-
Main menu
- Sign in
This draft is a preliminary, editor-facing scaffold for an IndiaWiki article tentatively titled Forest Guard Entrance, classified under the cohort of entrance examinations. The phrase, as commonly understood in Indian public-employment contexts, refers to the recruitment-style selection process used by various state forest departments to fill the post of Forest Guard, a frontline position in the protection and management of forest areas. Because the term is generic and is used by multiple state-level recruiting agencies and forest departments across India, the present draft does not assert any specific syllabus, eligibility threshold, examining body, schedule, fee, vacancy count, or selection ratio. Editors are requested to treat every concrete particular as unverified until cross-checked against an official notification or a reliable secondary source.
The intent of this document is to give human editors a substantial neutral starting body, complete with section scaffolding, suggested coverage areas, and a verification checklist. It is explicitly not for public publication in its current form. Wherever a factual gap exists, the draft offers contextual framing rather than invented detail, so that subsequent editors can fill in sourced specifics without first having to remove speculation.
The post of Forest Guard exists within the broader administrative framework of forest governance in India, which operates concurrently under the Union and the States. Forest departments at the state level typically maintain a hierarchy of field staff, with the Forest Guard generally regarded as an entry-level uniformed role responsible for patrolling, assisting in anti-poaching duties, supporting fire control, helping with afforestation activities, and aiding senior officers during surveys and inspections. The exact designation, scope of duties, and reporting structure may vary between states and union territories, and editors should not assume uniformity.
Recruitment to the position is ordinarily conducted through a competitive selection process, which in many Indian states includes a written examination, a physical standards test, a physical efficiency test, and document verification. The conducting authority differs by state: in some jurisdictions a state staff selection commission or subordinate services selection board administers the examination, while in others the state forest department or a forest recruitment board does so directly. Because each cycle is governed by a fresh notification, historical patterns are not necessarily a reliable guide. Editors should consult the most recent official advertisement of the relevant state before stating procedural specifics in the article.
An article on the Forest Guard Entrance is significant for IndiaWiki readers because the recruitment is one of the more widely attempted public-sector entrance processes in rural and semi-urban India, often drawing candidates from districts adjacent to forest divisions. The role is also of public-policy interest: forest guards form the frontline workforce that implements field-level conservation, wildlife protection, and community-interface work in protected areas, reserve forests, and territorial divisions. Coverage of the entrance examination thus intersects with topics such as public employment, environmental administration, rural livelihoods, and gender representation in uniformed services.
At the same time, an encyclopedia entry on this subject must remain carefully neutral. It should avoid presenting any one state's process as representative of the whole country, refrain from publishing unverifiable selection statistics, and avoid making prescriptive claims about preparation strategies or coaching. The aim is to inform readers about what the entrance generally is, how it is conventionally structured at a high level, and where authoritative information may be located, rather than to function as a guide, advertisement, or examination bulletin.
Editors taking this draft forward are encouraged to confirm each of the following classes of information against primary sources, typically the official notifications of state forest departments or state recruiting agencies, supplemented by reporting in established Indian newspapers. Until such verification is complete, none of these items should be stated in the article as fact.
For the published version, editors may consider the following structure, adjusted to the depth of sourced material available:
Editors are advised to keep each section short until adequate sourcing is available, rather than padding with generic content. A shorter, well-sourced article is preferable to a long, speculative one.
This draft has been produced from the title and cohort alone and contains no invented dates, names, statistics, fees, awards, rankings, or allegations. Phrases such as "typically", "in many states", and "ordinarily" have been used to signal that the underlying claim is contextual rather than verified for any specific cycle. Before any portion of this draft is moved towards publication, an editor should:
Until these steps are completed, the draft should remain in the editorial workspace and not be transcluded into the public mainspace.
No references are cited in this draft, as it intentionally avoids unverified specifics. Editors are requested to add citations to: (i) the official notifications and recruitment portals of the relevant state forest departments or state recruiting agencies; (ii) state forest service rules and gazette notifications defining the cadre; (iii) reports in established Indian newspapers covering specific recruitment cycles; and (iv) standard reference works on Indian forest administration. Each factual statement introduced into the article should carry an inline citation to one of these source classes.