Note Making Questions
Note Making Questions
3. Red relates to the base chakra, orange the sacral chakra, yellow the solar plexus
chakra, green the heart chakra, blue the throat chakra, indigo the brow chakra
(sometimes referred to as the third eye) and violet relates to the crown chakra.
4. Colour is absorbed by the eyes, skin, skull, our ‘magnetic energy field’ or aura and
the energy of colour affects us on all levels, that is to say, physical, spiritual and
emotional. Every cell in the body needs light energy – thus colour energy has
widespread effects on the whole body. There are many different ways of giving
colour, including; Solarised Water, Light boxes/lamps with colour filters, colour silks
and hands on healing using colour.
5. Colour therapy can be shown to help on a physical level, which is perhaps easier
to quantify, however there are deeper issues around the colours on the psychological
and spiritual levels. Our wellbeing is not, of course, purely a physical issue.
Fortunately, many more practitioners, both orthodox and complementary, are now
treating patients in a holistic manner.
6. Colour Therapy is a totally holistic and non-invasive therapy and, really, colour
should be a part of our everyday life, not just something we experience for an hour or
two with a therapist. Colour is all around us everywhere. This wonderful planet does
not contain all the beautiful colours of the rainbow for no reason. Nothing on this
earth is here just by chance; everything in nature is here for a purpose. Colour is no
exception. All we need to do is to heighten our awareness of the energy of colour,
absorb it and see how it can transform our lives.
Sample Question Paper CBSE, 2018-19
1. There is a clear dichotomy between Jayashankar Prasad’s daily life and the one
that found expression in his literature. In his literary formulations, Prasad advocated
an escape- from personality ideals and categorically stated: “An artist‟s art, and not
his person, is the touchstone to assess his work . . . it is only after losing his
personality that he emerges in his art as an artist”.
2. In Prasad‟s works – his poems, short stories, novels, dramas etc. – what emerges
is life as shaped in the writer’s inner self by his emotions, fancies, dreams, reveries .
. . His writings are a record not of outer reality, but of the artist’s inner world. As such,
of a proper appreciation and understanding of his works more emphasis needs to be
placed on the working of his mind, than the events of his dayto-day life.
4. When the business had somewhat recovered, Prasad planned the publication of a
literary journal. Prasad started the “Indu”. The inaugural number appeared in July
1909. By this time Prasad’s notions of literature had crystallized into a credo. In the
first issue of Indu, he proclaimed, “Literature has no fixed aim; it is not a slave to
rules; it is a free and all-embracing genius, gives birth to genuine literature which is
subservient to none. Whatever in the world is true and beautiful is its subject matter.
By dealing with the True and Beautiful it establishes the one and affects the full
flowering of the others. Its force can be measured by the degree of pleasure it gives
to the reader‟s mind as also by the criticism which is free of all prejudice”. The words
sound like the manifesto of romanticism in literature.
5. Even while recognizing the social relevance of literature, Prasad insisted, “The
poet is a creator . . . he is not conditioned by his milieu; rather it is he who moulds it
and gives it a new shape; he conjures up a new world of beauty where the reader for
the time being, becomes oblivious of the outer world and passes his time in an
eternal spring garden where golden lotuses blossom and the air is thick and pollen”.
Thus, the chief aim of literature according to Prasad is to give joy to the reader and
to create a state of bliss in him. Later under the impact of Shiv Advaitism, this faith of
Prasad got further strengthened.
(Extract from ‘Jayashankar Prasad- His mind and Art’ by Dr. Nagendra)
Question Paper CBSE, 2020
1. How does television affect our lives? It can be very helpful to people who carefully
choose the shows that they watch. Television can increase our knowledge of the
outside world; there are high quality programmes that help us understand many
fields of study, science, medicine, the different arts and so on. Moreover, television
benefits very old people, who can’t leave the house, as well as patients in hospitals.
It also offers non-native speakers the advantage of daily informal language practice.
They can increase their vocabulary and practise listening.
3. Recent studies show that after only thirty seconds of television viewing, a person’s
brain ‘relaxes’ the same way that it does just before the person falls asleep. Another
effect of television on the human brain is that it seems to cause poor concentration.
Children who view a lot of television can often concentrate on a subject for only
fifteen to twenty minutes. They can pay attention only for the amount of time
between commercials.
5. Before a child is fourteen years old, he or she views eleven thousand murders on
the TV. He or she begins to believe that there is nothing strange about fights, killings
and other kinds of violence. Many studies show that people become more violent
after viewing certain programmes. They may even do the things that they see in a
violent show.
2. The factors that influence one’s well-being are interrelated. For example, a job
provides not just money but purpose, goals, friendships and a sense of belonging.
Some factors also make up for the lack of others; for example, a good marriage can
compensate for a lack of friendship, while religious beliefs may help a person to
accept physical illness. Money is linked to well-being, because having enough
money improves living conditions and increases social status. But various
international studies have shown that it is the quality of our personal relationships,
not the size of our bank balance, which has the greatest effect on our state of
well-being. Believing that money is the key to happiness can also harm a person’s
well-being.
The good news is that waste management to keep cities clean is now getting
attention through the Swachh Bharat Mission. However, much of the attention begins
and stops with the brooms and the dustbins, extending at most to the collection and
transportation of the mixed waste to some distant or not so distant place, preferably
out of sight.
The challenge of processing and treating the different streams of solid waste, and
safe disposal of the residuals in scientific landfills, has received much less attention
in municipal solid waste management than is expected from a health point of view.
One of the problems is that instead of focusing on waste management for health, we
have got sidetracked into ‘‘waste for energy’’. If only we were to begin by not mixing
the biodegradable component of solid waste (close to 60 percent of the total) in our
cities with the dry waste, and instead use this stream of waste for composting and
producing a gas called methane.
Benefits of compost on the farm are well-known. The water holding capacity of the
soil which uses compost helps with drought-proofing, and the requirement of less
water per crop is a welcome feature for a water-stressed future. By making the soil
porous, use of compost also makes roots stronger and resistant to pests and decay.
Farmers using compost, therefore, need less quantity of pesticides. There is also
evidence to suggest that horticulture crops grown with compost have better flavour,
size, colour and shelf-life.
City compost has the additional advantage of being weed-free unlike farmyard
manure which brings with it the seeds of undigested grasses and requires a
substantial additional labour cost for weeding as the crops grow. City compost is also
rich in organic carbon, and our soils are short in this.
Farmers clearly recognize the value of city compost. If city waste was composted
before making it available to the farmers for applying to the soil, cities would be
cleaned up and the fields around them would be much more productive.
Quite apart from cleaning up the cities of biodegradable waste, this would be a major
and sustainable contribution to improving the health of our soil without further
damage by excessive chemical inputs. What a marvellous change from waste to
health!
The good news is that some states are regularly laying plastic roads. Plastic roads
will not only withstand future monsoon damage but will also solve a city’s problem of
disposing of non-recyclable plastic. It is clear that if the mountains of waste from our
cities were to be recycled into road construction material, it would tackle the problem
of managing waste while freeing up scarce land.