Phase I online exam
Phase I is the screening stage across English, reasoning, aptitude, awareness, and stream-linked areas.

PFRDA Grade A - Assistant Manager Descriptive English Mock Test
PFRDA Grade A - Assistant Manager Descriptive English Mock Test
Phase I is the screening stage across English, reasoning, aptitude, awareness, and stream-linked areas.
Phase II brings descriptive English into play alongside the stream-specific paper.
Interview follows Phase II and rewards candidates who can connect regulation, finance, and policy clearly.
PFRDA Grade A preparation is phase-driven: a broad objective screening test first, then descriptive English and stream papers in Phase II before interview.
A screening paper covering aptitude, reasoning, awareness, English, and stream elements.
Paper I is an English descriptive paper and deserves separate timing practice.
The second Phase II paper is technical or domain-oriented based on the post stream.
PFRDA Grade A 2025 descriptive preparation works best when topic choice stays close to the institution and not just generic essay prompts.
Pension reforms, retirement planning, and social security
Financial inclusion, digital finance, and investor literacy
Regulation, governance, and policy implementation
Analytical English writing with a regulatory and public-policy tone
Analytical English writing on pensions, regulation, governance, and public-policy themes.
Structured responses that reward clarity, economy, and policy understanding.
The course is aligned to the real descriptive paper or stage instead of relying on generic writing copy.
The focus areas stay close to the institution and exam context instead of broad generic essay themes.
Scheme cards and source visibility make the page easier to trust and easier to scan before you spend prep time.
You can judge the pattern, focus areas, and likely usage flow before deciding how to use the mocks.
Phase II Paper I is an English descriptive paper for 100 marks with a 60-minute duration.
Yes. Phase II English is a dedicated paper, so it needs its own writing practice instead of only objective revision.
Pension reforms, retirement security, financial inclusion, regulation, and economy-linked governance topics are the strongest preparation areas.
Because the exam belongs to a financial regulator, so writing quality improves fastest when topics stay close to regulation, pension systems, and public finance.