PSIR Optional Test Series UPSC 2026 / 2027

8 Sectional + 4 Full Length Tests + 45 Years Solved PSIR PYQs Course + 1000 Practice Questions with Solutions

Rs. 8999 Only

Details

What is PSIR Optional Test Series UPSC 2026 / 2027 by Synopsis IAS?

It is course for PSIR optional Test Series for UPSC 2026 and UPSC 2027 batch. You can choose one batch (2026 or 2027). It is designed by Riddhi Sharma.

It is available in Hindi and English Mediums both. कोर्स अङ्ग्रेज़ी और हिन्दी माध्यम दोनों में संचालित किया जाता है। 

Included Modules

  1. PSIR Optional (Test Series): 8 Sectional + 4 Full Length Tests (Tests, Model Answers, Evaluation of 12 Tests).
  2. PSIR Optional (PYQs): 1979-2025 Solved Papers.
  3. 1000+ Practice questions: See Demo With Model Answers.
  4. Answer Writing Sessions: Approach Videos and Papers Discussion Videos.

Details of Test Schedule 2026: 

  • 4 Sectional Tests: 3 August 2025 – 5 October 2025 (On Sunday with max gap) 
  • 4 Sectional Tests: 23 November 2025 – 25 January 2026 (On Sunday with max gap) 
  • 2 Full-Length Tests: February 2026 
  • 2 Simulator Tests (Full-Length Tests: (on the same day, Morning & Afternoon): You can choose one date from 22 march 2026 (if you want to appear before Prelims) or 9 August 2026 (if you want to appear afrer Prelims).
  • Flexible Test Series: Dates can be postponed, but can not be preponed.

PSIR Optional Test Series for UPSC 2026 / 2027 Schedule (English and Hindi Mediums)

Test No Date Test Syllabus Test Name (Units Covered)
1 24 October 2025 Paper 1 Section A: Units 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 Political Theory, Theories of State, Justice, Equality, Rights
2 06 November 2025 Paper 1 Section B: Units 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 Indian Nationalism, Constitution, Union & State Govt, Panchayati Raj
3 18 Nov 2025 Paper 1 Section A: Units 6, 6.1, 7, 8, 9 Democracy, Political Culture, Power & Ideology, Political Ideologies, Indian Political Thought, Western Political Thought 
4 1 Dec 2025 Paper 1 Section B: Units 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 Statutory Institutions, Federalism, Economic Development, Caste & Ethnicity, Party System, Social Movements
5 15 Dec 2025 Paper 2 Section A: Units 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 Comparative Politics, State, Representation, Globalization, IR Approaches
6 28 Dec 2025 Paper 2 Section A: Units 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 Key IR Concepts, Political Order, International Economy, UN, Regionalization, Global Concerns
7 10 Jan 2026 Paper 2 Section B: Units 12, 13, 14, 15 Indian Foreign Policy, NAM, South Asia, Global South
8 25 Jan 2026 Paper 2 Section B: Units 16, 17, 18, 19 India & Major Powers, UN, Nuclear Policy, Recent Foreign Policy
Break for Revision
9 15 Feb 2026 Paper 1 Full Syllabus (Units 1–21) Paper 1 Full-Length Test
10 22 Feb 2026 Paper 2 Full Syllabus (Units 1–19) Paper 2 Full-Length Test
11

22 March 2026 (9 AM – 12 PM)

Paper 1 Full Syllabus (Units 1–21) Paper 1 Full-Length Test (Final Simulator Mock)
12 (22 March 2026) (2 PM – 5 PM) Paper 2 Full Syllabus (Units 1–19) Paper 2 Full-Length Test (Final Simulator Mock)

What you will get:

  • Each student will get a unique Student dashboard at www.synopsisias.com
  • Unique Login id and Password for the Student dashboard.
  • Upload your answer sheet or OMR sheet to your student dashboard.
  • Candidates will upload Solved Answer Copies.
  • Download evaluated Answer sheet with proper feedback and comments. (after 10-14 days) (N/A for Prelims tests)
  • Video Discussion of 300+ Questions (PYQs +).
  • Question Paper-cum-Model Answer (PDF files only. No hard copy dispatch)
  • Study material for Content enrichment: PSIR Optional PYQ Course and E Books (PDF files only. No hard copy dispatch)

IMPORTANT POINTS RELATED TO PSIR TEST SERIES FOR UPSC

  • Study material will be provided in soft copy only and will not be dispatched.
  • In case a student is found involved in any violation of copyrights of Synopsis IAS material, the admission to the test series will be cancelled.
  • The fee once paid is non-refundable and non- transferable.
  • Synopsis IAS reserves all rights related to admission.
  • Synopsis IAS reserves all rights to make any changes in test series schedule, if need so arises.
  • Last date for submission of answer copies for evaluation: 12 Days Before the Mains Examination 2026. You will get back all the evaluated copies latest before 1 week Mains 2026. No copy will be accepted after the last date.

Faculties

Riddhi Sharma

Course Pages

500+ Pages

Course Duration

20 Hours

Validity

Mains 2027

Course Content / Syllabus

Following subjects are covered:

Syllabus of PSIR Paper - I

Political Theory and Indian Politics:

  1. Political Theory: meaning and approaches.
  2. Theories of state: Liberal, Neo-liberal, Marxist, Pluralist, Post-colonial, and Feminist.
  3. Justice: Conceptions of justice with special reference to Rawl’s theory of justice and its communitarian critiques.
  4. Equality: Social, political, and economic; the relationship between equality and freedom; Affirmative action.
  5. Rights: Meaning and theories; different kinds of rights; Concept of Human Rights.
  6. Democracy: Classical and contemporary theories; different models of democracy—representative, participatory and deliberative.
  7. Concept of power: hegemony, ideology, and legitimacy.
  8. Political Ideologies: Liberalism, Socialism, Marxism, Fascism, Gandhism, and Feminism.
  9. Indian Political Thought: Dharmashastra, Arthashastra, and Buddhist Traditions; Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, Sri Aurobindo, M. K. Gandhi, B. R. Ambedkar, M. N. Roy.
  10. Western Political Thought: Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, John S. Mill, Marx, Gramsci, Hannah Arendt.

Indian Government and Politics

  1. Indian Government and Politics
    (a) Political Strategies of India’s Freedom Struggle: Constitutionalism to mass Satyagraha, Noncooperation, Civil Disobedience; Militant and Revolutionary Movements, Peasant and Workers Movements.
    (b) Perspectives on Indian National Movement; Liberal, Socialist, and Marxist; Radical Humanist and Dalit.
  2. Making of the Indian Constitution: Legacies of the British rule; different social and political perspectives.
  3. Salient Features of the Indian Constitution: The Preamble, Fundamental Rights and Duties, Directive Principles; Parliamentary System and Amendment Procedures; Judicial Review and Basic Structure doctrine.
  4. (a) Principal Organs of the Union Government: Envisaged role and actual working of the Executive, Legislature, and Supreme Court.
    (b) Principal Organs of the State Government: Envisaged role and actual working of the Executive, Legislature, and High Courts.
  5. Grassroots Democracy: Panchayati Raj and Municipal Government; Significance of 73rd and 74th Amendments; Grassroot movements.
  6. Statutory Institutions/Commissions: Election Commission, Comptroller and Auditor General, Finance Commission, Union Public Service Commission, National Commission for Scheduled Castes, National Commission for Scheduled Tribes, National Commission for Women; National Human Rights Commission, National Commission for Minorities, National Backward Classes Commission.
  7. Federalism: Constitutional provisions; changing nature of center-state relations; integrationist tendencies and regional aspirations; inter-state disputes.
  8. Planning and Economic Development: Nehruvian and Gandhian perspectives; Role of planning and public sector; Green Revolution, land reforms and agrarian relations; liberalization and economic reforms.
  9. Caste, Religion, and Ethnicity in Indian Politics.
  10. Party System: National and regional political parties, ideological and social bases of parties; Patterns of coalition politics; Pressure groups, trends in electoral behavior; changing socio-economic profile of Legislators.
  11. Social Movement: Civil liberties and human rights movements; women’s movements; environmentalist movements.

Syllabus of PSIR Paper - II

Comparative Politics and International Relations

Comparative Political Analysis and International Politics:

  1. Comparative Politics: Nature and major approaches; Political economy and political sociology perspectives; Limitations of the comparative method.
  2. State in Comparative Perspective: Characteristics and changing nature of the State in capitalist and socialist economies, and advanced industrial and developing societies.
  3. Politics of Representation and Participation: Political parties, pressure groups and social movements in advanced industrial and developing societies.
  4. Globalisation: Responses from developed and developing societies.
  5. Approaches to the Study of International Relations: Idealist, Realist, Marxist, Functionalist and Systems theory.
  6. Key Concepts in International Relations: National interest, security and power; Balance of power and deterrence; Transational actors and collective security; World capitalist economy and globalisation.
  7. Changing International Political Order:
    (a) Rise of superpowers; Strategic and ideological Bipolarity, arms race and cold war; Nuclear threat;
    (b) Non-aligned movement: Aims and achievements.
    (c) Collapse of the Soviet Union; Unipolarity and American hegemony; Relevance of non-alignment in the contemporary world.
  8. Evolution of the International Economic System: From Bretton woods to WTO; Socialist economies and the CMEA (Council for Mutual Economic Assistance); Third World demand for new international economic order; Globalisation of the world economy.
  9. United Nations: Envisaged role and actual record; Specialized UN agencies—aims and functioning; the need for UN reforms.
  10. Regionalisation of World Politics: EU, ASEAN, APEC, AARC, NAFTA.
  11. Contemporary Global Concerns: Democracy, human rights, environment, gender justice terrorism, nuclear proliferation.

India and the World

  1. Indian Foreign Policy: Determinants of foreign policy; the institutions of policy-making; continuity and change.
  2. India’s Contribution to the Non-Alignment Movement Different phases; current role.
  3. India and South Asia:
    (a) Regional Co-operation: SAARC-past performance and future prospects.
    (b) South Asia as a Free Trade Area.
    (c) India’s “Look East” policy.
    (d) Impediments to regional co-operation: River water disputes; illegal cross-border migration; Ethnic conflicts and insurgencies; Border disputes.
  4. India and the Global South: Relations with Africa and Latin America; Leadership role in the demand for NIEO and WTO negotiations.
  5. India and the Global Centres of Power: USA, EU, Japan, China and Russia.
  6. India and the UN System: Role in UN Peace-keeping; Demand for Permanent Seat in the Security Council.
  7. India and the Nuclear Question: Changing perceptions and policy.
  8. Recent developments in Indian Foreign Policy: India’s position on the recent crises in Afghanistan, Iraq, and West Asia, growing relations with US and Israel; Vision of a new world order.

General Details

Lectures: There are pre recorded lectures by the highly qualified and experienced faculties.

Study material: Course study material will be available for registered students in downloadable and printable PDF format on the student dashboard. 

Personalized student dashboard: Registered Students get a Personalized student dashboard with a login password. You can watch the lectures anywhere, anytime and any number of times.

Two-way feedback: We take students’ feedback seriously. We can remove or replace faculties if the feedback is not good.

It is a Paid Batch for UPSC CSE aspirants. However, a number of videos are uploaded at YouTube for Demo and Awareness purpose.

Course Completion Date: 1 month before exam

Validity: One month after exam.

How is this course different from similar courses by other coachings?

STUDY MATERIAL
Other coachings provide too much content.

Still, a number of topics are left out. Students are forced to follow two or three coachings, along with a newspaper like The Hindu, Indian Express, Dainik Jagran etc.

Ultimately, students tend to confuse and get stressed. A number of students even do not appear in the exam due to the phobia of Current Affairs, PT type compilations, The Hindu, Indian Express.

At Synopsis IAS, we provide to the point and Synoptic Content.

No other Study Material / Book needed: For making content, we start with NCERTs, and refer newspapers, standard text books, reference books, research papers and journals. We update the content with current affairs regularly. After making content for any topic, we also refer to the other major institutes notes to ensure that we don't miss any important point or topic.

Still, the content is available in approx 1/3rd pages as compared to the other institutes.

Krishna sir is the content head at Synopsis IAS. The course content is thoroughly reviewed by him. He has gained 7+ years of experience in Research and Development while in services at DAE, GOI.

LECTURES

We do not waste unnecessary time in selling coupons for courses, marketing, and promotions. The faculties just teach, teach and teach, and do not beat around the bush. The lecture duration is short – If other institute has covered the same topic in 1 hour, we cover that just in approx. 15-20 minutes.

MEDIUM OF COURSE

We teach in easy Hinglish language. The content slides for the course are in Hinglish (One line English, One line Hindi).

The course is available in English and Hindi Mediums. The Study Material is in Three Languages: First file is in English, Second file is in Hindi, Third file is Bilingual (one line English, one line Hindi). The Lectures are delivered in Hinglish.

GUIDANCE

When it comes to guidance, noone can even come closer to Synopsis IAS. The Synopsis IAS institute is based on the vision of a person, who left services just to teach and provide genuine Guidance.

There are Strategy Videos by Krishna Sir: He has discussed the strategy to prepare for UPSC in cover in a realistic way in his most popular Guidance Series.

COST

The course is available for a very less price compared to any other online or offline coaching.

Content Developers and Faculties

Riddhi Sharma

Rating

Students Rating: 4.8 (854)

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