Bringing back
of the defunct Honours programme by the Directorate of Collegiate Education of
Kerala in five select colleges during the current academic year, 2013-14 is a
fine example of putting the cart before the horse. The reason for abandoning
the erstwhile Honours degree programme is still relevant, then what impelled
the Directorate of Collegiate Education to reintroduce the same is unknown. And
with the recent introduction of credit and semester system, the degree
education in Kerala lost its charm. The students prefer B Tech and MBBS courses
to degree courses and any further alteration in it will distract students away
from degree education.
Interestingly,
according to DCE, the qualification for applying for the Honours course will be
a pass in the higher secondary or equivalent course with 70 percent marks in
the general category. Since higher
secondary courses in Kerala entertain no marks but only grades for its
examination where from the DCE get the qualifying marks for admission. Moreover,
the appointment of a co-ordinator for
each subject of the course at UGC rate of Rs 40,000 is a bad practice and is
intended to siphon out the government money.
The execution of degree education in Kerala is topsy-turvy. Likewise is the functioning of DCE office and regional DD offices. Instead of streamlining the existing system any move to introduce once abandoned course would bring more embarrassment to degree education segment.
K A Solaman
The CDeccan(Kerala) Chronicle published on 10-7-13
The CDeccan(Kerala) Chronicle published on 10-7-13
No comments:
Post a Comment