Class 9 Skill Education Kaushal Vikas Chapter 1 Introduction to Agricultural Practices Solutions (NCERT 2026–27)

These Class 9 Skill Education Kaushal Vikas Chapter 1 solutions cover Introduction to Agricultural Practices from Unit I – Work with Life Forms of the new NCF-2023 Skill Education textbook (2026–27). This mandatory opening chapter introduces the key concepts and processes common across agricultural work — the value chain, the agro-climate relationship, setting up a simple meteorological observatory, soil testing and amendment, seed selection and treatment, and how to choose a vocation. Every “Assess your learning” exercise question is solved below with original, exam-ready answers.

Class: 9 Subject: Skill Education Book: Kaushal Vikas Chapter: 1 Unit: I – Work with Life Forms Session: 2026–27

Class 9 Kaushal Vikas Chapter 1 Solutions – Overview

Chapter 1, Introduction to Agricultural Practices, opens Unit I, Work with Life Forms, and is mandatory for every student. India is one of the world’s oldest agricultural civilisations and a global leader in farm outputs, leading in vegetables, fruits, milk, eggs and fish. The chapter explains the importance of agriculture (16 per cent of GDP and 46.1 per cent of the workforce, per the Economic Survey 2024–25), the value chain that raises a produce’s price as it travels and is processed, and the agro-climate relationship that decides cropping patterns. You learn to build a simple meteorological observatory (rain gauge, dry–wet bulb thermometer, wind vane), to test and amend soil for texture and pH, and to select and treat seeds using the floating method. Finally, it guides you in choosing a vocation related to working with life forms.

Key Concepts & Notes

1.1 Importance of work & the value chain

The agricultural sector is the “mother of all production” — the primary source of food and of raw materials (cotton, jute, leather, wood, rubber, oil, tea, coffee) for almost all industries. Food security means all people, at all times, have reliable access to a sufficient quantity of affordable and healthy food.

A value chain explains why the same vegetable costs far more in a supermarket than in a mandi (sometimes 300–400 per cent more). If producing a harvest costs ₹100, value keeps getting added: post-harvest handling adds 15–20 per cent, and processing (grinding, oil extraction, cleaning, pasteurisation, packaging) adds another 30–50 per cent, plus storage, transport and profit. Using hybrid seeds and research costs raise the price further. Understanding the value chain helps us make informed buying choices.

1.2 Agro-climatic relationship

Climate is a critical factor in farming. India has diverse agro-climatic regions, so cropping patterns change from the Himalayas to the Kerala coast — rice in some regions, wheat, cotton, soyabean, sugarcane and millets in others. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) records observations and provides Agrotechnological Advisory Services (AAS), helping farmers plan kharif, rabi and summer (zaid) crops and warning of rainfall, snow and livestock-disease outbreaks. District and block forecasts reach farmers through SMS alerts, radio, Doordarshan, mobile apps, the Kisan Portal, KVKs and platforms like Bharat-VISTAAR and the Gramin Krishi Mausam Sewa (GKMS).

Crop seasons: Rabi = winter crops (e.g., wheat, gram, mustard, peas, barley); Kharif = monsoon crops (e.g., rice, maize, cotton, groundnut, bajra, jowar, sugarcane); Zaid = summer crops (e.g., watermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, pumpkin).

Building a meteorological observatory: a rain gauge (a bottle with an inverted funnel and a ruler) measures rainfall depth; a dry–wet bulb thermometer measures temperature and humidity — the wet bulb reads lower because evaporation cools it, and a small dry–wet difference means humid air; a wind vane (a free-moving arrow on a marked disc) shows wind direction.

Relevance of meteorological parameters (Table 1.1, Ladakh caselet):

Meteorological parameterRelevance for farmers and livestock owners
Duration of summer/winterAs Ladakh is a cold desert, a very short period is available for farming (May to September). Thus, any change in weather negatively affects agricultural activities.
Precipitation (rainfall and snowfall)Ladakh receives maximum rainfall from July to September, when most crops grow. Very heavy rain can cause floods and crop loss, while poor rain causes water scarcity.
TemperatureFrom June to August, temperatures are highest in the day (20 to 30°C) and above freezing (0 to 5°C) at night. This range is best for farming activities.
HumidityAverage humidity ranges from 70 to 74 per cent between May and September. Very low humidity causes higher evaporation losses from leaves and dryness of soil.
Wind direction and speedStrong winds, especially in open fields, can physically damage crops and lead to soil erosion.

1.3 Processes — soil testing, seed selection, organic inputs

Soil testing and amendment: healthy soil is judged on physical (texture, water-holding capacity), chemical (pH, nutrients, organic matter) and biological (microbes) parameters. Collect soil from several spots in a zig-zag pattern, dig a 15–20 cm ‘V’, mix, then quarter and reduce the sample. A mason jar test separates sand (bottom), silt (middle) and clay (top) after 24–48 hours so you can read the texture:

ResultAction to be taken
Clay more than 20 per cent — causes water-logging and suffocation of roots.Add river sand or red-garden soil to improve water drainage.
Sand more than 80 per cent — holds very little water, leading to wilting.Add compost or garden soil to increase water-holding capacity and add nutrients.

pH testing and amendment: most plants grow in slightly acidic to neutral soil (pH 6–7).

ResultAction to be taken
Soil pH is acidic, i.e., below 6Add compost (organic matter); add wood ash; add lime or dolomite.
Soil pH is basic, i.e., above 8.5Add extra water and drain it (soil wash); add compost; add gypsum or sulphur-containing fertiliser.

Seed selection & the floating method: a weak seed gives a weak plant however fertile the soil. Treating seeds raises the germination rate and protects them from insects and disease. In the salt-water floating method, add 100 g salt to 1 L water, add 250 g wheat seeds, wait 3–5 minutes; damaged, infected or hollow seeds float and are discarded, while healthy sinking seeds are washed and dried in shade. Salt also removes microbial infection from the seed coat. Seed dormancy is a natural state in which living seeds do not germinate until conditions are suitable.

Organic inputs: agro waste and cow dung make vermicompost; Daśhaparṇī arka is an organic pesticide made from ten materials — ten local leaves (neem, karanj, custard apple, papaya, castor, marigold, lantana, bael, tulsi, hibiscus) with cow-dung and cow-urine, fermented for 30–40 days and sprayed at 15 mL per 1 L of water.

Key Terms

TermMeaning
Livelihood ecosystemAn interconnected network of resources, people, institutions, activities and environmental factors that lets people earn a living while benefiting society.
Food securityReliable access for all people, at all times, to a sufficient quantity of affordable and healthy food.
Value chainThe series of steps (handling, processing, storage, transport) that add cost and value to a produce as it moves from farm to consumer.
Agro-climatic regionAn area defined by its climate and soil that determines which crops can be grown there.
Crop calendarA structured schedule of planting, maintenance and harvesting based on local weather and soil.
Rabi / Kharif / ZaidThe three crop seasons — winter, monsoon and summer crops respectively.
Rain gaugeAn instrument that measures rainfall by collecting rainwater and reading its depth on a scale (cm or mm).
Dry–wet bulb thermometerA pair of thermometers used to measure air temperature and humidity from the difference in their readings.
Wind vaneA free-moving arrow on a marked disc that shows the direction of the wind.
Soil textureThe relative proportions of sand, silt and clay in soil, which affect water-holding and root growth.
Soil pHA measure of how acidic, neutral or alkaline the soil is, affecting nutrient availability to plants.
Seed treatmentTreating seeds before sowing to raise germination and protect them from insects and disease.
Seed dormancyA natural state in which a living seed does not germinate until conditions are suitable.
VermicompostOrganic compost produced by worms from agro waste and cow dung.
Non-timber Forest Produce (NTFP)All useful forest products except timber — resin, medicinal plants, fruits, nuts, lac, etc.

“Assess your learning” — Exercise Solutions

All six questions from Section 1.6 “Assess your learning” are reproduced verbatim below; answers are original and exam-ready.

1. A farmer has sandy soil with high acidity. Suggest two amendments and explain how they will improve soil quality.

ANSWER The soil has two problems — it is too sandy (so it holds very little water and nutrients) and it is too acidic (pH below 6, which makes some nutrients hard for plants to absorb). Amendment 1 — Add compost (organic matter): compost increases the water-holding capacity of sandy soil and supplies nutrients; being organic matter, it also gently raises the pH, reducing acidity. This corrects both the sandiness and the acidity together. Amendment 2 — Add lime or dolomite (with some wood ash): lime/dolomite neutralises the acid and raises the pH towards the ideal 6–7 range, so nutrients become available to the plant roots again.

2. Non-timber Forest Produce (NTFP) refers to all useful products from forests (except timber), including resin, medicinal plants, fruits, nuts, etc. Lac is an important NTFP that is produced by a tiny insect, Kerria lacca, which secretes a resinous substance as a protective coating on the branches of host trees. Lac production is dependent on insect population. Insect growth in turn depends on suitable host plants and a warm and humid climate, among other factors like growth of plant, etc. If you were part of a team building a meteorological observatory to help monitor conditions for the growth of Kerria lacca, which two instruments would you prioritise and why?

ANSWER Since the growth of Kerria lacca depends mainly on a warm and humid climate, I would prioritise the two instruments that measure exactly those conditions. (i) Dry–wet bulb thermometer (for temperature and humidity): it tells us both how warm the air is and how humid it is — the two factors the insect needs most. A small difference between the dry and wet bulb readings shows the air is humid, which favours insect growth. (ii) A thermometer / temperature record: to track day and night temperature and confirm the warmth the insect needs. (If only one extra instrument is allowed beyond the dry–wet bulb, a rain gauge is the next useful one, as rainfall affects humidity and host-plant growth.) Wind and rainfall matter less directly, so they are lower priority.

3. Table 1.3 shows the rainfall in a region and the rainfall requirements of some crops. On the basis of the rainfall data, suggest which among the following crops can be safely planted in the region and when. Justify your choice.

ANSWER Step 1 — study the rainfall record (Table 1.3): the region’s annual rainfall over ten years is mostly low and very uneven — 480, 333, 882, 350, 974, 693, 494, 917, 549 and 596 mm. The average is about 587 mm, and in several years it falls to only 333–494 mm. Step 2 — match crops to that range: a crop is “safe” only if its minimum requirement is met even in the drier years. Crops needing 1000 mm or more (Rice 1500–3000, Jute 1250–2000, Sugarcane 750–1500, Wheat 750–1000) are not safe, because rainfall regularly drops well below their needs. Safe choices: crops with low to moderate requirements that fit even the poor years — Pulses (400–500 mm) are the safest, and Jawar (500–1000 mm), Soyabean (500–1000 mm), Maize (500–1000 mm), Groundnut (500–1250 mm) and Cotton (500–1000 mm) can also be grown in normal-to-good years. When: these are mainly rain-fed kharif (monsoon) crops, so they should be sown at the onset of the monsoon when the region receives its rainfall, allowing the crop to use the rains during its growth and to be harvested after the rains end. (Reasoning based on the data; pulses are the most reliable, low-rainfall option.)

4. Create a farm-to-plate journey map for any farming produce. Indicate the value chain as the produce travels from where it was grown to the table in the form of food.

ANSWER Example — Wheat (farm to plate): 1. Farm (cultivation): the farmer prepares the soil, sows treated wheat seed and irrigates — base cost of harvest, say ₹100. 2. Post-harvest handling: threshing, cleaning, drying and bagging at the farm/mandi add about 15–20 per cent to the cost. 3. Storage & transport: the grain is stored in warehouses (rent, maintenance) and transported to a mill, adding storage, transport and profit costs. 4. Processing: the wheat is ground into flour (atta/maida) — processing adds roughly 30–50 per cent more value. 5. Packaging & retail: the flour is packaged, branded and sold through a wholesaler to a supermarket or shop, adding further cost. 6. Plate: the family buys the flour and cooks roti/bread at home. At each step the value (and price) rises — which is why flour from a supermarket costs much more than the farmer’s raw grain. (Any produce, e.g., tomato or milk, may be used in the same way.)

5. Of the tasks that you did, which did you enjoy the most? Which did you enjoy the least? Give examples of what went well and what did not go well. What would you do differently next time?

ANSWER This is a personal reflection, so answer honestly about your own experience. A model answer: “I enjoyed the mason jar soil test the most because it was easy to do and the three clear layers of sand, silt and clay made the result obvious; my group’s sample showed too much clay, so we added river sand. I enjoyed the rain gauge readings the least, because rain was irregular and we sometimes forgot to record on time, so our data had gaps.” Next time I would fix a daily time and a roster so every observation is recorded, label every soil sample clearly, and repeat each test to make the results more reliable.

This is a reflection / portfolio task — write from your own hands-on work; the answer above is only a guide.

6. Give examples of how you can apply your learning in a real-life situation.

ANSWER The skills from this chapter are directly useful in daily life: I can test the soil of my home garden for texture and pH and amend it with compost or lime before planting; read weather data from a mobile app or my own rain gauge to decide when to sow or irrigate; and use the floating method to pick out healthy seeds before planting. I can also use my understanding of the value chain to buy vegetables more cheaply from a mandi instead of a supermarket, make vermicompost from kitchen and garden waste, and prepare an organic pesticide from local leaves — saving money and reducing chemical use. (Give examples from your own surroundings.)

Extra Practice Questions

Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. Why is the agricultural sector called the “mother of all production”?

ANSWERBecause it is not only the primary source of food that sustains human civilisation, but also supplies raw materials — cotton, jute, leather, wood, rubber, oil, tea, coffee — for almost all other industries and human activities.

Q2. What is food security?

ANSWERFood security means that all people, at all times, have reliable access to a sufficient quantity of affordable and healthy food.

Q3. In the floating method, why do some seeds float while others sink?

ANSWERAdding salt increases the density of the water. Damaged, hollow or infected seeds are lighter and float, while healthy, full seeds are denser and sink, so the floating ones can be discarded.

Q4. Name the three crop seasons and give one crop for each.

ANSWERRabi (winter) — wheat; Kharif (monsoon) — rice; Zaid (summer) — watermelon.

Q5. Why does the wet bulb thermometer show a lower temperature than the dry bulb?

ANSWERWater evaporates from the wet cotton covering its bulb, and evaporation absorbs heat and cools the bulb, so the wet bulb reads lower. The size of the difference indicates the humidity of the air.

Long Answer Type Questions

Q1. Explain why understanding the value chain is useful to a consumer, using an example.

ANSWERThe value chain shows how a produce’s price rises at each step from farm to table because of post-harvest handling, storage, processing, packaging, transport and profit. For example, vegetables in a supermarket can cost 300–400 per cent more than the same vegetables in a mandi, and wheat ground into branded flour costs far more than the farmer’s raw grain. Knowing this, a consumer can make informed choices — comparing the cost of travelling to a farm or mandi against buying processed produce from a supermarket — and can decide when paying extra for processing or packaging is worth it. This understanding helps people save money and value the work behind their food.

Q2. Describe how you would test and improve the quality of a soil sample.

ANSWERFirst I would collect a good sample — taking soil from several spots in a zig-zag pattern, digging a 15–20 cm ‘V’ hole, mixing the soil, removing stones and litter, drying and sieving it, then reducing it by repeated quartering. For texture I would do a mason jar test: fill a jar halfway with soil, add water and a little dish soap, shake, and let it settle for 24–48 hours; sand settles at the bottom, silt in the middle and clay on top. If clay is over 20 per cent I add river sand for drainage; if sand is over 80 per cent I add compost for water-holding. For pH I make a slurry, dip a pH strip, and compare the colour: if acidic (below 6) I add compost, wood ash, lime or dolomite; if basic (above 8.5) I do a soil wash and add compost or gypsum. I would handle chemicals and glass safely throughout.

Q3. How does the India Meteorological Department (IMD) help farmers?

ANSWERThe IMD records meteorological observations and provides Agrotechnological Advisory Services (AAS). Its weather forecasts and advisories help farmers plan their kharif, rabi and summer crops — deciding when to sow, irrigate and harvest. Besides warning of rainfall and snow, IMD data also help other agencies predict outbreaks of livestock diseases so timely prevention or treatment is possible. The department delivers district- and block-level forecasts through SMS alerts, All India Radio, Doordarshan, community radio, mobile apps, the Kisan Portal and Krishi Vigyan Kendras, while platforms like Bharat-VISTAAR and the Gramin Krishi Mausam Sewa (GKMS) give panchayat-level temperature, rainfall, soil-moisture and wind data, making accurate weather information widely available to farmers.

MCQs & Assertion–Reason

1. According to the Economic Survey 2024–25, agriculture contributed about ___ to India’s GDP.

(a) 8 per cent    (b) 16 per cent    (c) 46 per cent    (d) 60 per cent

2. Wheat, gram, mustard and peas are mainly grown in which season?

(a) Kharif    (b) Zaid    (c) Rabi    (d) None of these

3. In the mason jar test, which layer settles at the bottom?

(a) Clay    (b) Silt    (c) Sand    (d) Organic matter

4. Most plants grow best in soil with a pH of about:

(a) 2–3    (b) 6–7    (c) 9–10    (d) 12–14

5. In the floating method, the seeds that float are:

(a) the healthiest seeds    (b) damaged or hollow seeds    (c) the heaviest seeds    (d) all good seeds

6. The instrument used to measure rainfall is the:

(a) wind vane    (b) rain gauge    (c) thermometer    (d) barometer

7. The wet bulb thermometer reads lower than the dry bulb because of:

(a) condensation    (b) evaporation cooling the bulb    (c) sunlight    (d) wind speed

8. Daśhaparṇī arka is an organic:

(a) fertiliser only    (b) pesticide    (c) seed    (d) soil

9. The agency that provides weather forecasts and advisories to farmers is the:

(a) IMD    (b) ISRO    (c) DRDO    (d) RBI

10. Lac is produced by the insect:

(a) Apis mellifera    (b) Bombyx mori    (c) Kerria lacca    (d) Kerria lacca’s host tree

Answer key: 1-(b), 2-(c), 3-(c), 4-(b), 5-(b), 6-(b), 7-(b), 8-(b), 9-(a), 10-(c).

For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.

A-R 1. Assertion: The price of vegetables is higher in a supermarket than in a mandi.

Reason: Value is added to produce at each step of the value chain through handling, storage, processing and transport.

A-R 2. Assertion: Adding compost helps both sandy and acidic soils.

Reason: Compost increases water-holding capacity and adds organic matter that gently raises soil pH.

A-R 3. Assertion: Healthy seeds float in salt water during the floating method.

Reason: Adding salt increases the density of water so that damaged or hollow seeds rise to the surface.

A-R 4. Assertion: A small difference between the dry and wet bulb readings means the air is humid.

Reason: When the air is humid, less water evaporates from the wet bulb, so it cools less and reads closer to the dry bulb.

A-R 5. Assertion: A wind vane is used to measure the amount of rainfall.

Reason: A wind vane has a free-moving arrow that points in the direction of the wind.

Answer key: 1-(A), 2-(A), 3-(C), 4-(A), 5-(D).

Exam Tips & Common Mistakes

How to score full marks in this chapter

For “suggest amendments” answers, first name the problem (sandy / acidic / clayey / alkaline), then give the correct amendment and the reason it works — e.g., compost for water-holding, lime/dolomite to raise pH. For data questions (Table 1.3), always compare each crop’s rainfall requirement against the region’s lowest years, not just the average, and state when to plant. Remember the three soil parameters (physical, chemical, biological), the mason-jar layer order (sand–silt–clay from bottom to top) and the three crop seasons. Use the book’s own figures — 16 per cent GDP, 46.1 per cent workforce, pH 6–7 — to show you have read the chapter.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Confusing the crop seasons — rabi is winter, kharif is monsoon, zaid is summer; do not swap rice (kharif) and wheat (rabi).
  • Saying the floating seeds are the good ones — it is the opposite; floating seeds are damaged or hollow and are discarded.
  • Mixing up the mason-jar layers — sand settles at the bottom, silt in the middle, clay on top.
  • Treating acidic and basic soil the same — add lime/wood ash for acidic soil but gypsum/sulphur and a soil wash for basic soil.
  • Judging crops only by average rainfall — a crop is “safe” only if its minimum need is met even in dry years.
  • Skipping reflection/portfolio tasks — they carry marks and must be answered from your own hands-on work, not copied.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Class 9 Skill Education Kaushal Vikas Chapter 1 about?

Chapter 1, Introduction to Agricultural Practices, is the mandatory opening chapter of Unit I (Work with Life Forms). It covers the importance of agriculture and the value chain, the agro-climate relationship, building a simple meteorological observatory, soil testing and amendment, seed selection and treatment, and choosing a vocation.

What is the exercise in Kaushal Vikas Chapter 1?

The end-of-chapter exercise is Section 1.6, “Assess your learning”, which has six questions on soil amendment, prioritising weather instruments for lac, reading a rainfall table, drawing a farm-to-plate value chain, reflection and real-life application. All six are solved on this page.

How does the salt-water floating method help select seeds?

Adding salt increases the density of the water, so damaged, hollow or infected seeds float and can be discarded while healthy, full seeds sink. The salt also removes microbial infection from the seed coat, raising the germination rate.

All questions are reproduced from the official NCERT Kaushal Vikas (Class 9 Skill Education) textbook; the answers, notes, key terms, MCQs and FAQs are original and expert-checked for the 2026–27 session.

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