, sources and resources, assessment methods, and the relationship between SS and values/democratic citizenship education.
| Pedagogy Topic | Key Concepts | PYQ Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Nature of Social Science | Multidisciplinary, integrated, value-laden discipline | ★★★★☆ |
| Concept of Social Science | Relationship between History, Geography, Civics, Economics | ★★★☆☆ |
| Constructivism in SS | Learner-centred, inquiry, discussion, problem-solving | ★★★★★ |
| Critical Pedagogy | Paulo Freire; empowerment; questioning power structures | ★★★★☆ |
| Sources & Resources | Primary vs secondary sources; maps, newspapers, field trips | ★★★☆☆ |
| Concept Mapping | Graphic organiser showing relationships between concepts | ★★★☆☆ |
| Assessment in SS | Formative, summative, portfolio, CCE, project-based | ★★★★☆ |
| Gender in SS Teaching | Gender-sensitive curriculum; challenging stereotypes | ★★★☆☆ |
| Values & Democratic Citizenship | SS as vehicle for democratic values, rights, duties | ★★★★☆ |
| Learning Beyond Classroom | Field trips, community surveys, oral history projects | ★★★☆☆ |
🎓 Paulo Freire's Critical Pedagogy — CTET Context
- Banking Education: Teacher "deposits" knowledge into passive learners — Freire opposed this
- Problem-Posing Education: Learners and teachers engage in dialogue; knowledge is co-created
- Praxis: Reflection and action together — the goal of critical pedagogy
- Relevance to SS: SS teaching should empower students to question social inequalities, not just memorise facts
🔍 Approaches to Teaching SS — Comparative Summary
- Expository/Lecture: Teacher explains; good for covering content; low student engagement
- Inquiry-Based: Students investigate questions; develops critical thinking; time-intensive
- Project Method: Students work on extended, real-world projects; develops multiple skills
- Discussion Method: Structured classroom dialogue; develops democratic participation skills
- Source Analysis: Using primary/secondary sources; develops historical and civic thinking
- Map Method: Develops spatial thinking and geographical literacy
60 PYQ-Based MCQs with Answers PREVIOUS YEAR
Set 1 — Indian Constitution & Preamble (Q1–Q10)
Set 2 — Parliament, Judiciary & Federalism (Q11–Q25)
Set 3 — Panchayati Raj & Local Government (Q18–Q30)
Set 4 — Social Science Pedagogy (Q23–Q40)
📌 MCQs Q27–Q60: Access on MyTestSeries
The remaining 34 advanced PYQ MCQs (covering Electoral System, Gender Equality, Social Justice, Media & Democracy, Markets, and SS Pedagogy advanced topics) are available as a free chapter-wise practice set on MyTestSeries. Also includes detailed answer explanations, difficulty ratings, and year-wise source attribution.
Previous Year Question Analysis (2019–2024)
Based on thorough analysis of 6 CTET papers, here is the topic-wise frequency for Civics & Social Science Pedagogy questions:
| CTET Year | High-Frequency Civics Topics | Question Style |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 73rd Amendment, PIL, Constructivism in SS, Secularism | Scenario-based; "which is MOST appropriate" |
| 2023 | Preamble keywords, Gram Sabha, SS Pedagogy, Writs | Definition + Application |
| 2022 (Dec) | Fundamental Rights articles, 74th Amendment, Freire | Article identification; quote attribution |
| 2022 (Aug) | Rajya Sabha features, Education in Concurrent List, CCE | True/False-type MCQ format |
| 2021 | Constitution Day, 86th Amendment, Oral history | Date/event matching |
| 2019 | Preamble additions (42nd Amend.), Women reservation in PRIs | Direct factual recall |
📊 Key Insight from PYQ Analysis
SS Pedagogy is the highest-scoring section in Paper 2 SS — with 20 dedicated questions and relatively predictable topics. Constructivism, inquiry-based learning, critical pedagogy (Freire), and assessment methods (portfolio, CCE) are the most reliably recurring pedagogy themes. A candidate who masters SS Pedagogy alone can secure 14–18 of these 20 marks.
Common Mistakes Students Make in CTET SS Civics
- Confusing 73rd and 74th Amendments73rd = Rural (Panchayats, Part IX, 11th Schedule, 29 subjects). 74th = Urban (Municipalities, Part IX-A, 12th Schedule, 18 subjects). Mixing these two is the #1 Panchayati Raj error in CTET.
- Mixing up Preamble Words"Socialist" and "Secular" were added in 1976 (42nd Amendment), not original. Many students write these as original words. Also confusing "Justice" (Social, Economic, Political) with "Equality" and "Fraternity."
- Confusing Article 32 and Article 226Art.32 = Supreme Court writ jurisdiction for Fundamental Rights only. Art.226 = High Court writ jurisdiction for FRs AND any other purpose. Art.226 has broader scope.
- Not Knowing Which Writ Does WhatAll five writs (Habeas Corpus, Mandamus, Prohibition, Certiorari, Quo Warranto) are tested with specific scenarios. Create a one-line definition + example for each.
- Skipping SS Pedagogy EntirelyMany candidates focus only on content (Constitution, Parliament) and neglect the 20 pedagogy marks. SS Pedagogy is highly predictable and can be mastered in 2–3 days of focused study.
- Confusing Justiciable vs Non-JusticiableFundamental Rights = justiciable (courts can enforce). DPSP = non-justiciable (courts cannot enforce). This distinction is tested almost every paper, yet many candidates reverse it.
- Ignoring Gender & Social Justice ChaptersNCERT SPL Class 7 and 8 chapters on gender equality, social justice, and marginalised communities consistently contribute 2–3 questions per paper. These chapters are often skipped in preparation.
Preparation Strategy for CTET Social Science Paper 2
How to prepare CTET Social Science in 8 weeks: Study all three NCERT Social and Political Life books (Class 6, 7, 8) thoroughly. Cover Our Pasts (History) and Earth Our Habitat/Resources (Geography). Dedicate one week to SS Pedagogy. Practice 20 PYQ MCQs daily, solve 3 full mock tests, and revise with summary sheets in the final week.
- Week 1–2: NCERT Social and Political Life (Class 6, 7, 8)Read all chapters making concise notes. For Civics: mark every article number, amendment, key term. Focus on NCERT examples and case studies — these appear almost verbatim in CTET questions.
- Week 3: Constitutional Framework Deep DiveCreate flashcards for: all 6 Fundamental Rights, 5 writs with definitions, DPSP categories, key Amendments (42nd, 44th, 61st, 73rd, 74th, 86th). Draw the Parliament structure diagram from memory.
- Week 4: History & Geography (NCERT-based)Cover Our Pasts I, II, III for medieval and early modern Indian history. For Geography: Earth Our Habitat (Class 6) and Resources & Development (Class 8). Focus on map skills and resource distribution.
- Week 5: SS Pedagogy — 20 Marks SecuredStudy NCF 2005 position on SS teaching. Learn Freire's Critical Pedagogy, constructivism in SS, inquiry-based learning, concept mapping, and all assessment types. This is the most scoring component — don't skip it. Refer to CTET CDP Notes for pedagogy cross-references.
- Week 6–7: PYQ Practice & Mock TestsSolve all CTET 2019–2024 Paper 2 SS sections. Take at least 3 full Paper 2 mock tests at MyTestSeries CTET Mock Test Series. Maintain an error log for every incorrect answer.
- Week 8: Rapid RevisionReview all flashcards and summary sheets. Revisit error log topics. Do 10 MCQs daily on weak areas. In the last 3 days: only revision, no new topics. Check the CTET Syllabus 2026 to confirm you've covered everything.
| Resource | Details | Access |
|---|---|---|
| NCERT SPL Class 6–8 | Social and Political Life — primary study material | ncert.nic.in FREE |
| CTET Official Syllabus | Latest Paper 2 SS syllabus and pattern | ctet.nic.in GOV |
| CTET Mock Test Series | Full Paper 2 mocks with SS detailed solutions | MyTestSeries |
| Daily SS Quiz | 10 MCQs daily — chapter-wise SS practice | Free Registration |
| CTET Syllabus Guide | Complete Paper 1 & 2 syllabus breakdown | MyTestSeries Blog |
| CTET Eligibility Guide | Confirm you meet age and qualification criteria | MyTestSeries Blog |
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🎓 Conclusion — Your Roadmap to 60/60 in CTET Social Science Civics
Social Science Civics in CTET Paper 2 rewards candidates who understand concepts deeply rather than those who merely memorise. The Indian Constitution, Panchayati Raj, Parliament, and the Judiciary are not abstract topics — they describe the very system of governance that affects every Indian's daily life. When you study them with that perspective, the details become easier to retain and apply.
The 60 PYQ-based MCQs in this guide, combined with the topic notes and previous year analysis, give you a complete picture of what CTET actually tests. Pair this with regular mock test practice on MyTestSeries, and you will walk into the September 6, 2026 exam with genuine confidence.
Key Dates: CTET 2026 Exam — September 6, 2026 | Last date to apply — June 10, 2026 | Full Notification Details →


