home home about us site map
admission tnea counselling universities tamilnadu womens college
 
Search the web      
Education
   Admission Tracker
   Career Guidance
   Colleges Today
   Counselling
   Distance Education
   Districtwise Colleges
   Educational Loans
   Entrance Test
   Exam Results
   News Today
   Search - Colleges
   Universities
   Women's Colleges

Educational News Today
Monday, June 09, 2008
Choice-based credit system — the potential and the challenges

The proposed academic credit system calls for a fair and transparent internal assessment and teachers who will orient themselves to the new pattern to reap its avowed benefits


The Tamil Nadu State Council of Higher Education (TANSCHE) has taken the great initiative of introducing a new academic credit system in all affiliated colleges from the coming academic year. The genesis of this system is traced to ‘Cafeteria system’, in vogue in the West.

Under this system in place in all North American universities, teachers have a great deal of freedom to design their courses and students get total freedom to choose courses for their degree programme. The printout containing the names of courses — core, optional and extra-departmental — offered in the university are provided to students immediately after enrolment. The value of each course is listed in units of credits and how many units of credits are required for securing the respective degrees is also stated. Most undergraduate programmes at American universities require 120 credits, mostly with three credit classes for the award of the undergraduate degree. The students can take any number of courses to earn extra credits and similarly it is up to them to decide whether they would finish their six trimester programme in five trimesters or four semester programme in three semesters.


There is no external evaluation scheme, since the course teacher herself does the evaluation (100 per cent internal). One requirement of having three credit hours in a Humanities course for Science students and a three credit class in a Science course for their counterparts in Humanities is made compulsory in most of the universities.

This American academic credit system was first introduced in Indian Central Universities and Dr. Gnanam, the then Vice-Chancellor of Pondicherry University, is credited with implementing this “student friendly” system in his university from the academic year 1992-93. The nomenclature given in Pondicherry University for the new dispensation was Choice-Based Credit System (CBCS). Under the Pondicherry University model, the students in postgraduate courses can take as many courses as they can manage, provided they fulfil the prerequisites of a course, subject to a maximum of 30 credits in any semester. It is to be noted here that for the award of the degree, the university insists on 72 credits, meaning 18 credits per semester. Each programme (M.A., M.Sc., M.Com., M.C.A., etc.,) will have two sets of courses, namely hardcore and soft core. The hardcore courses are compulsory, while choice (limited) is given to students in selecting the soft courses. The students are allowed a minimum of 12 credits for doing courses of their choice. Depending on one’s capability, the student can register for a set of courses in appropriate forms in consultation with his or her teacher adviser. Here evaluation is not cent per cent internal.

Stress on job-oriented syllabi
Manonmaniam Sundaranar University under the vice-chancellorship of Dr. Vasanthi Devi was the first in Tamil Nadu to introduce this CBCS pattern in university departments from 1996. Autonomous colleges in Tamil Nadu, with one or two exceptions, had also adopted this Choice-Based Credit System around this time. In the last 10 years, almost all universities in the state have followed the CBCS. But there is no uniform pattern followed amongst these institutions. Notwithstanding the modification or dilution done of the original system, the emphasis everywhere unmistakably has been on job-oriented syllabi and socially-relevant courses. The electives introduced in colleges and universities have encouraged inter-disciplinary academic pursuits, enhanced students’ competency and thereby their job prospects. The system has also enabled the students to study the subjects in which they are naturally proficient or interested. But the teachers have to marshal their full intellectual and organisational strength to attend to the daunting tasks involved.

Some vice-chancellors, realising the potential of the CBCS, thought of extending it to affiliated colleges. But their unwarranted fear of resistance from teachers prompted them to shelve the project. In fact, Association of University Teachers (AUT) and Madurai-Kamaraj-Manonmaniam Sundaranar University Teachers Association (MUTA) have demystified the falsely perceived notion about teacher associations by taking a leading part in Bharathiyar and Manonmaniam Sundaranar Universities in revamping the undergraduate curriculum in the early 1990s. Bharathiyar University was pioneer in introducing Part IV and Part V components in undergraduate curriculum of affiliated colleges, followed by Manonmaniam Sundaranar University. This writer has the privilege of associating with the curriculum reforms of the said two universities and can, therefore, assert that the transition in these two universities to the CBCS system will be smooth, since they already have the required framework to get the new system started. Instead of General Awareness paper in Part IV they have to fix one paper on Advance Tamil or a Non-major elective and another paper on skill developing course. They are already familiar with value-based education.

TANSCHE has been pragmatic right from the beginning. They did not push through the full-fledged CBCS in haste. Instead they have taken the realistic step of taking the teacher associations into confidence and deciding to introduce the innovative system in parts in affiliated colleges.

Computing credits
The apprehension of teachers about the possible reduction of workload in certain departments has been cleared with an assurance that there will be no retrenchment of teachers on account of introduction of the CBCS. Though TANSCHE has fixed the total number of credits for the award of undergraduate degree as 140 and the postgraduate degree as 90, they have given the freedom of computing the credits for each course to the respective Board of Studies. The flexibility in determining the core courses as well as in identifying major and non-major electives is also left to the Board of Studies concerned. By this master stroke they have pre-empted any resistance from any quarters.

The new pattern is expected to close the opportunity gap between the students reading in rural colleges and the students of elite institutions and go a long way in bridging the performance/achievement gap between those students from disadvantaged — educationally, culturally and economically — families and those from higher income households in the state. But a caution to the TANSCHE is that there should be a mechanism at the university level to monitor and address the issues that may crop up periodically in the course of implementing the system. Internal Assessment System which was dispensed with long ago is reintroduced in affiliated colleges and hence every effort should be made to make the system fair and transparent. Since the success of the new system is largely dependent on teachers’ involvement and commitment, the state should allocate sufficient funds to the universities to orient the teachers of affiliated colleges to the proposed task.

The writer is Professor of History, Manonmaniam Sundaranar University.
Courtesy: The Hindu - Education Plus
<< Back
Education News Archive 

2005     2006     2007     2008

about us | disclaimer | feedback | press release | site map | tell your friend | useful links
copyright © 2003 - 2009, adroit techno solutions all rights reserved