Assam Assamese Typing Test — InScript
25 WPM Assamese on a 5-minute passage. Skill-test gate for APSC Junior Assistant, ASCB Junior Administrative Assistant, Assam Police clerical and Stenographer recruitments. This page covers the cutoff, scoring, post-wise pattern, common mistakes, and a four-week plan calibrated to the APSC/ASCB exam-centre experience. Bilingual posts also run a 40 WPM English session in a separate sitting.
- Speed cutoff
- 25 WPM
- Duration
- 5 min
- Source
- APSC / ASCB notification
- Layout
- Assamese InScript
- Scoring
- Net WPM
Who takes the APSC/ASCB Assamese typing test
Assamese typing is required across multiple Assam state recruitments. APSC handles senior cadres; ASCB runs the bulk of clerical hiring.
Junior Assistant / Junior Steno
APSC's clerical recruitments include Assamese typing at 25 WPM (or 40 WPM English). Most candidates choose Assamese for state-cadre posts; English-only posts allow either. The test is qualifying and is conducted post-mains.
JAA / Junior Assistant
Assam Staff Selection Commission (formerly Assam Subordinate Services) runs the largest clerical recruitment cycle in the state. JAA cadres require 25 WPM Assamese typing on the Bengali-Assamese InScript layout.
Stenographer / Steno-Typist
Stenographer cadres require shorthand plus Assamese typing at higher speeds (30+ WPM). The shorthand portion is dictation-based; the typing portion uses the Bengali-Assamese InScript layout on Unicode.
Police Constable Clerk / PSU Assistant
Assam Police clerical recruitments and state PSU cadres (APDCL, APGCL, ASTC) typically piggyback on ASCB's typing-test platform. Speeds and durations match the ASCB JAA standard.
The biggest mistake first-time aspirants make is practising on the wrong layout or font. APSC and ASCB tests use Assamese Unicode on the Bengali-Assamese InScript layout — not the older Geetanjali or DT Heera fonts that publishing houses and many older coaching centres still teach. The Assamese alphabet shares structure with Bengali but adds the letters ৰ (ra) and ৱ (wa) which have their own dedicated keys. If your hands are trained on legacy fonts or pure-Bengali keyboards, plan extra weeks of Assamese-InScript drilling before the skill-test date.
Official typing test pattern
The recruitment notification specifies the typing test rules in detail. The pattern has been stable in recent cycles, with the cutoff and duration set per notification.
Duration: 10 minutes, single sitting. The clock runs once the candidate clicks Start — it does not pause for water breaks, keyboard issues, or system restarts (those are handled separately by the invigilator).
Medium: the language chosen at the application stage. The medium is fixed at the application stage and cannot be switched on the test day. Some recruitments allow English-only or regional-language-only; others run separate sittings for both.
Passage length: calibrated so a candidate at cutoff speed finishes the passage roughly when the timer ends.
Speed cutoff: 35 Net WPM English, 30 Net WPM Hindi. Below the cutoff is a fail. There is no partial credit, no interview substitute, and no re-test within the same cycle.
Qualifying only: the test does not contribute to the merit list. Tier 1 + Tier 2 marks decide the rank. But a candidate who misses the typing cutoff is removed from the selection pool for that recruitment cycle, regardless of how high the Tier 2 score was.
How the typing test is scored
Net WPM, not Gross. Most practice sites report only Gross, which is why candidates arrive at the exam surprised by their Net score. Here is the exact formula SSC uses, with a worked example.
Gross WPM
Gross WPM counts the raw speed — every character typed, divided by a standard word length of five, divided by minutes elapsed.
Net WPM
Net WPM subtracts errors. SSC treats every wrong character and every missing character as one full mistake. The total-errors count is then divided by minutes to give an errors-per-minute penalty, and that penalty is subtracted from Gross WPM.
Worked example
Gross WPM = 1,875 / 5 / 10 = 37.5 WPM
Net WPM = 37.5 − (20 / 10) = 35.5 WPM
This clears the 35 WPM cutoff by a thin margin of 0.5 WPM — roughly one additional error away from a fail. That is why an aim-for-40 target is not overkill: it builds a safety buffer the exam's scoring rule demands.
Backspace policy at the centre
Before 2022, the rule varied by exam centre software. Some test panels disabled backspace entirely; others allowed it silently. Candidates swapped conflicting advice on coaching forums, and a small number of disqualifications traced back to that ambiguity. The agency issued a formal clarification in 2022: backspace is permitted during the APSC/ASCB typing test, and the software used at exam-centre platforms reflects this.
Knowing the rule is not the same as using it well. Every backspace costs two keystrokes worth of time — one to delete, one to retype — and sometimes more if the correction itself slips. Candidates who clear the cutoff by a comfortable margin typically follow three rules:
- Correct a mistake only when the mistake is obvious the moment it happens — a letter swap, a doubled vowel. Do not scroll back five words to fix something noticed later.
- Never correct a mistake in the middle of a word. Finish the word, then backspace to the error. Breaking rhythm costs more than the mistake itself.
- Leave the last minute untouched. In the final sixty seconds, type through everything — errors included. Partial characters at the end count as mistakes, but unfinished passages leave missing characters that also count as mistakes. Speed wins.
The candidates who fail despite knowing the rule almost always fail from over-correction. They see a typo at the thirty-second mark, backspace ten characters to fix it, lose five seconds, and never make that time back. Practice in both modes — backspace-allowed and strict — so the decision is automatic on exam day.
Six mistakes that cost aspirants the test
These are the patterns that show up in feedback from candidates who failed a cycle and cleared the next one. Each fix is small; the aggregate effect is five to seven WPM.
Over-correcting mid-passage
Backspace is allowed, so every small error looks fixable. Each fix costs two to five seconds, and by minute eight the correction budget has eaten the speed budget.
Correct only word-level typos noticed inside the current word. Let everything else ride.Practising on a different keyboard than the one used in the exam
Most aspirants practise on a laptop keyboard. Government exam centres use full-size external keyboards with 1.5-mm key travel and deeper actuation. The feel is different, and a candidate who has only practised on chiclet keys loses five to ten WPM on exam day.
Buy a basic wired external keyboard two weeks before the exam. Practise on it for the last 300 minutes of preparation.Looking at the keyboard during timed drills
Glancing down costs 200–400 milliseconds per lookup. Compounded over a 10-minute test, that is three to five WPM lost to a fixable habit.
Cover the keyboard with a cloth during the last two practice weeks. Uncomfortable for the first session; automatic by the third.Treating the test as a sprint
Candidates who start too fast hit a 45-second wall — the forearms tighten, accuracy collapses, and Net WPM drops below the cutoff by minute five.
Start at a sustainable 32–33 WPM for the first two minutes. Ramp to 37 WPM in the middle. Hold.Ignoring mock tests under time pressure
Practising in 30-second bursts trains speed; only full 10-minute sessions train the stamina that the actual test rewards. A candidate who has never sat through a full-length mock often seizes at the eight-minute mark.
At least three full 10-minute mock tests in the final week. Same time of day as the scheduled exam.Neglecting the language chosen in the form
An aspirant who selected Hindi in the application and practised English for three months arrives at the centre to face Kruti Dev on a Remington layout. Re-application is not possible; the only option is to fail.
Check the chosen medium in the admit card the moment it releases. If the medium is Hindi, switch practice to Kruti Dev or Mangal immediately.A four-week practice plan that actually works
This sequence assumes thirty focused minutes a day, six days a week. Candidates already above 30 WPM can compress it to two weeks. Candidates below 20 WPM should extend week 1 to three weeks before moving on.
Accuracy base
- Home-row drills, no look-down, five minutes
- Full 5-minute passages at comfortable speed
- Track accuracy, not speed
- Skip anything that pushes accuracy below 95%
Speed ramp
- 10-minute daily session, capital and punctuation included
- Administrative and economics passages only
- Add one 30-minute session on Sunday
- Ignore errors during the drill; review after
Endurance
- Full-length mocks every other day
- Backspace-allowed on alternate days, strict on the others
- Focus on the 7–10 minute window where most candidates slip
- External keyboard from this week onwards
Mocks + weak spots
- Full 10-minute mock every day, same time slot as the scheduled exam
- Review every mock — track which word types cause errors
- Five-minute cooldown after each mock: slow, accurate typing
- Skip the final two days entirely — rest beats the last drill
Take the test in exam conditions — right now
Ten-minute timer, SSC-style passage, Net WPM scoring, backspace rule picker. No sign-up, no ads inside the widget, and a result card that shows exactly where the Net WPM penalty came from.
Start Free APSC Assamese Practice →Frequently asked questions
Short, straight answers. Every number is pulled from the current SSC notification and the 2022 clarification, not from memory.
25 WPM Assamese (or 40 WPM English) for most APSC Junior Assistant and ASCB clerical posts. Some posts require both languages. The test is qualifying — clearing the cutoff is sufficient. Confirm in the specific notification — APSC and ASCB occasionally revise the cutoff between cycles.
APSC Junior Assistant, APSC Stenographer, ASCB Junior Administrative Assistant, ASCB Junior Assistant, Assam Police Constable Clerk and Stenographer, and several state-board clerical posts. Each post sets its own speed and language requirement; the typical Assamese cutoff is 25 WPM.
APSC and ASCB online tests use Assamese Unicode (Bengali-Assamese InScript layout) on modern OS rendering. Older coaching material still teaches Geetanjali or DT Heera fonts from the typewriter and DTP era. Practise on Unicode InScript for any current notification — the older fonts do not run on the test platform.
Net WPM = Gross WPM minus errors per minute. Assamese characters are scored as full units; mistakes (missing or wrong glyphs, including ৰ/ৱ-specific errors and conjunct mistakes) each count as one error. The skill test is qualifying — clearing 25 WPM is sufficient. Speed beyond cutoff does not earn merit marks.
Most modern APSC exam-centre software allows backspace and basic editing, in line with the central typing-panel standard. Some older centres disable it. Verify in the admit card. Practise forward-only as default; treat backspace as a safety net for the inevitable conjunct slip.
Formal Assamese prose — administrative, governance, or general-knowledge topics. Standard Assamese punctuation. About 400-500 Assamese characters in a 5-minute window, calibrated so a candidate at cutoff speed finishes the passage roughly when the timer ends. The Assamese-specific letters ৰ (ra) and ৱ (wa) appear in normal density.
From 12 WPM to 25 WPM Assamese: three to four weeks of thirty focused minutes a day. Below 8 WPM: six to eight weeks. Assamese typing rewards conjunct accuracy heavily — the script shares structure with Bengali but adds ৰ and ৱ which need their own muscle memory. Drill 98 percent accuracy at sustainable speed first, then push WPM in the final fortnight.