Yes. It needs correction as:
- one theory hour (60 minutes) is one credit.
- Two hours (120 minutes) of practical/Tutorial/Project/Seminar is one credit.
In fact, I worked in Govt. Polytechnics (1969-72) and Govt. Engineering colleges (1973-88) with the formula given above. However, those days there was no concept of course- credits but for teaching load calculation purpose 2 hours of practical used to be treated equal to one theory hour and say for Assistant Lecturer/Non-Gazetted Lecturer and Lecturer the teaching load prescribed was 16 theory hours/week, e.g. 8 theory hours/week and 16 practical hours/week (total load 24 hours/week) make 16 theory hours load/week per faculty.
Later in 2000/2002 AD, AICTE prescribes through a Notification the same teaching load norms but expressed in credits/week (i.e., average load/faculty 14 Credits/week) . AICTE left then this business to Management rather than sticking to the then existing prescribed norms. So obviously later on the practice for computing weekly load inadvertently followed has been: one theory=one Practical/Tutorial/Seminar/Project.
Moreover, it is to be noted that the Course Credits are worked out on the same rule expressed above.
Regards,
Dr. P H Waghodekar, PhD (Egg), IIT,KGP, IE&M, 1985,
Advisor (HR), IBS & PME (PG)
Marathwada Institute of Technology,
NH 211, Beed by pass road,
Aurangabad: 431010 (Maharashtra) INDIA.
(O) 02402375113 (M) 7276661925
E-Mail: waghodekar@rediffmail.com
Website: www.mit.asia
and
Chairman, Advisory Board, MTC Global, Bangalore.
Engineering & Management Education: An Engine of Prosperity.
Classroom teaching must match with Boardroom needs!
From: "virendra goel" <goel.virendra@gmail.com>
Sent: Tue, 01 Aug 2017 21:15:22
To: <waghodekar@rediffmail.com>
Subject: Re: [MTC Global] AICTE for 1:20 teacher-student ratio
waghodekar@rediffmail.com [mailto:waghodekar@rediffmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, August 01, 2017 8:08 PM
To: join_mtc@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [MTC Global] AICTE for 1:20 teacher-student ratio
waghodekar@rediffmail.com
Website: www.mit.asia
and
Chairman, Advisory Board, MTC Global, Bangalore.
Engineering & Management Education: An Engine of Prosperity.
Classroom teaching must match with Boardroom needs!
From: "Prof. Bholanath Dutta"
Sent: Tue, 01 Aug 2017 17:55:54
To: join_mtc
Subject: [MTC Global] AICTE for 1:20 teacher-student ratio
The All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) is considering changing the teacher-student ratio in engineering colleges to 1:20, its chairman Anil D. Sahasrabudhe has said.
Mr. Sahasrabudhe was speaking at an interactive session on 'Technical education in Kerala – challenges and solutions' organised by the Kerala Self-Finance Engineering College Managements' Association and Vijnana Bharati here on Thursday.
'Fall in quality'
Mr. Sahasrabudhe said the increase in colleges and enrolment had led to a fall in quality.
One of the suggestions to address the issue was to change the teacher-student ratio from 1:15 to 1:20.
Adjunct faculty
Last year, the AICTE had allowed colleges to have 80% regular faculty and the rest adjunct faculty so that experienced people from industry and academics would come in to supplement efforts of the regular faculty.
Now, it was considering making the ratio 1:20 plus adjunct faculty.
He said the AICTE would allow sharing of the same workspace as long as the number of classrooms for different programmes was met and there was no problem in adjusting the timetable. In case of no students for any discipline, colleges should close that and opt for some other discipline for which there was more demand.
About the possibility of a single entrance examination on the NEET model for engineering, Prof. Sahasrabudhe said it would help improve the quality of input into colleges.
During discussions with stakeholders it had emerged that some States had not even revised their curriculum. Besides curriculum revision before introducing the single entrance examination, the government suggested understanding the NEET experience before venturing any further, Prof. Sahasrabudhe said.
On apprehensions about the proposed higher education empowerment regulation agency (HEERA), he said the AICTE had no role in it, and it was up to the Union Cabinet, the NITI Aayog, and Parliament to decide on it. HEERA, he said, was in a nascent stage, and all check and balances would be in place before it was introduced.
He said all questions would be made compulsory and focus would be on problem-solving. The AICTE would release the model question papers in the public domain.
Source: TOI
president@mtcglobal.org
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