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This draft is an editor-facing skeleton for an IndiaWiki article on the recruitment process commonly referred to as the ITBP SI examination, which falls within the broader cohort of competitive entrance examinations in India. The abbreviation ITBP refers to the Indo-Tibetan Border Police, a central armed police force functioning under the Ministry of Home Affairs of the Government of India, and SI is the standard abbreviation for Sub-Inspector, a rank in Indian police and central armed police organisations. The examination, in general terms, is one of several recruitment pathways through which the force inducts personnel at the Sub-Inspector level for various branches and trades.
This document is not intended for public publication in its present form. It has been prepared as a starting body for human editors who will verify, correct, expand, and rewrite the contents using authoritative sources. Specific factual elements such as eligibility criteria, age limits, physical standards, syllabi, selection stages, vacancy figures, fee structures, examination dates, application portals, and notification numbers have been deliberately omitted, since these vary across notifications and recruitment cycles, and must be confirmed against the most recent official ITBP recruitment notification before publication.
The Indo-Tibetan Border Police is one of the central armed police forces of India, generally tasked with duties along certain Himalayan frontier areas as well as a range of internal security and disaster response responsibilities. Like other central armed police forces, it periodically conducts recruitment drives at multiple ranks, including constable, head constable, assistant sub-inspector, sub-inspector, and higher gazetted ranks, depending on the trade or branch concerned. The Sub-Inspector cadre typically encompasses both general duty roles and various specialist or technical streams, although editors should verify the precise list of streams advertised in any given recruitment cycle before describing them.
Recruitment to the Sub-Inspector level in central armed police forces is generally undertaken either through dedicated departmental notifications issued by the force itself or through common examinations conducted by central recruiting agencies. Editors should confirm, for the specific period covered by the article, whether ITBP SI vacancies were filled through a direct recruitment notification by the force, through a centralised examination, or through a combination of both, since the conducting authority has implications for the syllabus, application route, and dispute redressal mechanism. Historical context regarding earlier recruitment cycles may be added once verified.
Recruitment examinations such as the ITBP SI selection are significant within the Indian entrance examination ecosystem because they offer a structured pathway into uniformed central government service at a supervisory rank. Aspirants from across the country, including candidates from rural and semi-urban backgrounds, typically prepare for such examinations alongside other central armed police force and state police recruitments, which contributes to a sizeable coaching and self-study segment in the test preparation industry.
From an institutional standpoint, the examination is one of the means by which the force maintains its officer-level cadre at the cutting edge of operations, including general duty supervision and specialised technical functions. The selection process generally seeks to assess a combination of academic knowledge, reasoning ability, language proficiency, physical fitness, and medical suitability, reflecting the demands of service in difficult terrain and varied operational environments. Editors expanding this section should take care to describe significance in neutral, encyclopaedic terms, avoiding promotional language, and should not assert specific competition ratios, success rates, or comparative rankings against other examinations unless these can be supported by published, citable sources.
The following checklist identifies areas where the article will require careful sourcing. None of these items should be filled in from memory or assumption; each must be verified against the latest official notification, the official ITBP website, or other reliable published sources before inclusion.
Editors should also verify whether any judicial pronouncements, official circulars, or policy revisions have affected the recruitment process, and ensure that any such references are accurately cited.
The final published article may be organised along the following lines, subject to editorial judgement and the availability of reliable sources:
Throughout the article, editors should maintain a neutral point of view, avoid coaching-style language, and refrain from offering preparation advice or endorsements of specific institutes, books, or websites.
This draft has intentionally avoided specific numerical, chronological, and procedural claims, because such details are highly variable across recruitment cycles and are easily rendered inaccurate by subsequent notifications. Editors are requested to treat every factual proposition introduced into the article as requiring an inline citation to a reliable, preferably primary, source, such as an official ITBP notification, an official Government of India publication, or a reputable national news outlet reporting on the recruitment.
Care should be taken to distinguish between recurring features of the examination and changes specific to a particular cycle. Where information differs between cycles, the article should specify the year or notification to which a given detail applies, rather than presenting cycle-specific information as if it were a permanent feature. Editors should also avoid reproducing copyrighted text from notifications and should paraphrase appropriately. Any user-generated content from forums, coaching sites, or social media should not be used as a source. Finally, the article should be reviewed for compliance with IndiaWiki policies on neutrality, verifiability, and biographies or institutional articles before being moved out of draft space.
References to be added by editors. Suggested categories of sources include: the official ITBP recruitment notification for the relevant cycle; the official ITBP website; Ministry of Home Affairs publications and press releases; Press Information Bureau releases; and reports from established national news organisations covering the recruitment. Each factual statement in the final article should be supported by at least one such citation, and care should be taken to ensure that links remain accessible or are archived appropriately.