For RMS Class VI, English is qualifying only (students must score 35%, but the marks are not added to the final merit list). However, for Sainik Schools (both VI and IX) and RMS Class IX, English is a highly scoring subject that directly impacts their final rank.
1. Reading Comprehension
- This section tests reading speed and the ability to extract facts quickly.
- Factual Retrieval: Answering direct “Who, What, Where, When” questions based on the passage.
- Vocabulary in Context: Finding synonyms or antonyms for specific words exactly as they are used in the text.
- Inference: Deducing the moral of the story or selecting the most appropriate title for the passage.
2. Core Grammar & Mechanics (Class VI & IX)
This forms the bulk of the “Fill in the blanks” and “Spot the error” questions.
- Parts of Speech: Nouns: Singular/plural rules, gender, and collective nouns
- Pronouns: Personal, demonstrative, reflexive, and relative pronouns.
- Adjectives: Degrees of comparison (Positive, Comparative, Superlative) and correct usage (e.g., much vs. many, little vs. a little).
- Verbs: Main verbs, auxiliary (helping) verbs, and modals (can, could, should, would, might).
- Adverbs: Identifying adverbs of time, place, manner, and frequency.
- Prepositions: Appropriate use of in, on, at, by, with, from, to
- Conjunctions: Coordinating (and, but, or) and subordinating (because, although, if).
- Articles: Definite and Indefinite and knowing when to omit articles entirely.
- Subject-Verb Agreement : Ensuring singular subjects take singular verbs, especially with tricky phrases like “As well as,” “Along with,” or “Neither/Nor.”
- Tenses: Identifying and filling in the correct verb form for Present, Past, and Future tenses (Simple, Continuous, Perfect).
3. Advanced Grammar (Primarily Class IX)
- Active and Passive Voice: Identifying the correct passive structure of a given active sentence (and vice versa) across different tenses.
- Direct and Indirect Speech (Narration): Recognizing correct pronoun and tense shifts when a quote is converted into reported speech.
- Question Tags: Applying the rule of positive statements taking negative tags
- Conditional Sentences: Recognizing “If… then” structures (e.g., “If I had studied, I *would have passed”).
4. Vocabulary & Usage
- Synonyms and Antonyms: Choosing the word nearest or opposite in meaning.
- One-Word Substitutions: Replacing a descriptive phrase with a single word
- Idioms and Phrases: Identifying the figurative meaning of common phrases
- Spelling: Spotting the single correctly spelt word among three incorrect variations, or finding the single misspelt word.
- Homophones/Confusing Words: Distinguishing between words that sound the same but have different meanings (e.g., *Accept* vs. *Except*, *Stationary* vs. *Stationery*).
5. Sentence Structuring
- Jumbled Words / Sentence Rearrangement: Reordering scrambled words
- Sentence Types: Identifying Assertive, Imperative, Interrogative, and Exclamatory sentences.