One of the highest goals of civil service examination is whether candidates have potential macro-decision-making ability. Article writing questions need to examine whether candidates can dig deep into and give full play to a specific problem, and whether they can think about the overall situation from a specific problem and make macro decisions.
Some applications for the last question have clear instructions on what style to write. For example, the national civil service examination in 2006 requires that "at present, how to deal with all kinds of public emergencies is an important issue that governments at all levels must face." Please write an argumentative paper on how to improve the ability of governments at all levels to deal with public emergencies, and limit the article to a strategic paper. But in many cases, only the theme is clear, and candidates are required to write articles according to their own situation.
According to the marking situation, it is found that more than 80% of the candidates have written policy papers. On the one hand, it is because some essentials of policy papers are easy to master in a short time, and it is slightly easier to write. On the other hand, I dare not take risks, because I am not familiar with the writing of political papers. After all, writing a good political paper requires a certain accumulation of policy theory, and the requirements for writing skills are higher than those for policy papers.
Whether it is a political paper or a policy paper, it is ultimately an inspection of candidates' simulated administrative ability. The purpose of writing political papers is to make sense, not to make sense. In the actual civil service work, the ultimate goal of reasoning is to solve the existing practical problems.
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