{
  "type": "article",
  "title": "UPTET Candidates Say History Questions Ate Up Time While Maths and English Felt Easy",
  "summary": "The first day of the UPTET exam passed off peacefully, with History questions leaving candidates puzzled even as Maths and English offered relief.",
  "content": "The first day of the Uttar Pradesh Teacher Eligibility Test, UPTET, passed off peacefully across the state, though the question paper caught many candidates off guard with some unexpectedly deep historical questions, ranging from Mohammad Ghaznavi to the Vedic period and from Maurya rule to Buddhism. Students walking out of the exam centres described the overall difficulty level as average, saying Maths and English questions came as a relief while the History portion tested their time management skills far more than they had expected.\n\nHistory's Older Chapters Ate Up Precious Minutes\nCandidates emerging from the centres said the questions overall were fairly average in difficulty. Maths and English, they said, posed no real trouble at all. The real challenge came with History, where questions drawn from older historical periods demanded far more time to work through than the rest of the paper. Several candidates admitted that jumping between centuries-old events left them short on time, and some said the time crunch meant they simply could not attempt every question in that section.\n\nSonbhadra's Saumya Expects the Cutoff to Climb Higher\nSaumya, who travelled from Sonbhadra to appear for the exam, said this year's paper was fairly simple overall and that she managed to solve every single question on it. She noted that a handful of Maths questions were genuinely tough, but the rest of the paper was fairly ordinary, and she got through every question in both the Hindi and English sections without trouble. Candidates who prepared thoroughly, she said, can expect a noticeably stronger cutoff this time around. Saumya, who already works as a teacher, said her own preparation had been solid, and going by the nature of this year's paper, she believes the cutoff will climb quite high, with most aspirants likely to clear it comfortably.\n\nPaper Matched Expectations, But History Tripped Up Banaras's Gaurav\nKhushi Chaudhary said the paper turned out largely the way she had anticipated it would. She had prepared extensively for the exam, though, in the end, fewer questions were asked than what she had actually studied for. A few questions did give her real trouble, she admitted, but she still expects to score well this time, adding that the exam overall did not feature unusually difficult questions. Gaurav Kesari, who travelled from Banaras, said History-related questions were the ones that caused him genuine difficulty, while the rest of the paper felt quite ordinary and did not trouble him at all. According to Gaurav, the paper as a whole was moderate in difficulty and was not deliberately made tougher than it needed to be.\n\nFewer Questions Than the Syllabus Suggested, Social Science Held Students Up\nRoshni said far fewer questions were asked than what the prescribed syllabus had led candidates to expect. She said her own preparation had been thorough and proper, and while the Social Science questions gave her some trouble, she managed to solve the rest of the paper quite comfortably and without much effort. Taken as a whole, she said, the paper was of a fairly normal standard and was unlikely to have caused major difficulty for any candidate who had prepared adequately.\n\nWhat this means for you\n• Across India: Aspirants preparing for similar teacher eligibility tests get a reminder of how much time management on tricky History questions can matter on exam day.\n• In Uttar Pradesh: UPTET candidates who appeared can factor in the likelihood of a higher cutoff this year, given how the paper's overall average difficulty played out.\n\nQuestions & Answers\n\n1. How was the overall difficulty level of the UPTET paper on day one?\nCandidates said the paper's overall level was average or normal.\n\n2. Which subject's questions troubled candidates the most?\nHistory questions, especially those on older historical periods, made time management difficult.\n\n3. How were the Maths and English questions?\nCandidates said Maths and English questions came as a relief and did not cause much trouble.\n\n4. Which historical topics were the questions drawn from this time?\nQuestions covered Mohammad Ghaznavi, the Vedic period, Maurya rule and Buddhism.\n\n5. What did Saumya from Sonbhadra say about the paper?\nShe said the paper was easy, she solved every question, and expects the cutoff to go higher this time.\n\n6. Which subject troubled Gaurav Kesari from Banaras?\nHe faced difficulty with History-related questions, while the rest of the paper was fairly normal.\n\n7. Which subject's questions confused Roshni?\nShe said the Social Science questions gave her some trouble.\n\n8. Were the questions asked as per the announced syllabus?\nNo, several candidates said fewer questions were asked than what the syllabus had indicated.",
  "url": "https://trendkia.com/en/exam/uptet-men-itihasa-ke-savalon-ne-ulajhaya-ganita-angreji-men-mili-rahata-abhyarthiyon-ne-bataya-pepara-ka-hala-4175",
  "category": "Exam",
  "publishedAt": "2026-07-02",
  "tags": [
    "UPTET",
    "Teacher Eligibility Test",
    "Uttar Pradesh",
    "History Questions",
    "Cutoff",
    "Candidate Reactions"
  ],
  "language": "en",
  "site": "TrendKia"
}