Wednesday, 19 June 2013

Global Reunion 2013

Join us at MCC for the Gala Global Alumni Reunion 2013 on 27, 28 July 2013. 
You can register online by clicking on this link HERE.
Email: mccglobalalumnireunion2013@gmail.com
Mobile: +918056195510

Tuesday, 18 June 2013

Postponed by a Day:

The MA English Lit entrance test scheduled for 21 June 2013 has been postponed by a day. It will now be held on Saturday, 22 June 2013, at Selaiyur Hall Indoor Theatre, due to unavailability of the Exams Office on that day.
Kindly look up the Dept Notice Board for the shortlisted candidates.
for The Head

Friday, 14 June 2013

Are You Under their Influence?


Each one of us would have had to put up with at least a dozen negative people who hover around us all along in our lives. 

Negative people, by the way, are the ones, who drain out the energy in us (call them “energy vampires” if you want), and send in a negative energy through their continuous rantings and ravings about all the unpleasant, difficult, unfair people and things that happened in their lives. 

These people not only carry toxicity on their hips, and gossip on their laps wherever they go, but also have the knacky tact (or call it their potential or their USP) of draining a person of one’s energy, even on a minute's shorty talky with them, like in a one-to-one aka tete a tete too.

These 'energy vampires' are capable of producing the boundless negative energy in a jiffy the moment you start conversing with them. 

They always tend to see the darker side, the half empty glass and worry more about the future than live the present. They are people who can never have a good word even for the likes of Mother Teresa or Swami Vivekananda. 

Hence, negative people sometimes have the ability to give you negative energy which can lead you to even depression at times.

The only way in which these people feel powerful is by hurting others in every little way possible, to the extent that they have no idea how negative they have become in life, until they are pulled out of their complacency by some good Samaritan.

Well, you can easily spot them from off a distance! 


Firstly, you can never see a smile on their faces. If at all they smile, it would be a triumphant glee at having succeeded in their gossipy gyrations on a pavapetta, unsuspecting friend.


Secondly, they will never have a good word for even a single human soul on this lovely planet earth! Not even on the flora and the fauna!


When they open their mouths, venom and negative words, spew out with an effortless spontaneity, more powerfully than from off a volcano's!


Thirdly, they are better off at always being critical of others, that they cease being humane!


Fourthly, they would have contributed nothing from off their words, their deeds or from off their wallets to making this world a better place for even one single person on this six billion plus planet! 

Finally, nothing on this planet makes them happy, as much as gossips and venomous words do!

Thoughts for a new academic year...

[click on pic, to enlarge]

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Entrance Exam - MA English: Reg

All candidates who have applied for MA English Literature are required to sit the entrance test to be held on Friday, 21 June 2013 at the Examinations Hall. The test will comprise an essay question [25 marks], and  25 objective type questions [25 marks]. All questions will be based on the BA English Literature syllabus.
For more details, you are requested to follow the 'announcements' put up periodically on the Department Notice Board or, contact the Head, Department of English.
With all best wishes, 
for The Head

Gone are the days when one had to hop from one leading library to another looking for that one book that has been eluding you all along. And, if the OPAC gives the word ‘OUT’ against your favourite book, you are bound to go wild with disappointment, more so, if you’re a passionate bibliophile!

Today, thanks to the burgeoning online portals that specialise in renting textbooks, you may heave a great sigh of relief.

Wednesday, 12 June 2013

"Experiential Learning has become the Buzzword"

‘Reinventing’ the Higher Education System

MCC Amongst India’s Best Colleges| ‘The Week’ Report

[9th June 2013 Issue] 

“The Indian Higher Education System is Reinventing Itself to cater to the increasing demands of the economy, with new courses, new formats, new ideas…”

This is the byline to the Cover Story in The Week’s Survey of the Best Colleges in India, 2013.

In fact, it’s a matter of pride that MCC finds a place among the TOP FIVE and the TOP TEN in most of the key categories.

The COVER STORY that follows, in the same Edition [9th June 2013] of ‘The Week’ has a lot of vibrant thoughts for those of us faculty members and decision makers in the field of higher education.

Hence me thought of giving us all, a few salient extracts from this very insightful article, culled out from THE WEEK, 09th June 2013.

So here we go -

I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand. – Confucius

The pearl of wisdom from the Chinese philosopher seems to be dawning on college education in 21st-century India.

You Branch Out & Explore!

Welcome to a system, where you do not just learn; you practise. Where you do not just listen; you absorb. Where you are not rooted in a classroom; you branch out and explore.

Well, it might sound Utopian, but Indian colleges are, indeed, following the concept of "learning by doing".

Institution - public and private - are realising that a formularised approach will not click anymore.

Experiential learning has become the buzzword

Earlier, practicals were restricted to the domains of applied sciences and management, but now subjects such as English and social sciences also are being given the experiential treatment.

Take, for example, Delhi University's Kamala Nehru College for women. It organises tours to historical sites and museums for students of history to understand and appreciate the bygone eras.

"The students perform skits and dramas on historical tales," says Dr Minoti Chatterjee, principal of the college.

"All of us have read about the Indus Valley civilisation, but our students learn about it by visiting the actual site. Similarly, for psychology students, there is internship with Vimhans [Vidyasagar Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences]."

It is No More Just Classroom Teaching

Sriparna Chakraborty, who recently graduated in English from Amity University, Noida, is all praise for the changing ways of education.

"It is no more just classroom teaching," she says.

"There are seminars, where eminent people from the literary world talk about their experiences. Also, if we are studying drama and there is a complex scene, it is enacted. We learn a lot by doing, so presentations and research works are given to improve our speaking and writing skills."

Application-based learning is Rapidly Picking Up

Application-based learning, too, is rapidly picking up, thanks to industry collaborations. Today, most top colleges have active involvement with the industry for catering to the changing needs of society.

According to a study by the Gurgaon-based employability solutions company Aspiring Minds, only 17 per cent of the five lakh engineers who annually gradu-ate from India are fit for the IT services sector.

Making Students Industry-Ready

Human Resources Development Minister M.M. Pallam Raju, too, pointed out the issue at a recent conference -  

"We are seeing that the students who are coming out [of universities and colleges] are not necessarily industry-ready, and the industry is spending a lot of resources in re-training them...."

Academia-Industry Interface

However, colleges and the industry are now joining forces. For instance, students at Delhi University's Shahid Sukhdev College of Business Studies are required to do live projects with companies. At Patiala-based Thapar University, students take up contract research on agro-biotechnology.

The university has worked on improving the quality of potato tubers for PepsiCo and Mc Cain Foods, and on eucalyptus clones for writing and printing paper company Ballarpur Industries.

Vocational Courses: Corporates in Board of Studies

Colleges are looking at courses from a vocational angle, too. And the corporate sector's advice is sought for curriculum design and updating. Manipal University, for instance, invites corporates to its board of studies. Amity University involves the industry right from the shortlisting of applicants.

"There is a great deal of value addition that we get through corporate tie-ups," says Dr G.K. Prabhu, registrar, Manipal University.

"What we teach should be relevant to the industry, and that is why we take their help in designing our courses. Infosys, for instance, has a programme called Campus Connect, wherein they train our faculty. We, in turn, do research projects for them. It is a symbiosis."

Furthermore, internships with the industry - limited to technical and management streams earlier - is now common under subjects such as public policy, international affairs, development studies and foreign languages courtesy NGOs, think-tanks and media houses.

The Surge in Research: A Welcome Trend

Another welcome trend is the surge in research. For one, the IITs, which have been criticised for excessive focus on undergraduate education, have ramped up research work.

Currently, IITs take in about 3,000 Ph.D students annually, against 1,000 five years ago.

"There is a lot of exciting work in the areas of nano electronics and smart grid technology," says Gautam Barua, director, IIT Guwahati.

"To give a push to research, IITs have discussed with the government about allowing meritorious B.Tech students to start research in their third year. We will start it from 2014."

Some IITs have set up special centres for large-scale projects. IIT Delhi, for instance, has a centre for bio-medical engineering and low-cost design innovation. IIT Madras and Bombay have set up centres for combustion and photovoltaic researches, respectively.

All IITs should have Research parks and Innovation Centres

"The Kakodar Committee had recommended that all IITs should have research parks and innovation centres," says Prof. Bhaskar Ramamurthi director, IIT Madras.

"Most of the IITS have done that. About 33 per cent of our students are research scholars, and we are planning to encourage undergraduate pass-outs to take up research."

Private institutes are not falling behind, either. Thapar University has received government grants worth 76 crore for research projects, mainly in biotechnology and agricultural sciences.

Manipal Institute of Technology is working on emerging areas such as nanotechnology, ad hoc wireless networks, nuclear engineering and pattern-recognition.

Research & Innovation

Says Amity University vice-chancellor Dr Atul Chauhan –

"Research is an important part of all our programmes. Without research and innovation, it would be impossible to find solutions for our country's problems."

Prof. P. Ray, dean (academics), XLRI, Jamshedpur, terms research "our life blood".

His students have been coming up with solutions for actual problems of corporates and the government, he says.

A major shot in the arm for college education in India is the National Knowledge Network - a Central initiative to provide ultra-high-bandwidth broadband network to interconnect leading science and technology institutions.

The NKN could be an effective tool for seamless exchange of ideas and sharing of lectures, databases and virtual libraries between campuses. Also, it would be a platform for real-time distance education.

The NKN, which has already connected 1,001 institutions, aims to add another 500 in the coming months.

The rejig in the education system is not limited to highbrow spheres. Soft-skills training, for instance, is an area that is being given a thrust these days. Some institutes like Manipal have made it a compulsory subject, while

others offer it at the end of the course. "Soft skills have become vital today because one has to become a team leader; one has to carry people along," says Ray.

Thrust for Multidisciplinary or Liberal Education

With considerable change in the learning environment, a great deal of reinvention is on. The Indian system seems to be going the American way - multidisciplinary or liberal education.

Basically, it is about taking up several subjects at the undergraduate level, instead of specialising in just one. So a student can study a host of subjects and, eventually, pursue a specialisation.

Delhi University's new four-year undergraduate programme, in effect, is a shift towards the multidisciplinary system. But even as the move has created a furore among students and teachers, experts say DU has actually arrived a bit late.

Colleges such as O.P. Jindal Global University and Foundation for Liberal and Management Education (FLAME, Pune) already have a clutch of multidisciplinary courses in liberal arts.

So one can study history, enjoying fine arts and music at tandem. The system is apt for students who want to explore before choosing a career path.

Meanwhile, some colleges are experimenting with the interdisciplinary system - one subject as major and an interest area as minor. Shiv Nadar University and a couple of IITs have this system in place.

"Studying several subjects together is fun and helpful," says Ganesh Gupta, a second year student at Shiv Nadar.

"When I took B.Sc with mathematics as major and economics minor, I understood the application of maths in data analysis and statistics. In terms of career, too, I have an additional option of economics."

Multidisciplinary: The Way Forward

Experts believe that multidisciplinary is the way forward.

"For a society to develop in a holistic manner, we need people who can think in a broad and multidisciplinary way, says Dr.C. Raj Kumar, vice-chancellor, O.P.Jindal Global University. "In a diverse society like India, first and foremost one needs the skills to navigate through the complexities...'

Career potential for every course is strong in a developing economy.

And courses are springing up by the day. Experts say that students should neither shy away from offbeat courses, nor get distracted by pop-ups.

"Look at what your interests are; ask questions like how and where would you want to see yourself five years down the line,"

says Shalini Manchanda, director at Career Track, a career counselling firm.

"If these checks and balances are in place, you will not regret your decision."

Oh what needless pain we bear..!


A psychologist walked around a room while teaching stress management to an audience. As he raised a glass of water, everyone expected they’d be asked the “half empty or half full” question. Instead, with a smile on his face, he inquired: “How heavy is this glass of water?”

Answers called out ranged from 8 oz. to 20 oz.

He replied, “The absolute weight does not matter. It depends on how long I hold it. If I hold it for a minute, it’s not a problem. If I hold it for an hour, I’ll have an ache in my arm.  If I hold it for a day, my arm will feel numb and paralysed. In each case, the weight of the glass doesn’t change, but the longer I hold it, the heavier it becomes.”

Tuesday, 11 June 2013

How to Pursue a Medical Administrative Position [Guest Post Exclusive]


If you are looking for a career change and are interested in medicine then a career in medical administration may be what you are looking for. The first thing you need to do is understand what medical administration entails. Medical or healthcare administration is a specific field which involves the maintenance of relationship within a medical environment such as clinics, hospitals and health centers. As with anyone who works in a hospital or medical center, such individuals are considered to be health care professionals. Medical administration encompasses a wide range of different tasks. These include the management of different departments to ensure a smooth-running establishment, the analysis of different hospital policies, taking care of finances and dealing with accounting. There are also some medical management professionals who are going to specialize in specific areas of the industry.

Certification

In order to be qualified for medical administration it is pertinent to get a bachelor's degree within the field. While it is possible to be certified with such a degree, this is not always going to be enough. Many people consider the standard credential to be a Master's degree. As a result, it is

Monday, 3 June 2013

Back in the Reckoning and how!


It’s official now. English Literature has rightfully regained her regal ranking as the royal choice for applicants to the arts and the humanities courses. For the first time in many years, MCC witnessed an epoch-making event when, the admissions office, ‘admitted’ that, this year, application sales for BA English Literature far exceeded the demand that usually lays in store for the BCom Course. Once regarded as the hot pick among Chennaiites, the coveted BCom course in MCC had for long held monopoly as far as demand was concerned. Indeed, applications this year showed a remarkable trend. There were as many as 35 students who had scored above 1110/1200 and were all eyes on taking up English Literature.

One of the most established and widely recognised courses in the realm of academics, the English Literature course per se has evolved a lot over the decades, and today, it holds a preeminent position among the arts and humanities. There are quite a few interesting reasons as to why English Literature is and has always been a great course for study.

First of all, the efficiency of the course lies in its elasticity. I wish I don’t sound out of place when I pull off T.S.Eliot’s term ‘compatability’ to come to my rescue here, in order to augment my point better. Dictionaries the world over have a more or less similar definition for the word ‘compatible’, meaning, the capability to exist or perform in harmonious, agreeable, congenial combination, with efficient integration. Indeed, English Literature has the capacity to absorb the various literary schools and philosophical movements into its rich repertoire and thereby engage the students with a wide variety of texts (both literary and non-literary), in a lively and supportive learning environment.