(This article was also published in Governance Now at http://governancenow.com/news/blogs/biopsy-fyup )
Justification for Change
I am fortunate to have
witnessed Dr. Dinesh Singh twice justifying the FYUP course,
especially defending the introduction of Foundation Course papers and
on that I would honestly submit one observation that out of the whole
army of defenders that he has, only he could score some positive
points on this account. I saw him not only offering reasons for
having such a course and papers but also unlike the other marshals of
his army, I witnessed him owning an honest desire to introduce these
courses. He clearly exhibited a firm belief and confidence in the
positive result of this experiment that is currently being undertaken
in Delhi University.
I have maintained from
the beginning that this time the changes are not merely cosmetic in
nature as it was done during the semesterisation when it was only a
shift from annual to a bi-annual examination system. I was pleasantly
surprised to notice that even Prof. Dinesh Singh shows no inhibitions
in admitting this and on both the occasions expressed his no nonsense
intent to change the way the college education is looked upon in
India. My primary worry that the new course would shift the focus of
the students away from research and academics met with equally candid
admission from him that it was indeed the aim with which the course
was primarily designed for. Further, on both the occasions when I
listened to the Vice-chancellor I never noticed him feeling even
slightly apologetic about the shift of focus that this vision
threatens to bring about in the Indian college education system. Now
I am clear that the purpose of the FYUP is indeed not to make the
students oriented 'only' towards research or academics. Initially I
felt as one can make him see reasons for going back to our earlier
approach till he offered a winning argument in favour of this shift
by pointing out that only on an average a maximum of 5-10 % of the
undergraduate students happen to choose academics or research as
their career whereas our traditional education focuses completely on
them only. Our education system, that probably serves the interests
of this minority successfully, fails miserably in carrying the
expectations of rest 90% of the students. Honestly, I see a level of
transparency in his arguments that is often missing in the reasoning
offered by the other defenders of FYUP.
Foundation of
foundation courses
Even while I am
feeling agitated on being left out on not being given an opportunity
to express myself on the decision of affecting this change in
attitude towards the very purpose of our undergraduate studies
earlier but at the same time I am also ready to accept any excuse
because of the limitation that we also are likely to face while
attempting to consult each stakeholder for opinion. For this reason,
let me postpone the discussion on the need for this change for the
moment and try to investigate whether the course has been designed
properly or not for what it has now been aimed at in the first place.
Even if I completely agree with his entire contention, the agreement
turns into apprehension as I try to analyze and understand how the
new FYUP is going to serve the interest of those who do not choose
research or academics as their career. His claim that the Foundation
Courses would make these students 'employable' is what needs cautious
analysis. In both of his addresses he mentioned that a company had
came to DU looking to employ the undergraduate students, interviewed
around 1100 students but found only three as employable. Now this is
a thoroughly incomplete data for me to make out any meaningful
inference out of this unless it is shared with us that what all
quality/skills were they looking for in the students. Although there
is a high probability that the employers were not looking for
academicians or researchers in the case in question but just to
proceed logically I will assume that the employers who interviewed
the students were looking to employ the undergraduates in areas
including academics/research.
Even in the absence of
the accurate data we can begin the discussion as follows:
In any interview of a
general nature, who all can be considered as employable?
Of course the one who
is likely to leave an impression in the interaction?
Now how can a candidate
impress a selection committee? I would place the following (almost
exhaustive) qualities that normally impresses an interviewer.
1. Communication skills
(oral and written)
2. General awareness
quotient
3. How comfortable is
the candidate while using modern electronic tools (handling different
kinds of computers/printers, PPT, email, SMS, social networking etc)
4. Ability to think out
of box (innovative thinking)
5. Ability to work in a
group
6. Ability to lead a
group
7. Inclination to do
hardwork
8. Knows the importance
of observing deadlines
9. Ready to learn new
skills as and when required
10. Specific knowledge
of the area in which a particular company deals in.
If we look at the
points listed above it would be clear that our traditional approach
of undergraduate teaching indeed aims at improving mostly only last
of these skills. Communication skills that can impress almost anybody
on earth is ironically never given the adequate attention in our
studies. Here I must state that modern day private schools do give
attention to this aspect of personality development and it is true
that they stand a fair chance to impress any interviewer. Even if one
ignores the last quality listed above, the other qualities make a
student smart enough to impress anyone who would interact with them
to consider an entry-level employment. Those who have access to
modern equipments such as computers, laptops, tablets, smartphones,
internet usages and vehicle driving would find to have developed a
confidence that can help in impressing any interviewer. In today's
world if a candidate admits that he does not have an email account
then he is most likely to score negatively in any interaction
irrespective at the qualities that were being looked at. A candidate
who knows how to handle bank affairs, how to deal with government
departments, has a fair idea of our legal system and has a basic
knowledge of government rules and regulations regarding our tax and
civil liabilities and and is aware of our environmental concerns and
policies is bound to impress any prospective employer. One who has
some basic knowledge of Indian and world history, national and
international politics would also stand a fair chance of impressing
anyone. Basic understanding of data analysis and interpretation of
graphs is also a must for leaving a noticeable impression on the
interviewers.
It must also be
understood that if last of the above points is ignored then all the
other qualities that are listed above and are probably the target of
foundation courses can make students employable only for an
entry-level employments. On the other hand, even for those who wish
to continue in the area of academics and research must also have all
the attributes besides the last two to excel in their fields.
Further, anyone seeking a mid-level or a high-level entry employment
will have to supplement the qualities listed as point numbers 1 to 8
necessarily with the last two qualities listed above.
I believe that all
these qualities including some aspect of character building can be
best taken up during their school days itself but even at that stage
we would be able to cover the above-mentioned aspects of personality
development only by offering courses such as those listed below.
- Basic laws of our land: Dealing with driving and accidents, marriage acts, civil rights and behaviour, women rights and environmental concerns etc.
- Disaster management concerns.
- Basic financial awareness: Working of banks, Share markets, investment and insurance products.
- Basic economy: Indian and international economy, share market and investment strategies, inflation and interest rates.
- Geography: Basic understanding of Indian and international geographical maps.
- Political Science: Basic knowledge of Indian constitution and international politics.
- History : Basic knowledge of Indian history and international awareness.
- Travel and tourism ideas: Booking and managing individual and group travels for adventure, fun and pilgrim
Foundation Courses
seems to me as attempting to cover some of these aspects. Some
essential aspects that are listed above have been left out whereas
some aspects are given undue attention according to my personal
assessment.
Impact assessment
and suggestions
I have a first hand
experience of teaching Foundation Course papers. I have taught
History of Science (formulated for blind students), Information
Technology and the Science and Life papers partially. What I can say
for sure is that within the limitation of classroom teaching these
papers do have certain features to encourage certain essential
qualities in the students. But as teachers like us are not trained
for these interactions there is a fair chance that teachers would
become hurdles in their effort since we are always tempted to teach
them the way we know the best and are eventually trained at. I have often
found during the interaction with students for Foundation Courses
that the students were contributing more in enhancing my own vision
on several issues many a times while I could contribute only occasionally and always felt that I could have been better replaced by
an internet search engine. On the other hand, the aspects that one intends to cover in a classroom of Foundation Courses can well be embedded into the teaching methods that we adopt even for discipline courses.
As it must be
understood that the idea behind introduction of these courses is not
to make the learners as experts in these fields but is only intended
to make them aware on these issues. It is for this reason because of
which I am pretty convinced that it is late to introduce all these
subjects at the time of under-graduation. We should have a national
policy to include these aspects of studies in the schooldays and if
at the undergraduate level students are to be encouraged to learn
these aspects then they can best learn these outside their classroom
hours. It can be easily found out that a private school pass outs
generally would score very heavily on many of these aspects and only
students from conservative/semi-rural/rural background poses a real
challenge before us. Fortunately key to these kind of personality
development techniques lie in the method that should be adopted for
teaching these papers. I agree completely with Prof. Dinesh Singh who
has repeated himself so many times while submitting that classroom
teaching that is mostly unidirectional will never serve the purpose
that is required for Foundation Courses. Hence the students must be
given liberty of developing these qualities themselves by engaging
themselves in some or the other group activities. The college can at
best facilitate the process of providing them a suitable environment
and leave them on their own to develop these qualities. I would
prefer that they are asked to choose four such papers as listed above
(one in each of the initial four semesters) excluding the papers that
is related to their own area of specialization (honours) but they
should be encouraged to consult internet to study these papers.
Supplementary materials can be provided on our University website.
Students should be encouraged to acquire knowledge on their own for
these papers. Online multiple-choice tests can be made available during semester and students should be asked
to attempt these wherein they can be assigned the best score out of
their two to three allowed attempts.
In addition to this,
each student can be asked to choose a single project for the entire
duration of two years with a chosen group of 8-10 students preferably
from different backgrounds and a teacher (or teachers) should be made
available to them for consultation who would ensure that their single
project helps them in improving the following skills for sure:
- Writing skills.
- Collection of some data from field or from the internet sources.
- Analysis (tabular and graphical representation and comparison)
- Conclusion and further ideas for improvement in the approach/analysis.
- Creation of a working model, wherever possible.
- PPT presentation before an audience (students and teachers).
This way all the
aspects of 'employability' would get covered with a single project
without compromising on the development of their specific (honours)
skill. Some of these aspects of their personality development can be
taken care of during their regular teaching of discipline papers
itself. One can think of embedding these aspects into the discipline
courses by encouraging the students to give presentation and by
involving them in group discussions.
Conclusion
I must admit that
unlike during semesterisation this time I tried to engage myself
during the syllabus writing but I found that with reduced number of
papers and periods for discipline courses we were just helpless in
giving adequate attention to different aspect of physics teaching.
Just to point out our helplessness I can state here that the computer
programming and numerical analysis for which around 11 periods per
week for two semesters were being devoted earlier we could now
provide only three periods per week for two semesters wherein we have
added even micro-controllers into the curriculum. According to the
modern requirements we are justified in introducing the
micro-controllers but we were helpless in providing the adequate
periods for the same.
I would conclude my
discussion with a reverse analysis of the data that was cited by our
Vice Chancellor. If despite all the attention that we give to the
academics and research we are able to motivate only a miniscule
component (a maximum of 5-10%) of students towards these areas then
what would happen if these aspects are compromised beyond a
threshold. Unfortunately, the present FYUP structure is biased
heavily in favour of the Foundation Courses. This posses a real
danger of disorienting students away from academics and research and
a developing country like India can never afford to do this. We must
include aspects that were missing in our education but we can not
afford to do this by compromising on our strong points. We should
never let those students down who join the college to take up
academics and research as their career of choice. There is a clear case to look for a wide scale review of this course. I would end this with my last remark that Foundation Courses can at best serve as supplementary courses at the undergraduate level and any effort to make it as the backbone of the course (that is how I will sum up the entire FYUP exercise) will produce students who would find themselves as not ready for any mid-level or high-level employment.
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