Teaching Aptitude
Teaching Aptitude
Teaching Aptitude
• University Grants Commission has come up with the Choice Based Credit
System (CBCS) programme in which the students have a choice to choose
from the prescribed courses, which are referred as core, elective or minor or
soft skill courses and they can learn at their own pace and the entire
assessment is graded-based on a credit system.
• The basic idea is to look into the needs of the students so as to keep up-to-
date with development of higher education in India and abroad. CBCS aims to
redefine the curriculum keeping pace with the liberalisation and globalisation in
education.
• CBCS allows students an easy mode of mobility to various educational
institutions spread across the world along with the facility of transfer of credits
earned by students.
FEATURES OF CBCS
• • This is a uniform CBCS for all central and state and other recognised universities.
• There are three main courses: Core, Elective and Foundation.
• There are also non-credit courses available which will be assessed as ‘Satisfactory’
or “Unsatisfactory’.This is not included in the computation of SGPA/CGPA.
• All the three main courses will be evaluated and accessed to provide for an
effective and balanced result.
HOW DOES IT WORK?
• One credit per semester is equal to one hour of teaching, which includes both
lecture (L) or tutorial (T) or two hours of practical work/field work (P) per
week.A study course can have only L component or only T or P component or
combination of any two or all the three components.The total credits earned
by a student for each semester is L+T+P.
IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE GLOBAL
GRADING SYSTEM
• All the major higher education institutions across the world are implementing
a system of credits. For instance, we have the European Credit Transfer System
(ECTS) in Europe’s universities, the ‘National Qualifications Framework’ in
Australia.There is the Pan-Canadian Protocol on the Transferability of
University Credits. In the UK, we have the Credit Accumulation and Transfer
System (CATS). Even the systems operating in the US, Japan, etc. are based on
credit system.
ADVANTAGES OF CHOICE BASED
CREDIT SYSTEM
• • The CBCS offers a ‘cafeteria’ approach in which the students can choose
courses of their own choice.
• The credit system allows a student to study what he prefers in his own
sequence as per his interests.
• They can learn at their own pace.
• They can opt for additional courses and can achieve more than the required
credits.
• They can also opt for an interdisciplinary approach to learning.
• Inter college/university migration within the country and outside becomes
easy with the transfer of Credits.This means that it will be easier for foreign
universities to come and offer courses in India.
• • Can opt for one part of the course in one institute and the other part in
another institute. This will help in making a clear choice between good and bad
colleges/ institutes.
• The students have more scope to enhance their skills and more scope of
taking up projects and assignments, vocational training, including
entrepreneurship.
• The system improves the job opportunities of students.
• The system will help in enabling potential employers assess the performance
of students on a scientific scale.
DISADVANTAGES OF CBCS
• It is too early to say whether CBCS will be successful or not.The UGC has always
initiated measures to bring efficiency and excellence in the Higher Education
System of India.
• The basic motive is to expand academic quality in all aspects, right from the
curriculum to the learning-teaching process to examination and evaluation systems.
However, so far multiple methods are followed by different universities across the
country towards examination, evaluation and grading system.
• Considering this diversity, the implementation of the choice based credit system
seems to be a good system in assessing the overall performance of a student in a
universal way of a single grading system.
• Refernece: https://www.mapsofindia.com/my-india/education/what-is-cbcs-or-
choice-based-credit-system-how-does-it-work