Department of
PSYCHOLOGY






Syllabus for
Bachelor of Arts (Music, Psychology, English)
Academic Year  (2023)

 
3 Semester - 2022 - Batch
Paper Code
Paper
Hours Per
Week
Credits
Marks
AEN321 ADDITIONAL ENGLISH 3 3 100
ENG323 CREATIVE WRITING 3 3 100
EST331 AMERICAN LITERATURES 5 4 100
FRN321 FRENCH 3 3 100
HIN321 HINDI 3 3 100
KAN321 KANNADA 3 03 50
MUS331 HARMONY - I 2 2 100
MUS341A PIANO LITERATURE - I 2 2 100
MUS341B OPERA LITERATURE-I 2 2 100
MUS351A MAJOR IN PIANO - III 1 1 100
MUS351B COLLABORATIVE PIANO III 1 1 100
MUS352A MAJOR IN VOICE III 1 1 70
MUS352B COLLABORATIVE VOICE III 1 1 100
MUS381 INTERNSHIP 15 2 100
PSY332 SOCIOCULTURAL FOUNDATIONS OF BEHAVIOR 5 5 100
PSY352 PERSONAL GROWTH 2 2 100
SAN321 SANSKRIT 3 3 100
TAM321 TAMIL 3 3 100
4 Semester - 2022 - Batch
Paper Code
Paper
Hours Per
Week
Credits
Marks
AEN421 ADDITIONAL ENGLISH 3 3 100
ENG423 WRITING FOR MEDIA 3 3 100
EST431 INTRODUCTION TO LITERARY THEORY 5 4 100
FRN421 FRENCH 3 3 100
HIN421 HINDI 3 3 100
KAN421 KANNADA 3 03 50
MUS431 HARMONY - II 2 2 100
MUS441A PIANO LITERATURE - II 2 2 100
MUS441B OPERA LITERATURE - II 2 2 100
MUS451A MAJOR IN PIANO - IV 1 1 100
MUS451B COLLABORATIVE PIANO IV 1 1 100
MUS452A MAJOR IN VOICE IV 1 1 100
MUS452B COLLABORATIVE VOICE IV 1 1 100
MUS481 INTERNSHIP 2 2 100
PSY432 LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT 5 5 100
PSY452 PSYCHOLOGICAL STATISTICS AND EXPERIMENTS 2 2 100
SAN421 SANSKRIT 3 3 100
TAM421 TAMIL 3 3 100
5 Semester - 2021 - Batch
Paper Code
Paper
Hours Per
Week
Credits
Marks
EST531 POSTCOLONIAL LITERATURES 4 04 100
EST532 INDIAN LITERATURES: THEMES AND CONCERNS 5 4 100
MUS531 HISTORY OF WESTERN MUSIC - I 2 2 100
MUS541A MUSIC PEDAGOGY - I 2 2 100
MUS541B CHOIR CONDUCTING TECHNIQUES - I 2 2 100
MUS551A MAJOR IN PIANO - V 1 1 100
MUS551B COLLABORATIVE PIANO V 1 1 100
MUS552A MAJOR IN VOICE V 1 1 100
MUS552B COLLABORATIVE VOICE V 1 1 100
PSY531 ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY 4 4 100
PSY532 THERAPEUTIC INTERVENTIONS-I 4 4 100
PSY551 PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH METHODS AND ASSESSMENT-I 2 2 100
6 Semester - 2021 - Batch
Paper Code
Paper
Hours Per
Week
Credits
Marks
EST631 INTRODUCTION TO WORLD LITERATURES 5 4 100
EST631E ECOLOGICAL DISCOURSES AND PRACTICES 4 4 100
EST641A CULTURAL STUDIES 4 04 100
EST641B INTRODUCTION TO ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING 4 04 100
EST641C INTRODUCTION TO SHORT STORY 4 04 100
EST641D INTRODUCTION TO FILM STUDIES 4 04 100
EST641F REVISITING INDIAN EPICS 4 4 100
MUS631 HISTORY OF WESTERN MUSIC - II 2 2 100
MUS641A MUSIC PEDAGOGY-II 2 2 100
MUS641B CHOIR CONDUCTING TECHNIQUES-II 2 2 100
MUS651A MAJOR IN PIANO - VI 1 1 100
MUS651B COLLABORATIVE PIANO VI 1 1 100
MUS652A MAJOR IN VOICE VI 1 1 100
MUS652B COLLABORATIVE VOICE VI 1 1 100
PSY632 THERAPEUTIC INTERVENTIONS-II 4 4 100
PSY641A POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 4 4 100
PSY641B MEDIA PSYCHOLOGY 4 4 100
PSY641C ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND HUMAN-MACHINE INTERFACE 4 4 100
PSY641D CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR 4 4 100
PSY641E INTRODUCTION TO FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY 4 4 100
PSY641F HEALTH AND WELLBEING 4 4 100
PSY641G COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY 4 4 100
PSY651 PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH METHODS AND ASSESSMENT-II 2 2 100

AEN321 - ADDITIONAL ENGLISH (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Course Description

 

This course is taught in the second year for students from different streams, namely BA, BSc

 

and BCom. If the first year syllabus is an attempt by the Department of English, Christ

 

University to recognize and bring together the polyphonic Indian voices in English and Indian

 

regional literatures in translation for the Additional English students of the first year, the

 

second year syllabus intends to take that project a little further and open up the engagement

 

of the students to texts from across the world. The syllabus - selection of texts will

 

concentrate on readings from South Asian, Latin American, Australian, Canadian, and Afro-

 

American. It will voice subaltern concerns of identity, gender, race, ethnicity and problems of

 

belongingness experienced by humanity all over the globe.

 

The syllabus will extend the concerns of nation and nationality and marginalization,

 

discussed within the Indian context to a more inclusive and wider global platform. We have

 

consciously kept out ‘mainstream’ writers and concentrated on the voices of the subalterns

 

from across the world. There is an implicit recognition in this project that though the aspects

 

of marginalization and the problems facing subalterns are present across cultures and

 

nations, the experiences, expressions and reflections are specific to each race and culture.

 

The course will address these nuances and specificities and enable our students to become

 

more aware and sensitive to life and reality around them. This will equip the students, who

 

are global citizens, to understand not just the Indian scenario, but also situate themselves

 

within the wider global contexts and understand the spaces they will move into and negotiate

 

in their future.

 

There is a prescribed text book Blends: Voices from Margins for the second year students,

 

compiled by the Department of English, Christ University and intended for private circulation.

Course Objectives

 

The course objectives are

 

 to enable students to look at different cultures through Literature

 

 to help students develop an understanding of subaltern realities and identity politics

 

 to inculcate literary sensibility/taste among students across disciplines

 

 to improve language skills –speaking, reading, writing and listening

 

 to equip the students with tools for developing lateral thinking

 

 to equip students with critical reading and thinking habits

 

 to reiterate the study skills and communication skills they developed in the previous

 

year and extend it.

Learning Outcome

CO1: it will enable students to understand and analyse the nuances of cultures, ethnicities and other diversity around them and become sensitive towards them.

CO2 : They will be able to critique literature from a cultural, ethical, social and political perspectives

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Children?s Novel
 

TetsukoKuroyanagi: Tottochan: The Little Girl at the Window12

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Short Story
 

Liliana Heker : “The Stolen Party

 

 Higuchi Ichiyo: “Separate Ways”

 

 Harukki Murakami "Birthday Girl"

 

 Luisa Valenzuela: “I’m your Horse in the Night”

 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Poetry
 

Poetry 12 Hrs

 

 Silvio Curbelo: “Summer Storm”

 

 Nancy Morejon: “Black Woman”

 

 Ruben Dario: “To Roosevelt”

 

 Mina Asadi: “A Ring to me is a Bondage”

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:9
Essay
 

Essay 9Hrs

 

 Amy Tan: “Mother Tongue

 

 Linda Hogan: “Waking Up the Rake”

 

 Isabelle Allande: “Open Veins of Latin America”

Text Books And Reference Books:

Blends Book II

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Oxford Encyclopeadia on Latin American History

Children's Literature -  Kimberley Reynolds (CUP)

Evaluation Pattern

Evaluation Pattern

 

CIA 1: A written test for 20 marks. It can be an Open Book test, a classroom assignment, an

 

objective or descriptive test pertaining to the texts and ideas discussed in class.

 

CIA2: Mid-semester written exam for 50 works

 

CIA 3: This is to be a creative test/ project in small groups by students. They may do

 

Collages, tableaus, skits, talk shows, documentaries, Quizzes, presentations, debates,

 

charts or any other creative test for 20 marks. This test should allow the students to explore

 

their creativity and engage with the real world around them and marks can be allotted to

 

students depending on how much they are able to link the ideas and discussions in the texts

 

to the world around them.

 

Question Paper Pattern

 

Mid Semester Exam: 2 hrs

 

Section A: 4x5= 20

 

Section B: 2x15=30

 

Total 50

 

End Semester Exam: 3 hrs

 

Section A: 4 x 5 = 20

 

Section B: 2 x 15= 30

 

Total 50

ENG323 - CREATIVE WRITING (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

An introduction to the craft of creative writing, this paper offers an engagement with literary conventions as well as the writing techniques and tools essential to effective composition and editing.

Learning Outcome

CO 1: To engage with writing as a verbal visual craft

CO 2 : To develop a visual verbal vocabulary

CO 3 : to locate writing in a regional context and situate it in a global discourse

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:45
Topics
 

1)Narrativising Time: calibrating time through alternate modes of expression.

Instructions: Write a paragraph that captures the passage of time. Do not use conventional markers and instruments that mark the passage of time like calendars, watches, clocks.

Tip: Observe objects and their relation with time. Describe the changes you notice.

2) Writing about Space:

Instructions: Using your bodily experience, in a few lines describe being caged, then describe being alone in a vast open desert like space. Avoid conventional words that describe space like measurements or volumes.

Tip: Observe and describe the effect spatiality has on you in terms of feelings and perceptions.

3) Ekphrasis: Describing a work of visual art:

Choose a famous work of art and narrativise it.

Tip: avoid historical, biographical or compositional facts. Study the work and imagine the moments or situations that preceded what is depicted.

4)Pecha Kucha (Sequencing):

Instructions: using 20 slides with a six second transition per slide, narrativise the story that will lead to the LAST slide being the painting chosen by you for the previous exercise.

Tip: keep slides minimal. Avoid heavy text or images. Use a visual colour palette and design mode that aligns, complements or contrasts with your last slide (the painting). Choose a font, background colour and images to suit your narrative tone. Be sensitive to cultural moorings and milieu.

5) Perspectives/ Point of View

Instructions: Choose a popular legend or fairy tale or nursery rhyme. Retell it from the point of view of a minor character or object. Example: retell Cinderella from the point of view of the slipper or the coach man.

Tip: the plot must remain the same but the perspective will define the tone and telling thereof.

 

6) Analogy

Instructions: Write a brief analogy: 2-5 lines only. You may use a metaphor, simile, conceit, anecdote etc.

Tip: Try to find culture specific and contextual examples. feel free to draw from your own cultural and linguistic experiences. Provide adequate translation and context. Write in English only.

 

7)Artistic Manifesto

Instructions: write a page describing your emerging idea of artistic writing from your experiences with the writing exercises you have hitherto done.

Tip:  You may feel the need to align your style and voice within a tradition. Describe and appraise that tradition and locate yourself within it.

 

8 a) Material Memory:

Instructions: Find any household artefact or family heirloom of emotional value and trace its significance within your family.

Tip: trace its ownership, try to find to the source, have a conversation with someone who has a story about it, happy or otherwise. Observe the artefact and the response it evokes in the narrator. Try to supplement your writing with a photo or illustration.

8 b) Cultural expression:

Instructions: In conversation with your family, identify a favourite proverb, insult, threat, joke that has been repeated over the years. What does it mean? What is its intention? How do some of its elements capture the sense of region and community. For example, the donkey is often vilified as a beast of stubbornness and stupidity in Tamil folklore. It is also an affectionate term of rebuke by elders and is inoffensive yet stinging. It is a character often central to proverb and folktale alike as well as good natured insults.

9) Ballad: Story poems with clear conventions

Instructions: write a ballad using the conventions discussed in class.

10) Haiku:

Instructions: Write a sequence of haiku reflecting a season.

Tip: The haiku must have a seasonal marker (kigo), cutting word (kiregi) and adhere to the conventions of Imagism, avoiding primary speech cohesion.

 

11) Proposal for ESE Portfolio:

Instruction: Defend your choice of form. Mention why you are choosing it and what literary significance it enjoys.

12) Review of Literature:

Instructions: Select upto 5 pieces of writing by well known authors who are renowned for their contribution to that form. Write a brief review of their work, its impact on your imagination and how you intend to align yourself in their tradition.

13) Final Submission

Instructions: Draft your Final Submission. Have a friend review it. Edit and experiment with presentation.

14) Conceptualise the design and layout of your final submission. Write a paragraph on your design concept. Even if you choose to submit an unadorned manuscript, validate this decision.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Amis, Kingsley, ed, The New Oxford Book of Light Verse , Oxford University Press,, London, 1978.

Bradley, Margaret. Ed, More Poetry Please! JM Dent & Sons,Great Britain,1988.

 

Fry, Stephen , The Ode less Travelled , Random House , UK

Lowenstein Tom, ed Classic Haiku: The Great Japanese Poetry from Basho, Buson, Issa, Shiki and their followers, Duncan Baird Publishers, London

 

Palgrave, Francis Turner Palgrave's Golden Treasury with Additional Poems, Oxford University Press, London, 1908

Reid, Ian, The Critical Idiom: The Short Story, Methuen& Co. London

 

Stepp, Carl Sessions. Writing as Craft and Magic, Oxford University Press, New York,2007

Thayil, Jeet, ed,60 Indian Poets, Penguin Random House , India ,2008

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Will be provided by the instructor

Evaluation Pattern

This course has 10 internal assignments which are graded continuously for 50 marks.

Students will be graded for compliance with assignment instructions.

The End Semester Assessment will be a portfolio submission (50 marks).

There is no CIA or Mid Semester examination.

EST331 - AMERICAN LITERATURES (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:75
No of Lecture Hours/Week:5
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

  • To introduce the students to the socio-political, religious and cultural aspects of America through literary texts
  • To enable students to  read texts as products of  historical, political and cultural context
  • To provide insights into different styles of writing over different centuries
  • To encourage clear understanding of different genres and prosody/forms/literary devices.
  • To enable learners to give their perspective on the texts prescribed
  • To brainstorm learners to use their knowledge of History, Psychology, Sociology, etc to read literary works

Learning Outcome

CO1: Identify different influences on American literature & Provide an account of European colonization of American

CO2: Demonstrate a familiarity with native America literature

CO3: Use American history to analyze different pieces of American literature

CO4: Trace the development of American literature through different eras

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Beginnings to 1700
 

Description: This unit will introduce American History and literature. An outline of important events would be briefed.

  • The Navajo Creation Story
  • John Smith- The New Land
  • Anne Bradstreet – In Honour of that Highness
Unit-2
Teaching Hours:10
1700-1820
 

Description: This unit will move further into specific texts relevant to the century and sensitize learners in that direction. 

  • Doctor Richard Shuckburgh- Yankee Doodle (popular version)
  • Benjamin Franklin- Rules by which a Great Empire...
  • Sarah Wentworth Morton- Stanzas to a Husband Recently United
Unit-3
Teaching Hours:25
1820- 1900
 

Description: This unit will provide a variety in terms of different kinds of literature that the particular century has produced and provide contexts as and when required

  • James Lowell- Stanzas on Freedom
  • Washington Irving- Rip Van Winkle
  • Emerson- I Become a Transparent Eyeball/Brahma
  • Hawthorne- Young Goodman Brown
  • Martin Luther King- I have a Dream (speech)
  • Longfellow- My Lost youth
  • Douglas- What the Black Man Wants
  • Whitman- A noiseless Patient Spider
  • Dickinson- I years had been from Home
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe- Excerpts- Uncle Tom’s Cabin
  • Kate Chopin- Lilacs
Unit-4
Teaching Hours:15
1900-1945
 

Description: This unit will provide a variety in terms of different kinds of literature that the particular century has produced and provide contexts as and when required.

  • Hemingway- The Snows of Kilimanjaro
  • Frost- Meeting and Passing
  • Ezra Pound- An Immorality
  • Langston Hughes- Daybreak in Alabama
  • Fitzgerald- The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  • Cummings- Even a Pencil has Fear to
  • Ginsberg- Howl or A Supermarket in California
  • Eugene O Neill- The Emperor Jones or Hairy Ape
Unit-5
Teaching Hours:15
1945- Contemporary
 

Description: This unit will introduce war and the effect of it on the minds of American writers and the society. It will also take the learners through different styles of writing.

  • Alice Walker- The Color Purple
  • Sylvia Plath- Gold Mouths Cry
  • William Burroughs- Naked Lunch
  • James Thurber- A Couple of Hamburgers
Text Books And Reference Books:

Text compiled for internal circulation

Essential Reading

  1. Roger Williams: from A Key into the Language of America
  2. Anne Bradstreet: from Contemplations
  3. Context: Cultures in Contact: Voices from Anglo-American’s “New” World (17C)]
  4. Sarah Kemble Knight (1666-1727)
  5. The journal of Madame Knight
  6. Context: Tradition and Change in Anglo-America
  7. Philip Freneau (1752-1832)
  8. The Indian Student or Force of Nature
  9. Washington Irving (1783-1859)
  10. From A History of New York
  11. James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851)
  12. From The Last of the Mohicans
  13. William Apess (1798-?)
  14. An Indian’s Looking-Glass for the White Man
  15. Context: Indian Voices
  16. Herman Melville (1819-1891)
  17. TheParadise of Bachelors and The Tartarus of Maids
  18. Sarah Margaret Fuller (1810-1850)
  19. From Woman in the Nineteenth Century
  20. From American Literature; Its position in the present time, and prospects for the future
  21. Sojourner Truth (1797
  22. Address to the first Annual Meeting of the American Equal Rights Association
  23. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911)
  24. The colored people in America
  25. Context: Literature and the “Woman Question”
  26. Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo (1808-1890)
  27. An account of the Gold Rush
  28. Context: Voices from the Southwest
  29. Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney (1791-1865)
  30. The suttee
  31. Sherwood Anderson
  32. From Winesburg, Ohio
  33. John Dos Passos
  34. From U.S.A
  35. Elizabeth Bishop
  36. In the waiting room
  37. Tennessee Williams
  38. Portrait of a Madonna
  39. Sylvia Plath
  40. Lady Lazarus
  41. Robert Lowell
  42. Skunk hour
  43. Alice Walker
  44. The child who favoured daughter
  45. Adrienne Rich
  46. Upper Broadway
  47. Gary Snyder
  48. Sixth-month song in the foothills
  49. Vladimir Nabokov
  50. From Lolita
  51. Ralph Ellison
  52. From Invisible Man
  53. Thomas Pynchon
  54. Entropy
Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

  1. Abel, Darrel. American Literature, Volume 1: Colonial and Early National Writing, (ed)
  2. Abel, Darrel. American Literature, Volume 2: Literature of the Atlantic Culture, (ed) Abel, Darrel.
  3. Recent American Literature to 1930, (ed) Heiney and Downs Lenthiel H, Volume 3; Barron’s Educational Series
  4. Recent American Literature After 1930, (ed) Heiney and Downs, Lenthiel H. Volume 4; Barron’s Educational Series
  5. Literary History of The United States:  (ed) Spiller, Thorp, Johnson, Canby, Ludwig, Third Edition: Revised; Amerind Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd.
  6. The Heath Anthology of American Literature, Volume 1, Second Edition; (ed) Lauter, Yarborough et al, Heath
  7. The Harper American Literature, Compact Edition; (ed) McQuade, Atwan et al, Harper and Row
Evaluation Pattern

Assessment Pattern

 

CIA (Weight)

ESE (Weight)

Individual or group work

20+20

50

                

Question Paper Pattern

Mid Semester Exam

 Module

Section A

10 marks

Section B

20 marks

Module I

1

1

Module II

1

 

Module III

1

 

Module IV

 

 

 End Semester Exam

 Module

Section A

15 marks

Section B

20 marks

 

Module I

1

 

 

Module II

1

1

 

Module III

1

1

 

Module IV

1

 

 

 

Section A – 15x4 = 60

Section B – 20x2 = 40

The prescribed texts could form the subject matter of CIA 1 as well as CIA 3.

 

In particular, the texts could be extended to meet CIA 3 requirements.  

FRN321 - FRENCH (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

French as second language for the Arts, Science and Commerce UG program

Learning Outcome

CO1: Ability to communicate with native speakers and make presentations on small topics

CO 2: Proficiency in literary analysis, appreciation and review of poems,play ,films and fables

CO3: Acquaintance of culture, civilization, social values and etiquettes, and gastronomical richness

CO 4: Ability to do formal and informal, oral and written communication.

CO 5: Overall knowledge on functional and communicative aspects and get through a2 level exams.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:9
Dossier 1
 

To perform a tribute: artist, work, you are going to…..

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:9
Dossier 2
 

Towards a working life

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:9
Dossier 3
 

France Seen by...

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:9
Dossier 4
 

Mediamania

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:9
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme
 

Act 1, 2 & 3

Text Books And Reference Books:

1.        Berthet, Annie, Catherine Hugot et al. Alter Ego + A2. Paris : Hachette, 2012

2.      Gonnet, Georges. Molière- Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme .Paris : Hachette, 1971

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

1.      Lichet, Raymond., Puig Rosado. Ecrire à tout le monde. Paris : Hachette, 1980

2.      French websites like Bonjour de France, FluentU French, Learn French Lab, Point du FLE etc.

Evaluation Pattern

Assessment Pattern

CIA (Weight)

ESE (Weight)

CIA 1 – Assignments / Letter writing / Film review

10%

 

CIA 2 –Mid Sem Exam

25%

 

CIA 3 – Quiz / Role Play / Theatre / Creative projects 

10%

 

Attendance

05%

 

End Sem Exam

 

50%

Total

50%

50%

HIN321 - HINDI (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

 

Course Description:

The detailed text book “Shambook” is a Khanda Kavya written by Jagdeesh Gupta. To improve the creative writing skills, Nibandh, Kahani and Kavitha lekhan are included.Bharathiya chitrakala is also a part of the syllabus to improve the knowledge aboutIndian paintings.

Course Objectives:

Students are exposed to different forms of poetry especially, Khanda Kavya. It will help them to understand the contemporary socio-political issues.By learning about the tradition of Indian painting and legendary painters of India , students get to know about the richness and culture  of the Indian paintings. Creative writing sharpens their thinking, analytical  and writing skills 

Learning Outcome

CO1: By the end of the course the student should be able to: ● CO1: Improve their writing skill in literary Hindi by doing asynchronous session assignments and CIAs. ● CO2: Improve their analytical skills through critical analysis of the poetry. ● CO3: Will be able to learn the different aspects of Official correspondence. ● CO4: To improve their basic research skills while doing the CIAs. By the end of the course the student should be able to: ● CO1: Improve their writing skill in literary Hindi by doing assignments and CIAs

CO2: Improve their analytical skills through critical analysis of the poetry.

CO3: To improve their basic research skills while doing the CIAs

CO4: To understand the contributions of painters to Indian painting.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Shambooh
 

Khanda Kavya “Shambook” [Poetry] By:Jagdeesh Gupta. Pub: Raj Pal & Sons

 

Level of knowledge:Analitical    

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
Creative writing
 

Nibandh lekhan, Katha lekhan, Kavitha lekhan.

Level of knowledge:Conceptual

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:15
Bharathiya chithrakala -parampara evam pramukh kalakar
 

Utbhav, vikas aur pramukh shailiyam

pramukh kalakar-1.M F Hussain 2.Ravindranath Tagore 3.Raja Ravi Varma 4.Jamini Roy.

Level of knowledge: Conceptual

Text Books And Reference Books:

  1. Khanda Kavya”Shambook[Poetry] ByJagdeesh Gupta.Pub: Raj Pal & Sons
Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

.1. Sugam Hindi Vyakaran – Prof. Vamsidhar and Dharampal Shastry, SikshaBharathi,New Delh

2. Essentials of Screen writing: The art, craft and business of film and television writing

By: Walter Richard.

3. Writing and Script: A very short introduction

By: Robinson, Andrew.

4 .Creative writing By John Singleton

5. Adhunik  Hindi Nibandh By Bhuvaneshwarichandran Saksena.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA-1(Digital learning-wikipedia)

CIA-2(Mid sem examination)

CIA-3(wikipedia article creation)

End semester examination

KAN321 - KANNADA (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:50
Credits:03

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Course Description: Language Kannada is offered to students of third Semester BA/B.Sc as Second language for fifty marks. Students of this semester will study an anthology of Modern Kannada Poetry and an Autobiography of Laxman Gaikwad. This course prepares the students to understand the new era. At the dawn of the twentieth century, B.M. Srikantiah, regarded as the “Father of modern Kannada Literature”, called for a new era of writing original works in modern Kannada while moving away from archaic Kannada forms. Students will study modern Kannada poetry from B.M.Sri to Dalit poet Dr. Siddalingiah. An anthology of modern poetry is selected to understand the beauty of modern Kannada poets through their writings. Uchalya is an autobiographical novel that carries the memories of Laxman Gaikwad right from his childhood till he became an adult. Laxman Gaikwad took birth in a criminal tribe of India belonging to Orissa/ Maharastra. The original text is translated to Kannada by Chandrakantha Pokale.

 

Course Objectives:

Understand and appreciate poetry as a literary art form.

Analyse the various elements of Poetry, such as diction, tone, form, genre, imagery, symbolism, theme, etc.

Appreciates to  learn the elements of autobiography.

Learning Outcome

CO 1: Able to define autobiography

CO2: Outline a personal autobiography

CO3: Delineate different types of autobiography

CO 4: Proficiency in communication skills

CO5 : Understand the principles of translation

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Modern Kannada Poetry
 

1. Kariheggadeya Magalu- B.M.Sri

2. Hunnime Ratri- Kuvempu

3. Anna Yagna-Bendre

4.Mankuthimmana Kagga-D.V.G

5.Ikkala- K.S. Narasimha Swamy

6. Kannad padgol- G.P.Rajarathnam

7.Hanathe hachchuttene- G.S.S

8.Adugemane Hudugi-Vaidehi

9. Nehru Nivruttaraguvudilla- Adgaru

10. Nanna Janagalu.-Siddalingaiah

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:20
Autobiography- Uchalya- Lakshman Gayekwad (Marathi)
 

Text: Uchalya

Author:Lakshman Gayekwad

Translation: Chandrakantha Pokle

 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:10
Creative Writings
 

 

1 Dialogue Writing

2 Essay writing

3 short story building

Text Books And Reference Books:

1. English Geethegalu- Sri, Publishers: B.M.Sri Smarka Prathistana, Bangalore-19 (2013)

2. Kannada Sahitya Charithre- Volumes 1-4, Editor: G. S. Shivarudrappa, Prasaranga, Bangalore Univeristy.

3. Hosagannada Kavitheya Mele English Kavyada Prabhava- S. Ananthanarayana

4. Hosagannadada Arunodaya- Srinivasa  Havanuru

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

1. Hosagannda Sahitya- L.S. Sheshagiri Rao

2. Kannada Sahitya Sameekshe- G. S. Shivarudrappa

3. Bhavageethe- Dr. S. Prabhushankara

4. My Experiments with Truth- M.K. Gandhi

5. Ouru Keri- Siddalingaiah

Evaluation Pattern
 
Evaluation Pattern
 

CIA-1 Wikipedia Assignments- 20 Marks

CIA-2 Mid Semsester Examination- 50 Marks

CIA-3 Wikipedia Assignment-20 Marks

Attendance -10 Marks

End Semester Examination- 50 Marks

 
   

MUS331 - HARMONY - I (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course builds from content learned in MUS231 Music Foundations II. Music is a vehicle of expression that allows one to communicate experience directly. An individual situated within any culture can use their understanding of harmony to articulate their unique worldview to themselves and others. The inherent connections between western tonal harmony, neurology, and physiology grant students a means to explore and articulate their own worldview both musically and psychologically as such knowledge aids to increase emotional intelligence.

Course Objectives

  • Articulate the connections between musical, neurological, and physiological emotional responses of people.
  • Compose in four parts from a melody or a bass line (with or without lyrics).
  • Provision of a toolbox of musical techniques for exploring emotional psychology and self-expression.
  • Application of techniques learned to the development of own composition.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Analyse interconnecting structures, dimensions and elements that form the vocabulary of western tonal music.

CO2: Critically reflect and describe physiological, neurological, and emotional effects of music.

CO3: Solve musical problems using the musical structures, dimensions and elements described.

CO4: Use harmonization techniques to create and analyse music in four parts from a bass line or melody.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Introduction, Overview and Outline.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:8
Four-Part Harmonization
 

Melody Construction and Tendency, Part-writing in Four Voices, Four-part Harmonisation, Fine-tuning Melodies.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:8
Music and the Brain
 

Physiological Responses to Music; Chordal Tendencies and Neurotransmitters; Music and Emotion.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Navigating Tension
 

Prolonging the Dominant, Modulation, Application: Secondary Dominant and Diminished Seventh Chords, Modal Exchange and Mixture Chords, Tonicization.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Provided on Moodle platform for this unit.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Provided on Moodle platform for this unit.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

 Aural Tasks and Composition Sketch

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

 Centralised Examination of Concepts Taught

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Centralised End-of-semester Examination

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS341A - PIANO LITERATURE - I (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Piano art results from the work of a composer who express their ideas through music, and a performer who embodies the creation of the composer into life. In every musical interpretation there exists two tendencies: pursuit toward a clean expression of composers’ thoughts and pursuit toward full self-expression of a performer. During this course students will explore the nuances of famous composers and interpreters of piano music. It will also help each student grow in their listening skills and perception of classical piano music.

Course Objectives

  • Enable students to learn the main features of each epoch of piano compositions.
  • Help develop students to describe compositional and performance aspects of major piano works throughout history.
  • Help students find parameters for critical analysis of musical material and interpretation.
  • Evaluate and compare styles and interpretations of western piano music.

Learning Outcome

CO 1: Compare differences between musical structure and musical interpretation.

CO 2: Evaluate the differences between piano music from Baroque, Classical and Romantic musical periods.

CO 3: Derive practice techniques for professional performance through empathetic listening.

CO 4: Critically analyse and review piano performances.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Outline; Overview; Empathetic Listening.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:8
Discussing Musical Dimensions
 

Musical Dimensions and Structures; Composer and Performer; Interpretation Methods; Development of the Pianoforte.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:6
Baroque period
 

Domenico Scarlatti, Jean-Philippe Rameau, François Couperin, Johann Sebastian Bach.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:6
Classical Period
 

George Frederic Handel; Joseph Haydn; Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig Van Beethoven.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:8
Romantic period
 

Robert Schumann; Franz Schubert; Frederic Chopin and Franz Liszt.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Required resources will be provided by the professor in charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading
 

1. F. E. Kirby (1995). Music for Piano: A short history. Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press.

2. J. Peter Burkholder, Donald J Grout & Claude V. Paliska.(2014).  A History of Western Music. New York:  W.W. Nortan and Company.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

 Reflective practice journal & Critical reflection on practice journal

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Centralised written MSE

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Centralised written End-of-semester Examination

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS341B - OPERA LITERATURE-I (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course introduces students to a brief history of opera.Students will learn about the role of opera in the development of music in general from both theoretical and practical angles. During this course the students will get to know the names of famous opera composers and operas. There is also a focus on foundations of opera art, especially as they relate to libretto and music. Practical application of study arises in singing either famous arias and or ensemble choruses.

Course Objectives

  • Enables students to learn the main features of each epoch of opera
  • Analyse significant milestones in the development of opera
  • Recognize musical material from seminal operas by ear
  • Develop listening skills, perception and performing of western classical singing

Learning Outcome

CO1: Develop mind maps of seminal operas from the Baroque to Romantic Epochs.

CO2: Evaluate the underlying characters of each opera, their critical perspectives and social interactions.

CO3: Analyse librettos for historical, emotional and practical themes.

CO4: Recognize and identify historic and thematic material from musical extracts and cues.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Introduction, Overview and Outline.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:6
Early Opera
 

"Orfeo" by Claudio Monteverdi; "Giulio Cesare" by George Frederic Handel; "Orfeo ed Euridice" by Christoph Willibald von Gluck.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:4
Classical Opera
 

"The Marriage of Figaro" by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; "Don Giovanni" by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Romantic Opera
 

"Don Carlos" by Giuseppe Verdi; "Nabucco" by Giuseppe Verdi; "Barber of Seville" by Gioachino Rossini; "La Traviata" by Giuseppe Verdi; "Rigoletto" by Giuseppe Verdi; "Libiamo" by Giuseppe Verdi.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:6
Opera Verismo
 

"Cavalleria Rusticana" by Mascagni, "Pagliacci" by Leocavallo; "Carmen" by George Bizet; "Eugene Onegin" by Pytor Illich Tchaikovsky.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Required reading materials will be provided by the professor in charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

DelDonna, A. R.; Polzonetti, P. (2009). The Cambridge Companion to Eighteenth-Century Opera. Cambridge University Press.

Burton D. Fisher " A History of Opera"

Burton D. Fisher "Opera Classics Library Series"; "Opera

Journeys Mini Guide Series"; "Opera Journeys Libretto Series"

Evaluation Pattern
 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Listening Test and Presentations

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Mini Research Task

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Centralised End-of-semester Examination

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

 

MUS351A - MAJOR IN PIANO - III (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Major is a student's practical music specialization. It is the most important course among all music courses as it is the medium through which musical communication occurs. This course offers small-group and one-on-one interaction between instructor and learner. These interactions help in efficiently determining the theoretical and practical level of each student. The instructor will develop individual course plans to suit each student’s needs and requirements. The Major is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. The course concentrates on developing an individual’s piano techniques.  

Learning Outcome

CO1: Combine aspects of interpretation, sociocultural context and technical ability to generate emotional expression within performance.

CO2: Demonstrate appropriate posture and playing techniques for fluent performance.

CO3: Translate musical notation, language and nomenclature of each piece and interpret relevant musical information from the score.

CO4: Design appropriate practice regime to suit individual performance requirements.

CO5: Develop Stage presence, presentation, and communication skills.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Individual Development
 

Students will be directed individually with respect to the following guidelines:

 

  • Implement theoretical understandings from other courses into practice.
  • Perform selected repertoire with appropriate technical ability and musical expression.
  • Understand personal strengths and weaknesses and develop practice habits accordingly.
Text Books And Reference Books:

Willl be provided by the Faculty in-charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

NA

Evaluation Pattern

Formative assessment outline:

•      There will a Performance and Technical Exam scheduled either before or after the week of your theory MSE’s. Dates will be informed by the faculty in-charge in advance. 

•      The syllabus and the evaluation pattern for the technical exam remains the same as summative exam.

•      For the performance exam you need to perform at least one of the two pieces assigned. Evaluation rubrics and pattern remains the same as the Summative exam. 

•      Formative assessment is mandatory. You are not allowed to answer the summative exam if you fail to appear for the formative assessment.

•      If any changes on the above, the decision taken by the faculty in-charge in this regard will be final. 

 

Summative assessment outline:

Assessment Description:

The Assessment pattern will consist of two or more contrasting western classical piano pieces to be performed at the end of each semester. Repertoire selected by the instructor is tailored to each student's personal abilities.  

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighing adjustment

CIA 

No CIA I, II & III

-

 

ESE

End of semester Practical Examination: Solo Piano performance

100 marks

-

 

Practice Journal

10 marks

-

 

Total ESE

110 Marks

Reduced: 100marks

 

Total Marks

100 Marks

 

 To appear for the summative assessment:

1.     Min class attendance percentage for Major in Piano III should be 85%

2.     The student should have appeared for the formative assessment.

 If any changes in the above, the decision made by the piano coordinator will be final.

MUS351B - COLLABORATIVE PIANO III (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Collaborative piano is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. The course is divided into technical, accompaniment and ensemble Units. The former unit concentrates on developing fundamental piano techniques through primary technical exercises, the latter focusing on general mentalities and nonverbal communication skills that contribute to successful group performances in differing piano ensemble settings (4-hands, 6-hands, multiple pianos, any other ensemble setting.) and/or vocal accompaniments.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Combine aspects of interpretation, sociocultural context and technical ability to generate emotional expression within the ensemble performance.

CO2: Develop appropriate ensemble practice techniques to solve various musical and technical problems within performance of repertoire.

CO3: Clearly communicate with ensemble members (musically and linguistically) to manage musical goals thus contributing to the ensemble performance.

CO4: Develop solid piano techniques through primary exercises which directly contributes to technical development of a students? piano repertoire.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:7
Ensemble
 

This unit focusses on general mentalities and nonverbal communication skills that contribute to successful group performances in differing piano ensemble settings (4-hands, 6-hands, multiple pianos, choir etc.) 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:7
Accompaniment
 

Focuses primarily on how to work with in a group (especially accompanying a vocalist). Developing skills like  coordination, fluency, sight-reading, etc while accompanying. 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:1
Technical
 

This unit concentrates on developing fundamental piano techniques through primary technical exercises such as scales, arpeggios, broken chords, to name a few. 

Text Books And Reference Books:

Will be provided by the faculty in-charge

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

NA

Evaluation Pattern

Formative assessment outline:

•      There will a Ensemble Performance and Technical Exam scheduled either before or after the week of your theory MSE’s. Dates will be informed by the faculty in-charge in advance. 

•      The syllabus and the evaluation pattern for the technical exam remains the same as summative exam.

•      Formative assessment is mandatory. You are not allowed to answer the summative exam if you fail to appear for the formative assessment. 

•      If any changes on the above, the decision taken by the faculty in-charge in this regard will be final. 

 

Summative Assessment Description:

The testing pattern will consist of:

1. Technical exercises to be performed at the end of each semester as per the technical exam syllabus.

2. Contribute to collaborative event (piano ensemble, piano accompaniment, choir) and any event that involves team work as directed by the faculty in-charge.

Please note:

Min class attendance percentage for Collaborative Piano should be 85% to appear for the Final ESE. Else the student will not be able allowed to answer the practical exam and will be marked Fail. The student shoudl also have appeared for the formative exam. 

If any changes on the above, the decision of the piano coordinator is final. 

 

Exam

Task

Marks Allotted

Weighting adjustment

CIA

NO CIA I, II & III

-

-

ESE

End Semester practical exam:

-

-

 

Ensemble 

100

40

 

Accompaniment 

50

30

 

Technical 

50

30

 

Total ESE marks

200

100

 

Min. overall pass marks

-

40

MUS352A - MAJOR IN VOICE III (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:70
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

A Major is a student's practical music specialization. It is the most important course among all music courses as it is the medium through which musical communication occurs. This course offers small-group interactions between instructor and learners. These interactions help in efficiently determining the theoretical and practical level of each student's vocal abilities. The instructor will determine and develop groups to suit each student’s needs and requirements. The Major is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. 

Learning Outcome

CO1: Implement theoretical understandings from other courses into practice.

CO2: Perform selected repertoire with appropriate technical ability and musical expression.

CO3: Evaluate personal strengths and weaknesses and develop practice habits accordingly.

CO4: Demonstrate resonance in academic singing using physical location and conscious inclusion of various vocal resonances in the work.

CO5: Demonstrate the fundamentals of psychological and physical preparation for the stage performance.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:8
Principles of Singing
 

Equal Volume of Vowels, Aesthetics of Singing, Stable Vowels, Vocal Resonances, Active Pause.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:7
Articulation in Singing
 

Open Syllable, Masking Articulation of Vowels, Precise and Active Articulation of Consonants.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Not required

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Not required

Evaluation Pattern

The testing pattern will consist of music to be performed at the end of each semester. 

Repertoire selected by the instructor is tailored to each student's personal abilities.

 

No CIA I, II & III

 

End semester examination – practical exam; 100 marks 

MUS352B - COLLABORATIVE VOICE III (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course offers small to large group interaction between the instructor and the students. These interactions help students by giving them the opportunity to sing in various combinations of choral groups to a professional standard. The course joins with Major in Voice (solo) and is part of holistic performance education.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Demonstrate professional musical teamwork whilst working in different vocal ensembles (duet, trio, quartet and choir)

CO2: Contribute to group performances across departments.

CO3: Evaluate effective methods for solving problems when working with teams.

CO4: Create necessary administrative tools to easily manage projects within teams

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:5
Technical Work
 

Vocalise, Scales, Arpeggios, Articulations, Exercises

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:5
Self-Accompaniment
 

Playing of Vocal Exercises on Piano

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:5
Ensemble Project
 

Participation, Dependability, Punctuality, Communication, Musicality

Text Books And Reference Books:

Not required 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Not required 

Evaluation Pattern

No CIA I, II or III

End semester examination – practical exam; 100 marks

MUS381 - INTERNSHIP (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:15
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

The Department of Western Music, Christ University, insists on students doing an internship for the duration of a month (30-31 days). The objective of this compulsory curricular activity is to support students to initiate contacts with the industry, provide a professional platform to apply what they have been taught in class and bolster their confidence in practicing music. The students are expected to furnish details of the workplace they are interning in, send in weekly reports to the faculty mentor, get an internship completion certificate and a feedback report from the reporting head of the workplace in a sealed and stamped envelope. Both the certificate and the feedback should be printed on the institution's letterhead.

Course Objectives

  • Provide a link with industry platform to experience music-related work
  • Experience application of problem-solving skills within real-life environments
  • Provide students with professional networking opportunities within a music-related field
  • Engage students with the practice of logging work done as a means to growth-related ends

Learning Outcome

CO1: Adapt interpersonal professional skills and etiquette through engaging with professional performers and other music-based professionals.

CO2: Engage in practical challenges and work towards problem-solving.

CO3: Engage in multiple perspectives and project within any field involving music.

CO4: Critically reflect on experiential learning by way of processing and writing about it academically.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:60
Internship Report
 

At the end of the required period of internship the candidates will submit a report in not less than 1500 words. The report should be submitted within first 10 days of reopening of the university for the III semester.

Apart from a photocopy of the letter from the organization stating the successful completion of the internship, the report shall have the following parts:

  • Introduction to the place of internship
  • Reasons for the choice of the place and kind of internship
  • Nature of internship
  • Objectives of the internship
  • Tasks undertaken
  • Learning Outcomes
Text Books And Reference Books:

As recommended by the institutional supervisor.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

N/A

Evaluation Pattern

Internship Report: 75 (Job done and learning outcome: 40, regularity: 15; language: 10, adherence to the format: 10)
Presentation: 25 (clarity: 10, effectiveness: 10, impression: 5)

PSY332 - SOCIOCULTURAL FOUNDATIONS OF BEHAVIOR (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:5
Max Marks:100
Credits:5

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

 

Course Description

This course is offered to the third semester undergraduate students of psychology. This course will help the student to understand behaviour in a social and cultural context. It also seeks to bridge the gap between psychology and theatre by discussing the performative aspects of the self in a social context. It highlights human behaviour by exploring the relationship between aesthetics, arts, creativity, and psychology. The course also addresses the psychology of diversity and principles of social influence which enable one to understand the interface between psychology, culture and society.

Course Objectives and Learning Outcome

After the completion of this course students will be able:

To understand the sociocultural foundations of behaviour.

To appreciate the relationship between the self and the role of emotion in performance.

To comprehend the interface between psychology, culture and society.

To sensitize on the importance of the principles of persuasion and group processes in theatre.

 

Level of knowledge:

 

Knowledge of the courses studied at the higher secondary level in any discipline.

Learning Outcome

1: Analyze the factors that contribute to socio-cultural foundations of behaviour

2: Interpret the implications of various socio-cultural theories

3: Identify the role of self in the socio-cultural context

4: Reflect upon the various models of self-concept.

5: Evaluate the essence of group dynamics from a socio-cultural perspective.

6: Identify different forms of diversity within and across groups and illustrate ways in which they have or will apply them in interactions with others

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Introduction to Sociocultural psychology
 

History- Origin and Development of Modern Social Psychology; Social psychology in India.

Theories of social psychology - Motivational, Learning, Cognitive, Decision-making, Interdependence, Socio-cultural, Evolutionary, and Mid-range theories.

Approaches to Culture: Symbolic, activity and individualistic; Etics and Emics; Methods of understanding culture.

Interface between psychology, culture, and society; Contemporary trends in the Indian context.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:14
The self in a social context
 

The Self concept – Beginnings, Formation, Self- schemas and Multicultural perspective

Self-presentation – Types of self presentation, Self presentation strategies, False modesty, Self-handicapping, Impression management, Self –monitoring, Goffman’s Dramaturgical model.

         Self-esteem - Development and Consequences

Perceiving persons- Attribution theories; Attributional errors & biases, Integration, Confirmation bias

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Psychology of diversity
 

What is diversity, Types of diversity – Gender, race, disability, religion, social class, sexual orientation, physical appearance; Making sense of diversity; Cognitive processes in diversity

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Aesthetics, emotions, and the arts
 

Sociocultural perspectives of emotions, Context dependent emotion regulation,  Indian perspective on emotion (Rasa Theory ), Body language and  culture, Cultural variations in expressions of emotions. 

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Social influences
 

Persuasion: Paths to persuasion, Elements of persuasion – Communicator, message content, audience and channel of communication.

Nature and types of groups; Group performance – Types of tasks , Brainstorming ;  Group decision making – Biases in information, Group polarization , Group think ; Social facilitation & Social loafing

Group dynamics and performance 

Text Books And Reference Books:

Blaine B.E. (2007). Diversity. Sage (London).

Kassin, Saul M; Fein, Steven; Markus, Hazel; Brehm, Sharon S. (2008). Social Psychology. Houghton Miffin (Boston)

 

Matsumato, David; Juang, Linda. (2004). Culture and psychology. Thomson (Australia).

Taylor, Peplau & Sears. (2006). Social psychology. Pearson Education.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Dalal, A.K. & Misra, G. Social psychology in India: Evolution and emerging trends. In Dalal , A.K.& Misra, G. (Eds.) New directions in Indian psychology.  New Delhi: Sage.

Davidson.D.(1985). Adolescent in search of her identity. Journal of Analytical Psychology.Vol.30 (4), p339-346.

Lynn, S.J. & Payne, D.G. (1997). Memory as the theatre of the Past: The psychology of False Memories. Current directions in psychological science (Wiley-Blackwell). Vol. 6 (3) p55-55.

Pataki, S.P., & Mackenzie, S.A (2012). Modeling Social Activism and Teaching about Violence against Women Through theatre education. Psychology of women quarterly. Vol. 36(4). P 500-503.

Rosenberg.,T. (2013). Harnessing Positive Peer Pressure to Create Atruism. Social research.

Rutten, E.A.,Biesta, G.J.J., Dekovic, M., Stams, G.J.J.M, Schuengel, C.,  & Verweel,P (2010). Using forum theatre in organised youth soccer to positively influence antisocial and prosocial behaviour: a pilot study. Journal of moral education. Mar2010, Vol. 39(1) p65-78.

Sonn, C.C., Quayle, A,F.,Belanji.B.,Baker, A.M.(2015). Responding to racialization through arts practice: The case of participatory theatre. Journal of community psychology. Vol 43(2), p 244- 259. Vol. 80 (2) p 491-510.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA I - Written / individual assignment - 10 marks

CIA II - Mid Semester Examination - 25 marks

CIA III - Activity based assignment - 10 marks

Attendance - 5 marks

End Semester Examination - 50 marks

Total Marks - 100

PSY352 - PERSONAL GROWTH (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

The goal of personal growth classes is to educate the whole person in mind and body, thereby preparing to be professionally competent individuals who understand the need for maintaining a healthy lifestyle and are mindful about their personal and social actions.  Emotional Intelligence and Personality assessments is chosen for personal growth lab because it increases students’ awareness and understanding about their own emotions. The course flows a psychoeducation model of curriculum traction using assessments and class activities.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Assess emotional intelligence, and Personal attributes and interpret and relate them to their everyday lives.

CO2: Assess personal strengths and wellness to understand oneself better.

CO3: Assess behaviors related to personal responsibility including (but not limited to) healthy attitudes and behaviors, refusal skills, decision-making, and risk-taking behavior.

CO4: Identify the key components of personal fitness and describe the benefits of regular physical activity and a healthy diet.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Personal Growth and Development
 

Pre-assessment; The self-concept and self-esteem- Facilitating self-awareness through reflective exercises, Implementation of mindfulness skills, self-awareness questionnaires/inventories; Understanding and expressing emotions; Managing difficult emotions; Applying emotional intelligence; Understanding the role of culture, values and beliefs in understanding the self through assessments and reflection; Writing self-assessment and reflection papers, Ethical issues  Managing interpersonal conflicts; Self-disclosure in close relationships, values development and self-care

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
Health and Wellness
 

Illness- wellness continuum; components of wellness (WHO); The Bop-psycho-social model of health to understand Stress, mechanisms to deal with stress; Lifestyles-sleep, body image-and its impact on health and wellbeing; healthy relationships; Health compromising behaviors, Recognizing and Avoiding Addiction and Drug Abuse; Assessments and Writing self-assessment and reflections

Text Books And Reference Books:

http://www.tecweb.org/styles/gardner.html

http://www.cnbc.ca/uploads/File/strengthen/personal_growth_plan.pdf

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Stevic, C. R., & Ward, R. M. (2008). Initiating personal growth: The role of recognition and life satisfaction on the development of college students. Social Indicators Research, 89(3), 523.

Adler, R. B., & Proctor II, R.F. (2012). Looking out/Looking in (14th ed.). Wadsworth Cengage Learning

Nevid, J. S., & Rathus, S. A. (2015). Psychology and the challenges of life (13th ed.). John Wiley & Sons.

Edlin, G., & Golanty, E. (2007). Health and wellness (9th ed.). Jones & Bartlett Publishers.

Hoeger, W.K.& Hoeger, S.A. (2015). Lifetime Physical Fitness and Wellness. (13th Ed.) Cengage Learning. 

Evaluation Pattern

Continuous Internal Evaluations (CIAs) – 100 Marks

  • CIA 1: Individual Assignment (20 marks) +Class participation & Supervisor Feedback (5 marks)- 25 Marks

  • CIA 2: Individual assignment   (20 marks) +Class participation & Supervisor Feedback (5 marks)- 25 Marks

  • CIA 3: Department-Level Examination -50 Marks 

SAN321 - SANSKRIT (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Sundara Kanda is the only chapter of the Ramayana in which the hero is not Rama, but rather Hanuman. The work depicts the adventures of Hanuman and his selflessness, strength, and devotion to Rama are emphasized in the text. Bhoja only wrote 5 kāṇdas (up to the Sundarakāṇda), and there is a story about this: that he was inspired to write this work the night before a battle, that as he finished the Sundarakāṇda it was time to go, and that he announced that the Yuddhakāṇda would be enacted in the battlefield against the invader, but sadly he never returned. Others have composed a Yuddhakāṇda to complete the work.

The main objective of the students is to understand the champu Kavyas based on the sam.  

The Origin and development of the Champu.

Learning Outcome

CO1: To analyse the content of the text in detail with examples

CO2: To Deliberate the classification and characters of the epic

CO3: To understand the delight of the text.

CO4: To demonstrate an increased ability to read and understand Sanskrit texts

CO5: To understand the prefixes and suffixes and changing the sentences in grammar.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:35
champu
 

Origin and developmetn of Champu kavyas

Five Important Champus

Level of knowledge: Basic/conceptual/ Analytical

Shlokas 1 -60 Hnumantha¨s voyage to Lanka and searching for Seetha Description of city Lanka , Characters of Champu Kavya 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:5
Grammar
 

Prayogas and Krudantha

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:5
Language skills
 

Translation of Given passage from English to Sanskrit 

Writing composition in sanskrit on the given topic in Sanskrit

Text Books And Reference Books:

Sundarakanda from Bhaja´s Champu Ramayana 

Chitrakalayaa: ugagamam vikaasam ca

origin and development of painting through Vedas and Puranas

 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

   

Reference Books:-

 

1)      Sundarakanda from “Champuramayana of Bhoja  

2)      Sanskrit Grammar by M.R. Kale.

3)       History of Sanskrit literature by Dr.M.S. Shivakumaraswamy.

4)       History of Sanskrit literature by Krishnamachari.

 

 

Evaluation Pattern

CIA 1 Wikipedia assignment

CIA 2 mid semester examination

CIA 3 Wikipedia assignment

TAM321 - TAMIL (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Araillakiyam, bakthi illakiyam, ikala illakiyamn the major allakiyams.The influence myths and puranas are delineated through the good deeds for a better lifestyle.The  Cultural Studies part will have an overview of Indian painting both traditional and modern with special reference to mythology and literature

India 2020- Abdul Kalam

 

 

Learning Outcome

CO1: Recall and categorize the concepts of literature.

CO2: Understand the true essence of the texts, and inculcate them in their daily lives.

CO3: Recognize and apply the moral values and ethics in their learning.

CO4: Comprehend the concepts in literature and appreciate the literary text.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Ara illakiyam
 

1. Thirukural

2. Avvai kural

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:10
Bhakthi illakiyam
 

1. Thiru vasagam

2. Kambar andhadhi

 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:10
Ik kaala illakiyam
 

Naatu pura padalgal

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Prose
 

India 2020- Dr. Abdul Kalam

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:3
Common Topic and visual text
 

1. Common topic: Oviyam

2. Visual text : nattupuviyal

Unit-6
Teaching Hours:2
Grammer
 

Sollu illakanam

Text Books And Reference Books:

Thirukkural-Bhoombugar pathipagam- puliyur kesigan urai, Chennai- 08

Kammbarin Ainthu noolgal- Vanathi pathupagam- Dr. R. Rajagopalachariyar,  Chennai- 18

Nathu pura illakiyam- Ki Va jaganathan- malai aruvi- Monarch achagam- chennai

India 2020- APJ Abdul kalam- puthaiyuram aandugaluku aga oru thoali nooku,  New century book house, chennai

 

 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

 

Thirukkural-Bhoombugar pathipagam- puliyur kesigan urai, Chennai- 08

Kammbarin Ainthu noolgal- Vanathi pathupagam- Dr. R. Rajagopalachariyar,  Chennai- 18

Nathu pura illakiyam- Ki Va jaganathan- malai aruvi- Monarch achagam- chennai

India 2020- APJ Abdul kalam- puthaiyuram aandugaluku aga oru thoali nooku,  New century book house, chennai

Tamizhar nattup padagal - N Vanamamalai, New century book house, Chennai

 

 

 

 

Evaluation Pattern

EXAMINATION AND ASSIGNMENTS: There is a continuous evaluation both at the formal and informal levels. The language skills and the ability to evaluate a text will be assessed

This paper will have a total of 50 marks shared equally by End Semester Exam (ESE) and Continuous Internal Assessment (CIA) While the ESE is based on theory the CIA will assess the students' critical thinking, leadership qualities, language skills and creativity



AEN421 - ADDITIONAL ENGLISH (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course is taught in the second year for students from different streams, namely BA, BSc and B Com. If the first year syllabus is an attempt by the Department of English, Christ University to recognize and bring together the polyphonic Indian voices in English and Indian regional literatures in translation for the Additional English students of the first year, the second year syllabus intends to take that project a little further and open up the engagement of the students to texts from across the world. The syllabus - selection of texts will concentrate on readings from South Asian, Latin American, Australian, Canadian, and Afro-American. It will voice subaltern concerns of identity, gender, race, ethnicity and problems of belongingness experienced by humanity all over the globe.

The syllabus will extend the concerns of nation and nationality and marginalization, discussed within the Indian context to a more inclusive and wider global platform. We have consciously kept out ‘mainstream’ writers and concentrated on the voices of the subalterns from across the world. There is an implicit recognition in this project that though the aspects of marginalization and the problems facing subalterns are present across cultures and nations, the experiences, expressions and reflections are specific to each race and culture. The course will address these nuances and specificities and enable our students to become more aware and sensitive to life and reality around them. This will equip the students, who are global citizens, to understand not just the Indian scenario, but also situate themselves within the wider global contexts and understand the spaces they will move into and negotiate in their future.

 

There is a prescribed text book Blends: Voices from Margins for the second year students, compiled by the Department of English, Christ University and intended for private circulation. 

The course objectives are

·         to introduce the students to look at different cultures through Literature

·         to help students develop an understanding of subaltern realities and identity politics

·         to inculcate literary sensibility/taste among students across disciplines

·         to improve language skills –speaking, reading, writing and listening

·         to equip the students with tools for developing lateral thinking

·         to equip students with critical reading and thinking habits

·         to enable them to grasp and appreciate the variety and abundance of subaltern writing, of which this compilation is just a glimpse 

·         to actively engage with the world as a cultural and social space (to be facilitated through proactive CIAs which help students to interact and engage with the realities they face everyday and have come across in these texts)

·         to learn and appreciate India and its place in the world through association of ideas in the texts and the external contexts

 

·         to reiterate the study skills and communication skills they developed in the previous year and extend it.  

Learning Outcome

CO1 : CO1: To understand the socio- political concerns in various literatures through short stories, poems and essays

CO2: CO2: To critically read and articulate the non- canonised literatures

CO3: CO3: To analyse and apply these textual themes in a multi- cultural, global and professional space

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Novella
 

Unit 1: Novella

·         Viktor Frankl: “Man’s Search for Meaning”(Excerpts)                                       

 

 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Short Stories
 

Short Story                                                                                                    

·         Anton Chekov: “The Avenger”

·         Chinua Achebe: “Marriage is a Private Affair”

·         Nadine Gordimer: “Train from Rhodesia”

 

·         Wakako Yamuchai: “And the Soul Shall Dance”

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Poetry
 

Poetry                                                                                                             12 hrs

·         Octavio Paz: “As One Listens to the Rain”

·         Jamaica Kincaid: “Girl”

·         Derek Walcott: “A Far Cry from Africa”    

 

·         Joseph Brodsky: “Freedom”

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:9
Essays
 

·         Alice Walker: Excerpts from “In Search of My Mother’s Gardens”

·         Hannah Arendt: “Men in Dark Times”

Dalai Lama Nobel Acceptance Speech

 

 

 

 

Text Books And Reference Books:

Blends Book II

Viktor Frankl's "Man's Search for Meaning"

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Elie Wiesel "Night"

Diary of Anne Frank

Famous Nobel Lectures

Evaluation Pattern

CIA 1:  A written test for 20 marks. It can be an Open Book test, a classroom assignment, an objective or descriptive test pertaining to the texts and ideas discussed in class.  

CIA2: Mid-semester written exam for 50 works

 

CIA 3: This is to be a creative test/ project in small groups by students. They may do Collages, tableaus, skits, talk shows, documentaries, Quizzes, presentations, debates, charts or any other creative test for 20 marks. This test should allow the students to explore their creativity and engage with the real world around them and marks can be allotted to students depending on how much they are able to link the ideas and discussions in the texts to the world around them.

ENG423 - WRITING FOR MEDIA (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Performing artists often need fine writing to either publicise or promote or clarify diverse aspects of their work to specific publics, on a variety of platforms. From persuading an interested audience to watch a performance to furthering the standards of interpreting a performance, writing can be deftly employed to serve a variety of purposes. Good writing has the potential to promote artistic sensitivity and establish the link between art, society and culture. This course aims to lay a foundation for the students of performing arts to refine their writing skills, and aid in the process of crafting written content for different media platforms.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Demonstrate knowledge of the mechanics of writing

CO2: Employ writing skills for art journalism

CO3: Deploy writing skills for promoting art-centric content across different media platforms

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Basics
 

      Grammar:

      Mechanics of Writing: Mastering punctuations, Choosing prepositions, Knowing when to employ intensifiers and qualifiers, Using precise adverbs and adjectives, Avoiding tautology, Using action words, Replacing repetitive words, Writing in other words, Employing present tense, Varying sentence lengths, Varying sentence structures, Using parallel constructions

      Understanding Writing:

      Writing in contrast to other forms of human expression

      Writing as a slow, reflective, cerebral process

      Understanding Context: Temporal | Geographical | Socio-Political

      Understanding audience: Tastes | Values | Levels of intelligibility and | needs

      Understanding Purpose: Personal Objectives | Organisational Objectives | Social Objectives | Desired Impact

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:5
Different types of Writing:
 

      Expository | Descriptive | Narrative | Argumentative

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:10
Journalistic Writing
 

      What is NEWS?

      News worthiness: Currency | Impact  | Timeliness | Prominence | Proximity | Controversy | Oddity | Consequence | Human Interest | Extremity

      News Angles : What to focus on; whom to include, narrative structure

      Writing press releases, reporting events

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Writing about Performances
 

      Situating and interpreting

Cultural Context | Creator’s contribution | Oeuvre | Genre | Conflicts | Characters | Background (cast, finance, setting, sound, lighting, editing, background music [in case of a play]) | sensory impact | finer aspects of performance

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:10
Writing tasks
 

      Writing for Flyers, Posters, Brochures, Promotional content for Campaigns : - Packing vital pieces of information, Deciding prominence and order, Strategising audience-engagement aspects

      Writing a longform piece:  Gathering Information, Logical Sequencing, Narrative Ordering, Sustaining reader-interest

      Writing for microblogging  sites - Twitter and Instagram: Understanding trends, using second-person pronouns, evoking emotional response, brevity, using hashtags and multimedia content

Text Books And Reference Books:

Banes, Sally, et al. Before, between, and beyond: Three Decades of Dance Writing. University of Wisconsin Press, 2007.

Brooks, Brian S., et al. Working with Words a Handbook for Media Writers and Editors. Bedford/St. Martins, 2020.

Casagrande, June. It Was the Best of Sentences, It Was the Worst of Sentences: a Writer's Guide to Crafting Killer Sentences. Langara College, 2018.

Marshall, Carrie. Writing for Social Media. BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT, 2018.

Stovall, James Glen. Writing for the Mass Media. Pearson/Allyn and Bacon, 2009.

Tanner, Stephen J., et al. Feature Writing. Oxford University Press, 2017.

Truss, L. Eats, Shoots and Leaves: the Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation. Profile, 2003.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Will be provided by course instructor

Evaluation Pattern

This course will not have the regular CIA-mid sem-end sem pattern. There will be a series of assignments that need to be completed at regular intervals. Each assignment will have a specific percentage of marks.

 

  1. II Week: 20-mark grammar test
  2. IV Week: 100-150 word examples of Expository, Descriptive, Narrative, and Argumentative writing
  3. VI Week: Writing a press release
  4. VIII Week: An opinion piece on a theatre or musical performance (needs to focus on any two of these aspects) : Creator’s Contribution | Genre | Conflicts | Characters | Background (cast, finance, setting, sound, lighting, editing, music) | sensory impact | finer aspects of the performance
  5. X Week: Creating brochure content for a mega performance event
  6. XII Week: Writing a longform piece on any one of these 1. a trend in theatre/musical performances 2. an artist’s performance oeuvre 3. overall review of a performance 4. cultural significance of the performance
  7. XIV Week: Two Instagram posts, one Facebook post and two tweets.

EST431 - INTRODUCTION TO LITERARY THEORY (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:75
No of Lecture Hours/Week:5
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course aims to introduce the students to concepts, concerns, critical debates in theorising literary texts and expose them to the applicability of these theoretical frameworks. It will enable students to critically perceive and engage with the production of meanings, significations and negotiations. This paper  will act as a bridge to Cultural Studies; Popular Culture; Indian Literatures; Postcolonial Studies; Ecological Studies and other studies that will be introduced in the final year and English Honours.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Display familiarity with basic theories in literature

CO2: Apply theories as frameworks to analyze literary and other texts

CO3: Debate on the feasibility of theory in application to lived reality

CO4: Demonstrate an understanding of the arguments and limitations of different theoretical perspectives

CO5: Argue for their takes on several theoretical positions with justification

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Introducing Theory: Literature and the Need for Criticism and Theory
 

I.1 What is Literature?

I.2 What is Literary Criticism; Literary/Critical Theory?

1.3 Literary Criticism/Theory: Key Ideas: Plato to Leavis 

(An Overview of the development of theory)

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:20
The Linguistic and Inter-disciplinary Turn
 

II. 1. Structuralism

  1. What is Structuralism?
  2. The Project of the Structuralists.
  3. Key Ideas/Theorists: Ferdinand de Saussure and Claude Levi-Strauss

II. 2 Poststructuralism

  1. What is Poststructuralism?
  2. The Project of the Poststructuralists
  3. Key Ideas/Theorist: Deconstruction and Jacques Derrida
Unit-3
Teaching Hours:25
The Pattern of the Mind, Language and Literature
 

III. 1 Psychoanalysis:

  1. What is Psychoanalysis?
  2. The Project of Psychoanalysis and its working in Literature.
  3. Key Ideas/Theorists: Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan

III. 2 Feminism:

  1. What is Feminism?
  2. Pre-poststructuralist’ Feminist Literary Theory
  3. Poststructuralist Feminist Theory      
  4. Key Ideas/Theorists: Virginia Woolf, Elaine Showalter, Helene Cixous and Julia Kristeva
Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Ideology and the Subject: Freedom of Mind and Expression
 

IV. 1 Ideology and Discourse:

  1. What is Ideology?
  2. Key Ideas/Theorists: Karl Marx; Louis Althusser; and Antonio Gramsci
  3. What is Discourse and it implications?
  4. Key Ideas/Theorists:Michel Foucault; New Historicism; Mikhail Bakhtin; Raymond Williams and Cultural Materialism

IV. 2 Race and Postcolonialism: Nations, Nationalisms and Identity

  1. What is Postcolonialism?
  2. The Project of Postcolonialism
  3. Key Ideas/Theorists: Franz Fanon; Homi K Bhabha; Partha Chatterjee
Unit-5
Teaching Hours:10
Theory and Beyond
 

V. 1 Postmodernism: Knowledge and Glocalization

a. What is Modernism and Postmodernism?

b. Key Ideas/Theorists: Jean Baudrillard; Jean-François Lyotard; Giles Deleuze and Felix Guattari

V.2 Ecocriticism: Green Studies and Sustainability

a. What is Ecocriticism?

b. Key Ideas/Theorists: Cheryl Glotfelty and Harold Fromm

V. 3 Narratology: Telling and Retelling Stories

a. What is Narratology ?

b. Key Ideas/Theorists: Gerard Gennette and Vladimir Propp

Text Books And Reference Books:

  1. Peter Barry: Beginning Theory: An Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory.
Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

  1. Abrams, M.H. A Glossary of Literary Terms. 8th ed. New York: Wardworth, 2005.
  2. Ahmand, Aijaz. In Theory: Classes, Nations, Literatures. Rpt. New Delhi: OUP, 2006.
  3. Culler, Jonathan. The Pursuit of Signs: Semiotics, literature, deconstruction. London/New York: Routledge, 2001. Print.
  4. Devy, G.N., ed. Indian Literary Criticism: Theory and Interpretation. Rpt. Hyderabad: Orient Longman, 2007. Print.
  5. Eagleton, Terry. Literary Theory: An Introduction. 2nd ed. Oxford: Blackwell, 2008
  6. ---. The Function of Criticism. London: Verso, 2005. Print.
  7. Gurrin, Wilfred L, et al. A Handbook of Critical Approaches to Literature. 5th ed.New York: OUP, 2005. Print.
  8. Habib, M.A.R., ed. A History of Literary Criticism and Theory: From Plato to the Present. Oxford: Blackwell, 2008. Print.
  9. John, Eileen and Dominic McIver Lopes, eds. Philosophy of Literature: Contemporary and Classic Readings. Oxford: Blackwell, 2004. Print.
  10. John, Eileen and Dominic McIver Lopes. Philosophy of Literature: Contemporary and Classic Readings. Oxford: Blackwell, 2004.
  11. Kapoor, Kapil. Literary Theory: Indian Conceptual Framework. New Delhi: Affiliated East-West Press, 1998. Print.
  12. Klages, Mary. Literary Theory: A Guide for the Perplexed. London: Continuum, 2006
  13. Leitch, Vincent B., ed. The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism. New York:Norton, 2001. Print.
  14. Rice, Philip and Patricia Waugh. Modern Literary Theory. 4th ed. London: Hodder Arnold, 2001. Print.
  15. Rivkin, Julie, Michael Ryan, eds. Literary Theory: An Introduction. Rev ed. Oxford: Blackwell, 2003. Print.
  16. Rooney, Ellen ed. Feminist Literary Theory. Cambridge: CUP, 2006. Print.
  17. Waugh, Patricia. Literary Theory and Criticism: An Oxford Guide. Oxford: OUP, 2006. Print
Evaluation Pattern

CIA II: Mid Semester 

Section A: Any 3 questions out of 5. (3x10=30) (Conceptual Questions)

Section B: 1x 20=20. Application question. Compulsory no choice.

Total = 50.

 

CIA I: A class test (open book or otherwise on concepts and application) for 20 marks

CIA III: Any creative test that is application based for 20 marks.

 

End Semester Pattern

Section A: 5x10 =50 (Answer any 5 out of 7) Conceptual Questions alone

Section B: 2x25 = 50 (Answer any 2 out of 3) Application based

 

Total 100

FRN421 - FRENCH (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

French as a second language in the UG program. The method Génération A2 consists of a student's book and an activity book, both included in the digital manual. It consists of 6 units preceded by an initial section of 'Welcome'. Continuing from where A1 left, it aims to enhance learning skills further. The structure of each unit marks a real learning journey into different aspects of the French language and culture.

 

Course Objectives

·       To develop linguistic competencies and sharpen oral and written communicative skills further

·       To enhance awareness of different aspects of francophone civilization.

·       To enrich the learner’s vocabulary

·       To enable learners to engage in and discuss simple topics with ease

 

Learning Outcome

CO1: To familiarize students with the French culture and traditions.

CO 2: To equip students with correct grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation.

CO3: To enhance communicative skills.

CO 4: To make them well versed in all the four language skills.

CO5: To make them ready for A2 level Exams.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Festivals and traditions in France
 

Lesson 1: Let’s do the housework!

Lexicon – Lodging, the house, rooms

Grammar – The progressive present tense , possessive pronouns, negative form

Speech act – Protesting and reacting

 Lesson 2: About lodging

Lexicon – Furniture and equipment, household tasks

Grammar – Some adjectives and indefinite pronouns, verbs ‘to read, to break up

                   and to complain’

Speech act – Expressing interest and indifference

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:5
Drama
 

Molière’ s L’Avare – Français facile -Act III Sc 8 onwards

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:10
Culture and tradition
 

Lesson 1: All in form!

Lexicon – The human body: exterior / interior, sickness and medicines

Grammar – Simple past tense and imperfect, recent past, expression of duration

Speech act – Narrating in the past tense

Lesson 2: Accidents and catastrophes

Lexicon – Accidents, natural catastrophes

Grammar – Adjectives and indefinite pronouns: nothing, no one, verbs ‘to say,  to run, to die’

Speech act – Expressing fear and reassuring

 

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:5
Drama
 

Molière’ s L’Avare – Français facile -Act IV

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:10
French outside of France
 

Lesson 1: Studying abroad, Happy journey

Lexicon – The educational system, formalities to go abroad

Grammar – Demonstrative pronouns, simple future tense, situating in time

Speech act – Expressing one’s opinion,

 Lesson 2: The weather

Lexicon – The weather

Grammar –Me too, not me, impersonal verbs, verbs ‘ to believe, to follow and to rain’

Speech act – Speaking about the weather, speaking about the future

Unit-6
Teaching Hours:5
Drama
 

Molière’ s  L’Avare – Français facile -Act V

 

Text Books And Reference Books:

1.    Cocton, Marie-Noelle. Génération A2. Paris : Didier, 2016 

2.     Molière, L’Avare – Français facile

 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

1.     French websites like Bonjour de France, Fluent U French, Learn French Lab, Point du FLE etc.

 

Evaluation Pattern

Assessment Pattern

CIA (Weight)

ESE (Weight)

CIA 1 – Assignments / Letter writing / Film review

10%

 

CIA 2 –Mid Sem Exam

25%

 

CIA 3 – Quiz / Role Play / Theatre / Creative projects 

10%

 

Attendance

05%

 

End Sem Exam

 

50%

Total

50%

50%

HIN421 - HINDI (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Course Description:

The detailed text-book "Ashad ka ek din” is a drama by Mohan Rakeshi, one of the eminent writers of modern Hindi Literature. Hindi journalismis is one of the major unit of this semester. Phrases, idioms, technical and scientific terminology are included in this semester to improve the literary skills.

Course Objectives:

Through the prescribed play and the theatre performance, students can go through the process of experiential learning. Study of Mass media enables them to get practical training. Phrases, idioms, technical and scientific terminology sharpen the language skills of the students.  

 

Learning Outcome

CO1 : Understand the nuances of Hindi theatre.

CO2: Create awareness of the social issues.

CO3: Improve the skill of critical analysis.

CO4: Develop the writing skills for media.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Natak- Ashad Ka Ek Din (Play) by Mohan Rakesh
 

Madhavi (Play) ByBhishma Sahni. Rajpal and Sons, New Delhi - 110006 

Level of knowledge: Analitical

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
SancharMadhyam
 

  •  Report writing,
  • Media Interview                                                                    
  •  Hindi Journalism 
  • Electronic media and Hindi,
  • Print media                                    

Level of knowledge: Conceptual

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:15
Phrases, Idioms. and Scientific and Technical Terminology
 

1. 50 Nos. Phrases and Idioms for writing the meaning and sentence formation.  

2. 100 Nos. (Hindi equivalent)

Level of knowledge: Basic

Text Books And Reference Books:

  1. "Ashad ka ek din ” is a drama by Bhisma Sahni. Rajpal and Sons, New Delhi - 110006
Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

 1. News reporting and writing:          By Mencher,Melvin..

2. Hindi PatrakaritakaIthihas:By Jagadeesh Prasad Chaturvedi

3. HindiPatrakaritaSwaroopEvamSandarbh:                          By Vinod Godare

4. Media Interview:                     By Philip Bell,Theovanleeuwen.

 

Evaluation Pattern

CIA-1(Digital learning)

CIA-2(Mid sem exam)

CIA-3((Wikipedia-Article creation)

End sem exam

KAN421 - KANNADA (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:50
Credits:03

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

The course introduces the rich Kannada language and helps students to read and write the Regional language effectively. The prescribed text ‘Kalagnani Kanaka’ (Kanaka, the visionary) is all about 15th century poet, saint and philosopher of the Haridasa Bhakti tradition. “Kanaka’s writings touch on all aspects of truth and social reality’ said K.R. Nagaraj, literary critic and the author of the Kalagnani Kanaka play. “Kanaka’s poetry is dense with rhyme, rhythm, meter and rich descriptions. He upholds social justice while addressing the issues of the time-caste and class differentiation and gender oppression, for example. Contrary to popular belief, he never confined himself to any one philosophical tradition- Advaita, Dwaita or Vishistadwaitha” ‘Kannadada Moovattu Kathegalu’ is another prescribed text. Through this text the students are exposed to the writings of Koradkal Sreenivasa Rao, K. P. Poornachandra Tejaswi, Masti Venkatesha Iyengar, G. P. Basavaraj and others. Short stories help students in harnessing creative writing skills.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Reflects the tradition of old & the new

CO2: Helps to create dialogue writing

CO3: Identify key points in stories

CO4: Understand the ideologies during British rule

CO5: Expose to Dasa Sahitya movement

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:20
Kalagnani Kanaka- K.R. Nagaraj
 

Act- 1

Act- 2 

Act- 3 

Act- 4 

Act- 5

Act- 6

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:20
Selected short stories (Kannadada Moovatttu Kathegalu) Edited by: Fakir Mohammed katpadi, Krishnamurthy Hanur Publication: Sahitya Academy,2018
 

1.      Dhaniyara Sathyanarayana-Koradkal Sreenivasa Rao

2.      Thabarana Kate- K. P. Poornachandra Tejaswi

3.      Gowthami Helida Kathe- Masti Venkatesha Iyengar

4.      Raja mattu Hakki- G. P. Basavaraj

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:5
Language Skills
 

Essay Writing/ Letter Writing/ Dialogue writing 

Text Books And Reference Books:

1.      Adhunika Kannada Nataka: K.M. Marualasiddappa

2.      Kannada Rangabhoomi; L.S. Shesshagiri Rao

3.      Kannada Sanna Kathegala Olavu- Giradi Govinda Raju

4.      Tabarana Kathe- Kannada Screen play by Girish Kasaravalli

 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

1.      Adhunika Kannada Nataka: K.M. Marualasiddappa

2.      Kannada Rangabhoomi; L.S. Shesshagiri Rao

3.      Kannada Sanna Kathegala Olavu- Giradi Govinda Raju

4.      Tabarana Kathe- Kannada Screen play by Girish Kasaravalli

 

Evaluation Pattern

CIA- Wikipedia Article writing -20 marks

CiA-2 Mid Semester Exams- 50 marks

CIA-3 Wikipedia Article writing- 20 marks

End Semester Exams- 50 marks

MUS431 - HARMONY - II (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course builds from content learned in MUS331 Harmony I. This course elaborates on the themes introduced in the previous semester to include Chromatic, Serial, Modal and Carnatic approaches to Art Music. The laws of harmony involve understanding the construction of musical structures and the principles that govern them. Hence, harmonic analysis is taught in order to contextualise and interpret musical ideas considering all materials presented throughout the course.

Course Objectives

  • Apply musical understandings of harmonic content to compose a piece of music.
  • Use Schenkerian analysis to extract harmonic structures underpinning a score of tonal music.
  • Use any collection of notes to create a scale and use its inherent materials harmonically.
  • Apply Western and South Indian approaches to Art Music to identify similarities and differences in structure.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Aurally identify tetrachords and classify modes using Francian nomenclature

CO2: Create relative modal families and identify tendencies within any set of notes representing a scale.

CO3: Compose a jingle for submission to a radio station.

CO4: Elaborate diatonic functions using chromatic designs and techniques.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction and Overview
 

Introduction, Outline and Overview.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:10
Carnatic Music with Francian Nomenclature
 

Tetrachords, Carnatic Raga; Nomenclature Framework and Identifying Raga.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Crossing Musical Borders with Modal Families
 

Modes of the Major Scale; Harmonic Minor Modes; Melodic Minor Modes; Pentatonic Modes; Hexatonic Modes; Other Modal Families.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:6
Chromatic Functions
 

Tritone Substitution; Neapolitan Sixth; Augmented Sixths; Chromatic Sequences.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Required readings will be provided by the professor in charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Required readings will be provided by the professor in charge.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Raga Identification and Radio Jingle

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Centralised Midsemester Examination

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Centralised End-of-semester Examination

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS441A - PIANO LITERATURE - II (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Piano Art results from the work of a composer who express their ideas through music, and a performer who embodies the creation of the composer into life. In every musical interpretation there exists two tendencies: pursuit toward a clean expression of composers thoughts and pursuit toward full self-expression of a performer. During this course students will explore the nuances of famous composers and interpreters of piano music. It will also help each student grow in their listening skills and perception of classical piano music.

 

Course Objectives

  • Analyse the geographic influences of piano compositions through identification of musical structures specific to a given nation.
  • Describe compositional and performance aspects of major piano works throughout history.
  • Analysing different parameters used to construct program notes. 
  • Use insights gained from the course to expand on tools for self-development of quality practice techniques.

Learning Outcome

CO 1: Analyse stylistic features of various classical composers across the world.

CO 2: Create, manage, and perform in an education-based concert grounded by practical understandings of sociohistorical content.

CO 3: Design Program notes for recitals

CO 4: Critically justify and formulate personal musical practice approaches to music discussed.

CO 5: Critically analyse / review various interpretations of performances of piano repertoire discussed.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Introduction, Outline and Overview.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:2
Program notes
 

Types of music journalism, creating Program notes through best practice methods

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:8
Event Management Rudiments
 

Requirements; Effective Communication Strategies; Theme, Content and Practice Regimes, Piano-opera project

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:6
German and Russian Piano music
 

Johannes Brahms, Clara Schumann, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Alexander Scriabin, 

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:6
French impressionism
 

Gabriel Faure, Claude Debussy, Maurice Ravel and Eric Satie

Unit-6
Teaching Hours:6
Atonality, 20th century and other geographical locations
 

Second Viennese school, Atonality, Arnold Schoenberg and Bela Bartok, Spanish piano music, Revision 

Text Books And Reference Books:

Required materials will be provided by the professor in charge on the Moodle platform.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

1. F. E. Kirby (1995). Music for Piano: A short history. Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press.

 

2. J. Peter Burkholder, Donald J Grout & Claude V. Paliska.(2014).  A History of Western Music. New York:  W.W. Nortan and Company.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Program notes and Reflective Practice Journal

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Event Performance and Contribution

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Centralised End-of-semester Examination

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS441B - OPERA LITERATURE - II (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course introduces students to a brief history of opera. Students will learn about the role of opera in the development of music in general from both theoretical and practical angles. During this course the students will get to know the names of famous opera composers and operas. There is also a focus on foundations of opera art, especially as they relate to libretto and music. Practical application of study arises in singing either famous arias and or ensemble choruses within their own student-organised event focused on Opera History.

Course Objectives

  • Describe significant milestones in the development of opera leading to modern settings.
  • Recognize seminal operatic material by ear.
  • Develop listening skills, perception and performance of western classical singing. 
  • Create an Opera Revue with a sociohistorical narrative.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Describe the main characters, synopsis and history of seminal operatic works.

CO2: Plan, manage and perform their own opera history-themed event.

CO3: Evaluate the underlying features of each relevant operatic epoch.

CO4: Create individual practice routines influenced by performances analysed throughout the course.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:4
Verismo: Truth and Realism
 

Ruggero Leoncavallo: Pagliacci (1892); Pietro Mascagni: Cavalleria Rusticana (1890). 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:4
Italian Post-Romantism
 

Giacomo Puccini: La Bohème (1896); Tosca (1900); Madama Butterfly (1904); Turandot (1926).

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:4
French Lyrique and Grand Opera
 

Charles Gounod: Faust (1859); Georges Bizet: Carmen (1875).

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:6
Russia opera
 

Modest Mussorgsky: Boris Godunov (1874); Pyotr Il’yich Tchaikovsky: Eugene Onegin (1878); Queen of Spades (1890); Iolanta (1891).

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:1
Modern Music Drama
 

Richard Wagner: Tannhäuser (1845).

Unit-6
Teaching Hours:4
Operetta
 

Johann Strauss: Die Fledermaus (1874).

Unit-7
Teaching Hours:7
20th Century Opera
 

George Gershwin: Porgy and Bess (1935); Leonard Bernstein: West Side Story (1957); Benjamin Britten: Peter Grimes (1945); Andrew Lloyd-Webber (1948): The Phantom of the Opera (1986).

Text Books And Reference Books:

Required materials will be provided by the professor in charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

DelDonna, A. R.; Polzonetti, P. (2009). The Cambridge Companion to Eighteenth-Century Opera. Cambridge University Press.

B.V. Dobrokhotov, Y.V. Keldysh, A.V. Lebedeva, E.M. Levashov, O.E. Levashova, A.V. Polokhin & A.M. Sokolov. (1985). History of Russian Music. Monograph.

Burton D. Fisher " A History of Opera"

Burton D. Fisher "Opera Classics Library Series"; "Opera

Journeys Mini Guide Series"; "Opera Journeys Libretto Series"

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Listening Test and Analysis Task

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Opera Revue Performance and Contribution

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Centralised End-of-semester Examination

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS451A - MAJOR IN PIANO - IV (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Major is a student's practical music specialization. It is the most important course among all music courses as it is the medium through which musical communication occurs. This course offers small-group and one-on-one interaction between instructor and learner. These interactions help in efficiently determining the theoretical and practical level of each student. The instructor will develop individual course plans to suit each student’s needs and requirements. The Major is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. The course concentrates on developing an individual’s piano techniques.  

Learning Outcome

CO 1: Combine aspects of interpretation, sociocultural context and technical ability to generate emotional expression within performance.

CO2: Demonstrate appropriate posture and playing techniques for fluent performance.

CO3: Translate musical notation, language and nomenclature of each piece and interpret relevant musical information from the score.

CO4: Design appropriate practice regime to suit individual performance requirements.

CO5: Develop Stage presence, presentation, and communication skills.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Individual Development
 

Students will be directed individually with respect to the following guidelines: 

  • Implement theoretical understandings from other courses into practice.
  • Perform selected repertoire with appropriate technical ability and musical expression.
  • Understand personal strengths and weaknesses and develop practice habits accordingly.
Text Books And Reference Books:

Willl be provided by the Faculty in-charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

NA

Evaluation Pattern

Formative assessment outline:

•      There will a Performance and Technical Exam scheduled either before or after the week of your theory MSE’s. Dates will be informed by the faculty in-charge in advance. 

•      The syllabus and the evaluation pattern for the technical exam remains the same as summative exam.

•      For the performance exam you need to perform at least one of the two pieces assigned. Evaluation rubrics and pattern remains the same as the Summative exam. 

•      Formative assessment is mandatory. You are not allowed to answer the summative exam if you fail to appear for the formative assessment.

•      If any changes on the above, the decision taken by the faculty in-charge in this regard will be final. 

 

Summative assessment outline:

Assessment Description:

The Assessment pattern will consist of two or more contrasting western classical piano pieces to be performed at the end of each semester. Repertoire selected by the instructor is tailored to each student's personal abilities.  

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighing adjustment

CIA 

No CIA I, II & III

-

 

ESE

End of semester Practical Examination: Solo Piano performance

100 marks

-

 

Practice Journal

10 marks

-

 

Total ESE

110 Marks

Reduced: 100marks

 

Total Marks

100 Marks

 

 To appear for the summative assessment:

1.     Min class attendance percentage for Major in Piano IV should be 85%

2.     The student should have appeared for the formative assessment.

 If any changes in the above, the decision made by the piano coordinator will be final.

MUS451B - COLLABORATIVE PIANO IV (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Collaborative piano is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. The course is divided into technical, accompaniment and ensemble Units. The former unit concentrates on developing fundamental piano techniques through primary technical exercises, the latter focusing on general mentalities and nonverbal communication skills that contribute to successful group performances in differing piano ensemble settings (4-hands, 6-hands, multiple pianos, any other ensemble setting.) and/or vocal accompaniments.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Combine aspects of interpretation, sociocultural context and technical ability to generate emotional expression within the ensemble performance.

CO2: Develop appropriate ensemble practice techniques to solve various musical and technical problems within performance of repertoire.

CO3: Clearly communicate with ensemble members (musically and linguistically) to manage musical goals thus contributing to the ensemble performance.

CO4: Develop solid piano techniques through primary exercises which directly contributes to technical development of a students? piano repertoire.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:7
Ensemble
 

This unit focusses on general mentalities and nonverbal communication skills that contribute to successful group performances in differing piano ensemble settings (4-hands, 6-hands, multiple pianos, choir etc.) 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:7
Accompaniment
 

Focuses primarily on how to work with in a group (especially accompanying a vocalist). Developing skills like  coordination, fluency, sight-reading, etc while accompanying. 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:1
Technical
 

This unit concentrates on developing fundamental piano techniques through primary technical exercises such as scales, arpeggios, broken chords, to name a few. 

Text Books And Reference Books:

Will be provded by the faculty in-charge

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

NA

Evaluation Pattern

Formative assessment outline:

•      There will a Ensemble Performance and Technical Exam scheduled either before or after the week of your theory MSE’s. Dates will be informed by the faculty in-charge in advance. 

•      The syllabus and the evaluation pattern for the technical exam remains the same as summative exam.

•      Formative assessment is mandatory. You are not allowed to answer the summative exam if you fail to appear for the formative assessment. 

•      If any changes on the above, the decision taken by the faculty in-charge in this regard will be final. 

 

Summative Assessment Description:

The testing pattern will consist of:

1. Technical exercises to be performed at the end of each semester as per the technical exam syllabus.

2. Contribute to collaborative event (piano ensemble, piano accompaniment, choir) and any event that involves team work as directed by the faculty in-charge.

Please note:

Min class attendance percentage for Collaborative Piano should be 85% to appear for the Final ESE. Else the student will not be able allowed to answer the practical exam and will be marked Fail. The student shoudl also have appeared for the formative exam. 

If any changes on the above, the decision of the piano coordinator is final. 

 

Exam

Task

Marks Allotted

Weighting adjustment

CIA

NO CIA I, II & III

-

-

ESE

End Semester practical exam:

-

-

 

Ensemble 

100

40

 

Accompaniment 

50

30

 

Technical 

50

30

 

Total ESE marks

200

100

 

Min. overall pass marks

-

40

MUS452A - MAJOR IN VOICE IV (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

A Major is a student's practical music specialization. It is the most important course among all music courses as it is the medium through which musical communication occurs. This course offers small-group interactions between instructor and learners. These interactions help in efficiently determining the theoretical and practical level of each student's vocal abilities. The instructor will determine and develop groups to suit each student’s needs and requirements. The Major is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. 

Learning Outcome

CO1: Implement theoretical understandings from other courses into practice.

CO2: Perform selected repertoire with appropriate technical ability and musical expression

CO3: Evaluate personal strengths and weaknesses and develop practice habits accordingly.

CO4: Performance of previously studied vocal works without loss of performance quality with a large crowd of audience.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:8
Principles of Singing
 

Equal Volume of Vowels, Aesthetics of Singing, Stable Vowels, Vocal Resonances, Active Pause.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:7
Articulation in Singing
 

Open Syllable, Masking Articulation of Vowels, Precise and Active Articulation of Consonants.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Not required

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Not required

Evaluation Pattern

The testing pattern will consist of music to be performed at the end of each semester. 

Repertoire selected by the instructor is tailored to each student's personal abilities.

No CIA I, II & III

End semester examination – practical exam; 100 marks  

MUS452B - COLLABORATIVE VOICE IV (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course offers small to large group interaction between the instructor and the students. These interactions help students by giving them the opportunity to sing in various combinations of choral groups to a professional standard. The course joins with Major in Voice (solo) and is part of holistic performance education.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Demonstrate professionalism in different group situations in vocal settings

CO2: Develop repertoire in groups for performances across departments.

CO3: Evaluate appropriate strategies to overcome problems arising in large group projects.

CO4: Create appropriate materials to help coordinate people toward the undertaking of group performances

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:5
Technical Work
 

Vocalise, Scales, Arpeggios, Articulations, Exercises

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:5
Self-Accompaniment
 

Playing of Vocal Exercises on Piano

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:5
Ensemble Project
 

Participation, Dependability, Punctuality, Communication, Musicality

Text Books And Reference Books:

Not required

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Not required

Evaluation Pattern

No CIA I, II or III

End semester examination – practical exam; 100 marks

MUS481 - INTERNSHIP (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

The Department of Western Music, Christ University, insists on students doing an internship for the duration of a month (30-31 days). The objective of this compulsory curricular activity is to support students to initiate contacts with the industry, provide a professional platform to apply what they have been taught in class and bolster their confidence in practicing music. The students are expected to furnish details of the workplace they are interning in, send in weekly reports to the faculty mentor, get an internship completion certificate and a feedback report from the reporting head of the workplace in a sealed and stamped envelope. Both the certificate and the feedback should be printed on the institution's letterhead.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Adapt interpersonal professional skills and etiquette through engaging with professional performers and other music-based professionals.

CO2: Engage in practical challenges and work towards problem-solving.

CO3: Engage in multiple perspectives and project within any field involving music.

CO4: Critically reflect on experiential learning by way of processing and writing about it academically.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:60
Internship Report
 

At the end of the required period of internship the candidates will submit a report in not less than 1500 words. The report should be submitted within the first 10 days of reopening of the university for the V semester.

Apart from a photocopy of the letter from the organization stating the successful completion of the internship, the report shall have the following parts:

  • Introduction to the place of internship

  • Reasons for the choice of the place and kind of internship

  • Nature of internship

  • Objectives of the internship

  • Tasks undertaken

  • Learning Outcomes

 

The student will also be required to give a presentation regarding their internship, outlining the key areas as articulated in the dot points listed above.

Text Books And Reference Books:

N/A

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

N/A

Evaluation Pattern

Internship Report: 75 (Job done and learning outcome: 40, regularity: 15; language: 10, adherence to the format: 10)
 

 

Presentation: 25 (clarity: 10, effectiveness: 10, impression: 5)

PSY432 - LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:75
No of Lecture Hours/Week:5
Max Marks:100
Credits:5

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course has been conceptualized in order to provide a general introduction to various developmental concepts across the different stages of the lifespan, with the nature versus nurture debate as a concurrent theme. The course is described through three perspectives: physical, cognitive, and psychosocial. Emphasis will be on the major transitions from fetal development through death in the physical, cognitive, social, and emotional domains. Research methods in developmental psychology are addressed explicitly and are also addressed alongside each major research study and theory discussed. This course includes discussion on the influences of cultural issues and technological advancements. This course addresses classic developmental theories and research as well as provides an overview of current developmental topics across the lifespan.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Define basic concepts, issues, debates and theories in the field of developmental psychology

CO2: Explain human development as progressing through different stages and domains.

CO3: Identify the role of family, peers and community in influencing development at different stages.

CO4: Explain scientific research methods used to study human development.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Introduction
 

Importance of Life-span Development; Historical Perspective; Characteristics of Life-span Development; Nature of Development; Overview of Theories of Development: Freud, Erikson, Piaget, Vygotsky, Information processing, Behavioural, Socio-Cognitive, Ethological and Ecological theories; Major Issues and Debates in Developmental Psychology; Studying Development - Sequential, Cross-sectional and Longitudinal approaches.          

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
Physical Development
 

Stages of prenatal development; Teratogens and prenatal environment; Birth, newborn appearance, reflexes, assessment and states; Physical and motor development - in childhood: cephalocaudal and proximodistal pattern, gross and fine motor skills and handedness; Puberty and adolescent changes: Meaning of  puberty, biological changes, sexual maturation, growth spurt, primary and secondary sexual characteristics; Adult development and Ageing - Biological; Assessments in studying development.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:15
Cognitive Development
 

Stages of Cognitive Development - Piaget's Theory: Milestones and Mechanisms; Vygotsky’s Theory; Language development; Observations & Experiment Methods in studying development.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:15
Psycho-social development (Development of self)
 

Emotions; Temperament; Development of self-concept; Play; Aggression and altruism; Moral Development: Kohlberg’s theory; Development of identity: Erikson and Marcia’s views; Gender differences and gender role standards; Use of field experiments to study development.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:15
Psycho-social Development (Socio- cultural Influences)
 

Development of Attachment: Bowlby’s theory; Adolescent relationships: Family, peers, adult society, adult life; Vocational adjustment; Foundations of intimate relationships: friendship, love, and sexuality; Marriage: Marital adjustment and conditions influencing it; Parenthood and parenting styles: adjustment to parenthood; Coping with Mid-life crisis, changes in relationship; Ageing and theories of ageing; Coping with death, stages and patterns of grieving; Cultural differences: Indian philosophy- four stages of a life and expectations; Use of questionnaires and interviews to study development; Ethical considerations in developmental research.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Santrock, J. W. (2018). A Topical Approach to Life-span Development (9th Ed.). McGraw-Hill Education.
Berk, L. C. (2008). Child Development. Prentice Hall of India (Pvt) Ltd.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

 Papalia, D. E. (2004). Human Development (9th Ed.). Tata McGraw Hill.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA (Continuous Internal Assesment) - Total Marks - 50    

  • CIA I   – Activity-based Individual Assignment  - 10 Marks    
  • CIA II  – Mid Semester Examination- Case/Scenario-based Questions- 25 Marks; Department Level                  
  • CIA III – Individual Assignment                        - 10 Marks
  • Attendance                                     = 5 Marks 

ESE (End Semester Examination) : Total Marks - 50, 02 Hours

Question paper pattern

  • Section A (Short Answers)                 2 Marks x 5Qs = 10 Marks
  • Section B (Essay Type)                      10 Marks x 3Qs = 30 Marks
  • Section C (Compulsory: Case Study)  10Marks x 1Qs = 10 Marks

PSY452 - PSYCHOLOGICAL STATISTICS AND EXPERIMENTS (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

The coursework aims to provide undergraduate psychology students with the knowledge and hands-on practice of experimental psychology and statistics. The course imparts training in classic as well as contemporary experiments in the field of Psychology. Students will conduct experiments in the field of Psychology from the domains of learning and cognition. In the process, they will be provided with an understanding of central concepts in the field such as designing an experiment, variables, hypothesis etc. This course is planned to provide a framework for the development of assessment practices. Attention will be given to issues of identifying and selecting test instruments, conducting the assessment process in an ethical and considerate manner, interpreting norm-referenced and criterion-referenced test scores and writing APA style reports. The course introduces students to computer-assisted experiments. The course would help students to evaluate, modify and develop psychological experiments. Statistical techniques covered will include descriptive statistics including the concept of normality, measures of central tendency and dispersion, and pie charts and graphs, as well as the use of a common statistical program (SPSS) to analyze data. Laboratory periods stress the techniques of data analysis using computers.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Understand the basic principles of experimental psychology

CO2: Conduct, interpret and report psychological experiments following ethical protocols and APA format

CO3: Analyze experimental data with the knowledge of basic statistical techniques and software packages like SPSS, MS-Excel or JAMOVI

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:4
Ethical Standards in Psychological Testing
 

Ethical issues in research (APA)- consent, confidentiality, Standards of reporting, Plagiarism, Ethical issues in report writing for tests and experiments, style of writing (scientific, unbiased, objective)

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Psychological Experiments
 

This module will draw a sketch of the movement of Experimental Psychology in the disciplinary history, highlight and discuss some distinctive features of conducting experiments in human subjects including use of theories, establishing a hypothesis and designing experiments. The module also critically looks at the ethicality and contemporary understanding of this method. The student would conduct a minimum of four experiments including at least two computer-assisted experiments. Computer-assisted include but not limited to PEBL, E-Prime, Z-tree.

Topics: Perception, Illusion, Dexterity, Attention, Reaction time 

Suggested Experiments and tools for Demonstration/ to conduct: Size weight Illusion, Finger and tweezer Dexterity, Depth Perception, tachistoscope, Reaction time apparatus, colour blindness, Muller-lyer, Minnesota Rate of Manipulation Test (MRMT), Stroop test, division of attention,

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:14
Introduction to Statistics
 

The relevance of Statistics in Psychological Research; Descriptive Statistics; Variables and Constants; Scales of Measurement, Normality, Presentation of data: Graphs (Bar diagram, Pie chart) Group and Ungrouped data: Mean, Median, Mode. Introduction to Statistical packages; Data analysis (SPSS/ Word); Parametric and non-parametric tests- correlation and t-test

Text Books And Reference Books:

American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (7th Ed.).https://doi.org/10.1037/0000165-000

Cohen, R. J. & Swerdlik, M. E. (2013). Psychological Testing and Assessment: An Introduction to Tests and Measurement (Eighth Edition). McGraw-Hill.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Coolican, H. (2006). Introduction to Research Methodology in Psychology. Hodder Arnold.

Gravetter, F.J. &Wallnau, L.B. (2009).Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences (9th Ed.). Cengage Learning.

Martin, D. W. (2008). Doing psychology experiments. Thomson-Wadsworth.

Evaluation Pattern

Continuous Internal Evaluations (CIAs) – 100 Marks

  • CIA 1: Lab Reports (20 marks) + Class participation & Supervisor Feedback (5 marks) =25 Marks 
  • CIA 2: Lab Reports (20 marks) + Class participation & Supervisor Feedback (5 marks) =25 Marks 
  • CIA 3: Department Level Examination- 50 Marks

SAN421 - SANSKRIT (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Avimarakam by Bhasa is the drama  prescribed as a text and approved in the B.O.S.  It is sociological drama which explains about the society.  . This drama is an imaginary composition of Bhasa . The concept and drama skills expresses the beauty of the style of the author Bhasa.  He creates the characters and the incidents are naturally created. Grammar will also be studied.

Learning Outcome

CO1: To Understand the style and development of the play

CO2: To learn the linguistic skills of the drama.

CO3: To Deliberate the classification and characteristics of the play

CO4: To Understand the features of play

CO5: To understand the basic structural nuances of Panini?s grammar

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:35
Canto 1-5
 

Avimarakam of Balagovindaha  Jha Origin and development of Nataka to understand the different theories and original nature of Sanskrit dramas. Avimarakam  by Balagovind jha  provides an insight to sociological life .Basic grammer only rules are given for usage in composition. Language component will help for proper usage of Sanskrit language.

             Level of knowledge: Basic/conceptual/ Analytical

Avimaraka meeting kurangi and Avimaraka engtering into the mansion of  Kurangi

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:5
Grammar
 

Karaka prakaranam 

Vykarana vishesha 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:5
Language skills
 

Translation of given passage from English to Sanskrit

Writing an article in Sanskrit on the given topics

Text Books And Reference Books:

Avimarakam  by Balagovind jha 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

            

Books for Reference: -

1.      “Avimarakam” by Balagovinda Jha

2.      Basanatakachakram  of choukamba edition.

3.      Sanskrit dramas by a.B.Keith

4.      Sanskrit grammar by M.R.Kale.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA 1 Wikipedia assignments

CIA 2 Mid semester examinations

CIA 3 Wikipedia assignments

TAM421 - TAMIL (2022 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:45
No of Lecture Hours/Week:3
Max Marks:100
Credits:3

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

A new concept, cultural studies, will take the students beyond prescribed syllabus to include music, theatre, painting, and films out of which the art form of music is taken up for the first semester.  Aram poetry- Ara nericharam specifies life discipline and standards, which would pave a successful life for the students. 

Bhakthi ilakiya- them bhavani, cheerapuranam, thirumandiram is inclined towards ritual practices. Kaapiyam with its historical values provides an understanding about life in a mature way.



Learning Outcome

CO1: Recall and categorize the concepts of literature.

CO2: Understand the true essence of the texts, and inculcate them in their daily lives.

CO3: Recognize and apply the moral values and ethics in their learning.

CO4: Comprehend the concepts in literature and appreciate the literary text.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Kappiyam
 

seevaga sindhamani.

Thirumular Thirumandhiram

These topics coherently plays a significant role in inclination towards spiritual aspects of life. It puts for the religious beliefs and entitles each one to understand the rituals and practices.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:10
Ara illakiyam
 

Aranericharam- Munai padaiyaar

The text acustoms the core values and ethics with the ideological guidelines and ways of living.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:10
Bakthi illakiyam
 

Thembavani

Seera puranam

Thiru mular, thiru mandhiram

The text elicits the importance of rituals and beliefs. 

 

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Prose
 

Nadagam

1. Irakam yenge- C N Anna Dhorai

2. Theervu - Indhra partha sarathi

3. Soothradharam- Puvi Arasu

4. Karumbum Kalliyum- Komal saminadhan

5. Palaavku thookigal - Dr. A. Ramasamy

6. Pei ottam- Dr. K A Guna Sekaran

 

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:1
Grammer
 

Vetrumai orupugal

Unit-6
Teaching Hours:4
Common topic
 

Tamizhil pudhirgalum, pazhamozhigalum

Text Books And Reference Books:

1. Neethi book, Manikkavasakar pathippakam, paarimunai, Chennai -08 

2. Tamil paa thirattu - prasaranga pub. Bangalore university, Bangalore 

3. Kappiya noolkal-manikkavasakar pathippakam, Chennai -08 

4. Madagascar kalanchiyam - van a thing pathippakam

 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

1. Thamil paa thirattu - prasaranga pub. Bangalore university, Bangalore 

2. Mozhi varalaru - Dr. My. Varatharajan - kazhaka pub. Chennai- 01 

3. Aranerichaaram-Munaipatiyaar 

4. Kazhaka pub. Thirunelveli, thenninthiya saivachiththantha noorpathippu kazhaka, Ltd., Chennai 01 

5. Thirumoor thirumandiram-Thiruvaavatuthurai aathinam, Thiruvaavatuthurai Nadagam, Education in karnataka Bangalore 01. 

6. Madras university , etaikkala illakkiyam, Chennai -01 

7. Thamizh pazhamozhikal, janaral pub. Mylappur, Chennai -04 

8. Thamizhil puthirkal our aayivu-Aaru. Ramanadan, Manikkavasakar niilakam, Chennai -01

 

Evaluation Pattern

 

 

EXAMINATION AND ASSIGNMENTS: There is a continuous evaluation both at the formal and informal levels. The language skills and the ability to evaluate a text will be assessed

This paper will have a total of 50 marks shared equally by End Semester Exam (ESE) and Continuous Internal Assessment (CIA) While the ESE is based on theory the CIA will assess the students' critical thinking, leadership qualities, language skills and creativity

 

EST531 - POSTCOLONIAL LITERATURES (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:04

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Objectives:

·         To introduce students to few key terms of colonialism and postcolonialism

·         To enable close reading of texts in their socio/political/cultural contexts, specifically colonisation

·         To make students use critical vocabulary of the critical framework while discussing and writing

Learning Outcome

CO1: To make learners sensitive to the historical factors of colonization

CO2: Basic knowledge and application of key terms in Postcolonial Literature and Theory

CO3: To enhance student ability to engage with social/cultural, political debates with historical consciousness

CO4: Interdisciplinary scope for application of postcolonial frameworks to contemporary local and global concerns such as cultural hybridity, ecological consciousness and trans-national concerns of identity

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:20
Terms of Postcolonialism
 

Terms chosen will introduce the key issues of colonialism and postcolonial literatures as a foundation to the rest of the paper. The reference text is Key Concepts in Post-Colonial Studies, Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Tiffin, will offer focus to the discussions.

·         Centre/margin

·         Colonialism/imperialism

·         Decolonisation

·         Mimicry/hybridity

·         Post-colonialism/postcolonialism 

Savage/civilised

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
Poetry
 

The poems chosen are response to colonisation from America, Srilanka, England, Canada  and Caribbean. The selection aims at introducing the resistance to colonisation articulated by indigenous community, Anglo-French community and the migrant slaves.

·         A Lament for Confederation - Chief Dan George 

·         I Lost My Talk - Rita Joe

·         The Dodo – Hilaire Belloc

·         Buffalo Dusk – Carl Sandburg

·       Zong - Nourbese Philip

 

·       The Sea is History – Derek Walcott

 

 

·     

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:15
Novel
 

Novel is one of the major genres borrowed from the West and appropriated to narrate the nation. This module aims to introduce the form and the process in the Indian context.   

The team will discuss and select from the following texts. 

 

·       The Coming be the Christ Child -  Bessie Head

·       Is There Nowhere Else Where We Can Meet? – Nadine Gordimer

·       My Son, the Fanatic – Hanif Kureishi

·       Doris Lessing - Grass is Singing

·       Michael Oondatje - Running in the family

·       Naipaul - House for Mr Biswas or Miguel Street

·       Jamaica Kincaid - Lucy or A Small Place 

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Short Story
 

Postcolonial short story is one genre that has articulated thoughts of resistance very effectively. This module introduces conventional short story, autobiographical narrative – one of the major forms of fiction to students.

·         The Coming be the Christ Child -  Bessie Head

·         Is There Nowhere Else Where We Can Meet? – Nadine Gordimer

·         My Son, the Fanatic – Hanif Kureishi

Text Books And Reference Books:

Course pack compiled by the Dept of English, Christ University, for private circulation

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Adam, Ian. "Oracy and Literacy: A Postcolonial Dilemma?" The Journal of Commonwealth Literature 31.1 (1996): 97-109.

Ashcroft, William D., Gareth Griffith, and Helen Tiffin, eds. The Empire Writes Back: Theory and Practice in Post-Colonial Literatures. London: Routledge, 1989.

_____. Key Concepts in Post-Colonial Studies. London: Routledge, 1998.

_____. The Post-Colonial Studies Reader. London: Routledge, 1995.

Brydon, Diana. "The Myths That Write Us: Decolonising the Mind." Commonwealth 10.1 (1987): 1-14.

_____. "Re-writing The Tempest." World Literature Written in English. 23.1 (1984): 75-88.

Brydon, Diana, and Helen Tiffin, eds. Decolonising Fictions. Sydney, Austral.: Dangaroo P, 1993.

Chambers, Lain, and Lidia Curti, eds. The Post-Colonial Question: Common Skies, Divided Horizons. London: Routledge, 1996.

Said, Edward. Beginnings: Intention and Method. New York: Basic Books, 1975

_____. Culture and Imperialism. New York: Vintage Books, 1994.

_____. Nationalism, Colonialism and Literature. Derry, Ireland: Field Day, 1988.

_____. Orientalism. New York: Pantheon Books, 1978.

_____. "Representing the Colonized: Anthropology's Interlocutors." Critical Inquiry 15.2 (1989): 205-25

_____. Representations of the Intellectual. New York: Vintage Books, 1996.

_____. The World, the Text, and the Critic. London: Faber and Faber, 1984.

Viswanathan, Gauri. Masks of Conquest: Literary Study and British Rule in India. New York: Columbia UP, 1989

 

Evaluation Pattern

Since CIA I insists on individual testing, there could be three ways of testing the students

  1. A class test based on the text
  2. A movie review
  3. A book review           

 

For CIA III, the students can be asked

  1. To prepare group presentations on topics relevant to postcolonial literature
  2. To put up an exhibition/display of the literature/paintings/other art productions of the formerly colonized countries.

 

These are a few ideas, however, during the course of teaching, there could be other suggestions, and CIA’s could be slightly modified.

Mid Semester Exam Question Paper Pattern (50 Marks)

 

Number of

Answers

Marks

Total

Short Notes

4

5

20

Essay Questions

3

10

30

Total

7

 

50

 

End Semester Exam Question Paper Pattern (100 Marks)

 

Number of

Answers

Marks

Total

Short Notes

5

8

40

Descriptive/long questions

4

15

60

Total

9

 

100

EST532 - INDIAN LITERATURES: THEMES AND CONCERNS (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:75
No of Lecture Hours/Week:5
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This paper introduces students to key themes and concerns in Indian Literatures. This is a survey course that serves as an introduction to main issues and concepts in Indian Literatures. The paper is a mix of traditional as well as contemporary literatures written both in English as well as other regional languages translated into English.

 

Objectives

 

  • To understand the complexities of cultural, economic, political and social forces and their impact on the production of literatures in India of different classes and backgrounds
  • To understand the religious, caste, gender, colonial, national constructs in India through its literatures and thereby develop sensitivity and add to the core value of love for fellow beings
  • To become aware of methods interpreting literary texts in the contemporary context  

Learning Outcome

·       Students will be able to understand the religious, caste, gender, colonial, national constructs in India

Students will be comprehend the complexities of cultural, economic, political and social forces and their impact on the production of literatures in India of different classes and backgrounds

 

 

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:20
Essays
 

This module will introduce students to the category of Indian Literatures, its survey of different aspects of the body of writing as well as a critical understanding of the knowledge systems indigenous to India. 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
Poetry
 

This module surveys select poetry from contemporary India. It surveys cities, people and ideas like faith and non-violence located within the Indian context. 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:13
Play
 

This module introduces students to caste and its underpinnings through a translated Dalit Drama by Vinodini. It will also introduce the Subaltern as a conceptual category and interrogate questions of caste within gender, class and other hierarchic strcutures.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Short stories
 

This selection of short stories introduces students to a variety of readings about the nation, partition, women and their social roles as well as resistance to established traditions.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:15
Novel and Graphic Novel
 

This section introduces the novel form or the graphic novel as appropriated in the Indian context. The module will aim to familiazrize students to Indian writing in English and bring forth important questions with regard to English and India apart from discussing the thematic concerns in the text. Any one of the novels may be taken to class. Understanding ‘India’ in the contemporary context through the form of the novel will be the focus of this module. A thematic reading of the novel will also be done in class. (One of the two novels could be considered).

Text Books And Reference Books:

Unit I: Essays                                                                                                20 Hrs

This module will introduce students to the category of Indian Literatures, its survey of different aspects of the body of writing as well as a critical understanding of the knowledge systems indigenous to India.

 

  • P P Raveendran: “Genealogies of Indian Literatures”, Economic and Political Weekly (June 24, 2006)
  • Amitav Ghosh: “Ghost of Mrs Gandhi”
  • Excerts from Argumentative Indian by Amartya Sen

 

Unit II: Poetry                                                                                               15 Hrs

This module surveys select poetry from contemporary India. It surveys cities, people and ideas like faith and non-violence located within the Indian context.

  • K Satchidanandan “A Man with a Door”
  • Mirza Ghalib “Be Merciful and Send for Me”
  • Bonsai God by Temsula Ao
  • Basavanna Vachana “Cripple me, father”/ Akkamahadevi’s “Akka Kelavva”
  • Sangam Poetry Ilam Peruvatuti “This World Lives Because”

·         Rukmini Bhaiyya Nayar "Gender Role"  

·         Jayanta Mahapatra"Hunger"

 

Unit III: Play                                                                                                  13 Hrs

This module introduces students to caste and its underpinnings through a translated Dalit Drama by Vinodini. It will also introduce the Subaltern as a conceptual category and interrogate questions of caste within gender, class and other hierarchic strcutures.                                                                                                  

Daaham (Thirst) – Vinodini

 

Unit IV: Short stories                                                                                     12 Hrs

This selection of short stories introduces students to a variety of readings about the nation, partition, women and their social roles as well as resistance to established traditions.

 

Pudumaipitthan “Deliverance from Curse’’

Ambai: “A Kitchen in the Corner of a House”

Saadat Hasan Manto: “Dog of Tithwal”

A K Ramanujan's Annayya's Anthropology

 

Urvashi Butalia: “Blood” 

 

 

Unit V: Novel and Graphic Novel                                                                15 Hrs

This section introduces the novel form or the graphic novel as appropriated in the Indian context. The module will aim to familiazrize students to Indian writing in English and bring forth important questions with regard to English and India apart from discussing the thematic concerns in the text. Any one of the novels may be taken to class. Understanding ‘India’ in the contemporary context through the form of the novel will be the focus of this module. A thematic reading of the novel will also be done in class. (One of the two novels could be considered).

 

  • Arundati Roy, The God of Small Things

or

  • Chetan Bhagat: Five Point Someone
  • Sarnath Banerjee Corridor
Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Chakrovorty - Spivak, Gayatri. The politics of Translation  Tutun Mukherjee, Lawrence Venuti. (ed). Translation Studies Reader. London/New York; Routeldge, 2003.

Studies in Culture and Translation. Vol. 2 ‘Translating Caste’Basu, Tapan. Katha, 2002. New Delhi.

Das, Kamala. The Sandal Trees and Other Stories. Disha Books. 1995, New Delhi.

Fresh Fictions, Folk Tales, Plays and Novellas from the North East. Katha. New    Delhi, 2005

Indian Short Stories. 1900-2000. Ramakrishnan, E.V. (ed). Sahithya Academy New Delhi, 2003.

Indian Literature, Sahithya Academy, bi-monthly journal. Vol.167, New Delhi, 1995.

Indian Literature, Sahithya Academy, bi-monthly journal. Vol .168, New Delhi, 1995.

Indian Literature, Sahithya Academy, bi-monthly journal. Vol.169, New Delhi, 1995.

Journal of Literature and Aesthetics. Vol.7, Numbers1 & 2 Jan- Dec.2007.Kollam, 2008.

Nandy, Ashis. The Intimate Enemy, New Delhi: O.U.P. 1989.

Short Fiction from South India, Krishna Swami, Subasree. Sreelatha.K (ed), New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2008.

Stuart Blackburn and Vasudha Dalmia (ed). India’s Literary History. Essays on the Nineteenth Century. New Delhi: Permanent Black, 2008.

Tendulkar, Vijay. Five Plays. Bombay: 1992.OUP. 2007, New Delhi.

 

Tamil Poetry Today, K.S. Subramanian (ed). International Institute for Tamil Studies, Chennai 2007. 

Evaluation Pattern

CIA II

  • Comparative Study of the issues of any one prescribed piece with another one piece from any Indian language
  • Written assignment on any of the typical Indian issues discussed as part of the syllabus.        

CIA III

  • could be a Translation Assignment of any contemporary literary work

(Poems or Short Stories).

 

  • written assignment on any prescribed piece bringing out the problems of translation
  • If the students do not know how to read a regional language, they can listen to a story/poem from the oral tradition and translate that.
  • Some students might not have the linguistic competence to translate then, they can learn a folk art form/gather some folk, oral narratives, recipes, sports and analyze them.

MUS531 - HISTORY OF WESTERN MUSIC - I (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course builds from musical understandings taught in MUS431: Harmony II. Armed with the knowledge of musical structure, students will investigate how seminal composers used such musical understandings to express themselves and larger social ideas. Western music today is founded on centuries of human enterprise. Professional musicians today create music by building upon traditions of the past. This course introduces key figures of western tonal music, examined by stylistic period from ancient through to romantic styles.


Course Objectives

  • Introduce students to the development of the western tonal system.
  • Inform students of stylistic developments of each historical era of western tonal music.
  • Feature prominent composers of any gender, creed, or nationality; outlining significant contributions made.
  • Involve relevant stylistic methods of musical analysis.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Contextualise meanings behind modern musical ideas using interdisciplinary methods.

CO2: Apply seminal historical insights to modern-day life.

CO3: Analyse the cultural and thematic underpinnings of tonal music.

CO4: Evaluate seminal repertoire of each tonal music epoch.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Introduction, Outline and Overview.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:4
Prehistoric and Ancient Periods
 

Music, Language and Celebration; Mathematical Foundations of Western Music.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:8
The Baroque Period
 

Evolution of Polyphony and the Limits of Elaboration; The Invention of Opera; Music as Social Moderator; Tuning and Temperament.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:6
The Classical Period
 

The Classical Period; Classical Forms; The Symphony.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:10
The Romantic Period
 

The Romantic Period; Expanding the Emotional Palette; Folk Influences and Nationalism; Human Endeavour and Achievement; Revision Forum.

Text Books And Reference Books:

All materials provided by professor in charge on Moodle platform.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

All materials provided by professor in charge on Moodle platform.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Critical Listening

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Centralised Midsemester Examination

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Centralised End-of-semester Examination

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS541A - MUSIC PEDAGOGY - I (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Music pedagogy is an essential specialty subject for musicians who wish to help others learn their art. Music pedagogy also involves the unification of skill sets related to practical and theoretical art forms that are specifically inherent to music. This course will provide the tools essential to becoming and effective, learner-centred educator through the creation of a pedagogical portfolio based on the subject interests of individuals undertaking the course.

Course Objectives

  • Model the intersections of dynamic skill sets within learning music.
  • Provide dissemination techniques to design learner-centred music curricula.
  • Bridge with psychology to describe relevant underpinnings of music education.
  • Discuss effective communication strategies of musical knowledge.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Design a syllabus and educational content that leads to the formation of a musical skill of the student's choice.

CO2: Create assignments with an ethical evaluation scheme.

CO3: Create lesson and course plans that are aligned with relevant objectives and outcomes.

CO4: Deliver a lesson that stems from a lesson plan.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Introduction, Overview and Outline

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:2
Learning Taxonomies
 

Thinking, Feeling and Doing

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:10
Course Construction
 

Disseminating Content; Outcomes and Evidence of Learning; Assessment and Evaluation Rubrics; Relative Marking and Analysis; Scheduling and Preparation.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:6
Lesson Planning
 

Lesson Planning; Immersive Classroom Activities; Personal Teaching Style.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:10
Practical Applications
 

Explaining Musical Time; Teaching Western Notation; Approaching Instrumental Education; Choir and Orchestrar Direction; Revision

Text Books And Reference Books:

All materials provided by professor in charge on Moodle platform.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

All materials provided by professor in charge on Moodle platform.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Syllabus Design and Lesson Plan

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Video Submission of Online Class

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Practical: Teach Planned Lesson

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS541B - CHOIR CONDUCTING TECHNIQUES - I (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Conductors are the leaders of the classical music world, requiring not only a specialised set of skills for orchestrating live performances but also are expected to lead up to thousands of people at a time. Basic Conducting Techniques is a practical and innovative course that provides a combination of psychology, philosophy, pedagogy and practice procedure to professionally prepare students to grow toward artistic leadership. Students select one piece from a pool of repertoire and hone their skills through its demands over the duration of the course.

Course Objectives

  • Enable students to learn the basic mechanics of conducting music.
  • Develop their own professional musical portfolio consisting of a prepared score of a piece they can conduct; event plans; rehearsal models and musical resume.
  • Enable the growth of each student toward their individual learning affinities.
  • Develop musical leadership skills and self-development through the application of skills taught.

Learning Outcome

  1. Lead small ensembles and groups to achieve musical goals.
  2. Demonstrate conducting technique with hand independence.
  3. Reflect on personal development and incorporate appropriate practice techniques for conducting.
  4. Interpret and prepare a conductor’s score ready for historically accurate performance.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Introduction, Outline and Overview.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:6
Basic Conducting Mechanics
 

Preparation of beats; Keeping the beat; Starting and stopping; Downbeats; Upbeats; Dynamics; Hand independence; Subdivision; Beat patterns.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:8
Developing Kinaesthetic Awareness
 

Use of the left hand; Cues and dynamics; Managing limb independence; Body language and musical styles; Informal communication; Thinking in movements.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:6
: Basic Music Psychology and Pedagogy
 

Conducting psychology; Music leadership; Combating performance anxiety; Breaking the shell; Music pedagogy models for self-reflection and autonomy.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:4
Concert & Rehearsal Management
 

Score preparation; Repertoire selection; Owning the podium; Event management and Effective communication skills.

Unit-6
Teaching Hours:4
Artistic Direction
 

Defining and realising an artistic vision; Leading other artists; Marketing and self-management.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Resources will be provided by the professor in charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Pavel Chesnokov (2010). The Choir and How to Direct It. Musica Russica, Moscow.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Conduct Piece Segment and Lead Small Ensemble

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Conduct Larger Piece Segment

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Practical End-of-semester Examination

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS551A - MAJOR IN PIANO - V (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Major is a student's practical music specialization. It is the most important course among all music courses as it is the medium through which musical communication occurs. This course offers small-group and one-on-one interaction between instructor and learner. These interactions help in efficiently determining the theoretical and practical level of each student. The instructor will develop individual course plans to suit each student’s needs and requirements. The Major is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. The course concentrates on developing an individual’s piano techniques.  

Learning Outcome

CO1: Combine aspects of interpretation, sociocultural context and technical ability to generate emotional expression within performance.

CO2: Demonstrate appropriate posture and playing techniques for fluent performance.

CO3: Translate musical notation, language and nomenclature of each piece and interpret relevant musical information from the score.

CO4: Design appropriate practice regime to suit individual performance requirements.

CO5: Develop Stage presence, presentation, and communication skills.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Individual Development
 

Students will be directed individually with respect to the following guidelines:

  • Implement theoretical understandings from other courses into practice.
  • Perform selected repertoire with appropriate technical ability and musical expression.
  • Understand personal strengths and weaknesses and develop practice habits accordingly.
Text Books And Reference Books:

Willl be provided by the Faculty in-charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

NA

Evaluation Pattern

Formative assessment outline:

•      There will a Performance and Technical Exam scheduled either before or after the week of your theory MSE’s. Dates will be informed by the faculty in-charge in advance. 

•      The syllabus and the evaluation pattern for the technical exam remains the same as summative exam.

•      For the performance exam you need to perform at least one of the two pieces assigned. Evaluation rubrics and pattern remains the same as the Summative exam. 

•      Formative assessment is mandatory. You are not allowed to answer the summative exam if you fail to appear for the formative assessment.

•      If any changes on the above, the decision taken by the faculty in-charge in this regard will be final. 

 

Summative assessment outline:

Assessment Description:

The Assessment pattern will consist of two or more contrasting western classical piano pieces to be performed at the end of each semester. Repertoire selected by the instructor is tailored to each student's personal abilities.  

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighing adjustment

CIA 

No CIA I, II & III

-

 

ESE

End of semester Practical Examination: Solo Piano performance

100 marks

-

 

Practice Journal

10 marks

-

 

Total ESE

110 Marks

Reduced: 100marks

 

Total Marks

100 Marks

 

 To appear for the summative assessment:

1.     Min class attendance percentage for Major in Piano V should be 85%

2.     The student should have appeared for the formative assessment.

 If any changes in the above, the decision made by the piano coordinator will be final.

MUS551B - COLLABORATIVE PIANO V (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Collaborative piano is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. The course is divided into technical, accompaniment and ensemble Units. The former unit concentrates on developing fundamental piano techniques through primary technical exercises, the latter focusing on general mentalities and nonverbal communication skills that contribute to successful group performances in differing piano ensemble settings (4-hands, 6-hands, multiple pianos, any other ensemble setting.) and/or vocal accompaniments.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Combine aspects of interpretation, sociocultural context and technical ability to generate emotional expression within the ensemble performance.

CO2: Develop appropriate ensemble practice techniques to solve various musical and technical problems within performance of repertoire.

CO3: Clearly communicate with ensemble members (musically and linguistically) to manage musical goals thus contributing to the ensemble performance.

CO4: Develop solid piano techniques through primary exercises which directly contributes to technical development of a students? piano repertoire.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:7
Ensemble
 

This unit focusses on general mentalities and nonverbal communication skills that contribute to successful group performances in differing piano ensemble settings (4-hands, 6-hands, multiple pianos, choir etc.) 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:7
Accompaniment
 

Focuses primarily on how to work with in a group (especially accompanying a vocalist). Developing skills like  coordination, fluency, sight-reading, etc while accompanying. 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:1
Technical
 

This unit concentrates on developing fundamental piano techniques through primary technical exercises such as scales, arpeggios, broken chords, to name a few. 

Text Books And Reference Books:

Will be provided by the faculty in-charge

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

NA

Evaluation Pattern

Formative assessment outline:

•      There will a Ensemble Performance and Technical Exam scheduled either before or after the week of your theory MSE’s. Dates will be informed by the faculty in-charge in advance. 

•      The syllabus and the evaluation pattern for the technical exam remains the same as summative exam.

•      Formative assessment is mandatory. You are not allowed to answer the summative exam if you fail to appear for the formative assessment. 

•      If any changes on the above, the decision taken by the faculty in-charge in this regard will be final. 

 

Summative Assessment Description:

The testing pattern will consist of:

1. Technical exercises to be performed at the end of each semester as per the technical exam syllabus.

2. Contribute to collaborative event (piano ensemble, piano accompaniment, choir) and any event that involves team work as directed by the faculty in-charge.

Please note:

Min class attendance percentage for Collaborative Piano should be 85% to appear for the Final ESE. Else the student will not be able allowed to answer the practical exam and will be marked Fail. The student shoudl also have appeared for the formative exam. 

If any changes on the above, the decision of the piano coordinator is final. 

 

Exam

Task

Marks Allotted

Weighting adjustment

CIA

NO CIA I, II & III

-

-

ESE

End Semester practical exam:

-

-

 

Ensemble 

100

40

 

Accompaniment 

50

30

 

Technical 

50

30

 

Total ESE marks

200

100

 

Min. overall pass marks

-

40

MUS552A - MAJOR IN VOICE V (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

A Major is a student's practical music specialization. It is the most important course among all music courses as it is the medium through which musical communication occurs. This course offers small-group interactions between instructor and learners. These interactions help in efficiently determining the theoretical and practical level of each student's vocal abilities. The instructor will determine and develop groups to suit each student’s needs and requirements.

The Major is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. The course is divided into Solo and Ensemble Units. The former unit concentrates on developing individual, duet and trio technique, switching back and forth between small group and individual vocal contexts. The latter unit focuses on general mentalities and nonverbal communication skills that contribute to successful choral performances.

Course Objectives

  • Implement theoretical understandings from other courses into practice.
  • Perform selected repertoire with appropriate technical ability and musical expression.
  • Understand personal strengths and weaknesses and develop practice habits accordingly.

Learning Outcome

By the end of the program students will be able to:

  • Translate western music notation and nomenclature of each piece being performed into English.
  • Evaluate appropriate practice techniques to solve problems within performance of repertoire.
  • Create an appropriate practice regime to suit individual performance requirements.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Individual Development
 
  • Students will work as assigned by the professor per skill levels and ability.
  • Progress will be monitored and difficulties attended to on an individual / group interaction basis.
  • Groups will have regular performance opportunities in front of peers, wider department and beyond.
Text Books And Reference Books:

Essential references will be provided by the professor in charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Not required.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA

No CIA I, II & III

   

ESE

End of semester Practical Examination: Ensemble

100 Marks

95 Marks

 

Total ESE

95 Marks

No Adjustment

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS552B - COLLABORATIVE VOICE V (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course offers small to large group interaction between the instructor and the students. These interactions help students by giving them the opportunity to play in various combinations of piano groups to a professional standard. The course joins with a Major in Piano (solo) and is part of holistic performance education.

Learning Outcome

  • Demonstrate professionalism working in different vocal ensembles (Duets, Trios, Quartets, Ensembles, Choirs).
  • Prepare performance repertoire for group performances across departments.
  • Evaluate appropriate means for solving problems that come with project-based teamwork.
  • Create relevant administration approaches to clarify project proceedings.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Individual Development
 
  • Students will work together in groups assigned by the professor per skill levels and ability.
  • Progress will be monitored and difficulties attended to on an individual / group interaction basis.
  • Groups will have regular performance opportunities in front of peers, wider department and beyond.
Text Books And Reference Books:

Essential references will be provided by the professor in charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Not required.

Evaluation Pattern

No CIA I, II or III

End semester examination – practical exam; 100 marks

PSY531 - ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

The abnormal psychology course aims to sensitize the students about the existence of abnormal behaviour in order to develop greater social responsibility. The course coupled with the social psychology course of the previous semester and other courses from sociology, specifically with regard to social problems, would create a holistic understanding of the individual and their society. Further, the course would enable the student to develop a cultural understanding of abnormal behaviour within the Indian context and specifically to Bangalore. In Bangalore, there is a noticeable increase in the mental health issues faced by the population and the need for mental health practitioners who understand the difference between abnormal behaviour and distressing behaviour is a major requirement and the course would be the first step towards that direction. This course has been conceptualized in order to help the students develop an understanding of the historical development of the study of abnormal behaviour.  The specific course aim is to create an understanding of the criteria and perspectives in abnormal behaviour, common classification systems, and range of disorders including anxiety disorders, mood disorders, schizophrenia, somatic symptom disorders generally observed at childhood and adolescence, and personality disorders. 

Learning Outcome

CO1: Differentiate between the different types of abnormal behavior

CO2: Discern clinically diagnosable psychopathology from deviant behavior

CO3: Identify the causes of abnormal behavior

CO4: Chart out the chronological progression of the changes in the classification and nomenclature of abnormal behavior

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction and Theoretical Perspective
 

Defining Abnormal Behaviour, Criteria of Abnormal Behaviour, Brief Mention of DSM 5 and ICD 10 classification systems, Causes of Abnormal Behaviour – Necessary, Predisposing, Precipitating and Reinforcing Causes.

Psychoanalytic (only Freud), Behaviouristic, Cognitive - Behavioral, Humanistic, Interpersonal Perspectives (Student Effort Hours

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Neurodevelopmental disorders
 

Intellectual disability - Definition, Levels of MR, Clinical Types and Causal Factors;

Autism spectrum disorders - Clinical Picture and Causal Factors;

Specific Learning disorder - Clinical Picture and Causal Factors; Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (Student Effort Hours)

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Anxiety and Somatic symptom Disorders
 

Brief Description: Panic Disorder, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Phobic Disorder with Causal Factors.

Somatic symptom disorder, Functional neurological symptom disorder with Symptoms and Causal Factors.

Illness anxiety disorder (Student Effort Hours) 

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Bipolar disorders, depressive disorders and Schizophrenia
 

Cyclothymic Disorder, Bipolar I Disorder, Bipolar II Disorder.

Dysthymic Disorder, Major Depressive Disorder with Psychosocial Causal Factors.

Schizophrenia: Meaning, Clinical Picture.

Psychosocial Causal Factors (Student Effort Hours)

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Personality Disorders and Gender Dysphoria
 

Introduction - Clinical Features and Brief Descriptions of Cluster A, B, and C Personality Disorders with Psychosocial Causal Factors.

Gender dysphoria in children and gender dysphoria in adults (Student Effort Hours)

Text Books And Reference Books:

Barlow, D.H. & Durand, M.V. (2015). Abnormal Psychology. 7th Edition. Thomson Publication.

Butcher, J.N, Mineka, S. & Hooley, J.M (2016). Abnormal Psychology. 16th Edition. Pearson Education

Kring, A. M., Davison, G. C., Neale, J. M., & Johnson, S. L. (2012). Abnormal psychology (12th ed.). John Wiley & Sons Inc.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5h edition). 

World Health Organization (2004). ICD-10: International statistical classification of diseases and related health problems (10th Rev. ed.). 

Nevid, J. S., Rathus, S. A., & Greene, B. (2018). Abnormal psychology in a changing world. 10th ed. Prentice-Hall.World Health Organization. 

Evaluation Pattern
CIA (CONTINUOUS INTERNAL ASSESSMENT)    
 CIA I –Written Assignment /Individual Assignment  - Total Marks 20    
 CIA II – Mid Semester Examination                        - Total marks 50           
CIA III –Activity-based Assignment                        - Total marks 20
  CIA I + II + III                                                      = 90 /100 = 45/50
  Attendance                                                            = 5 marks
  Total                                                                      = 100 = 50
 
End Semester Examination: Total Marks=100=Reduced to 50; 3 hours 
Question paper pattern
 Section A   Brief, concepts, definitions, applications    2 marks x 10 = 20
 Section B   Short Answers: Conceptual/Application     5 marks x 4   = 20
 Section C   Essay Type: Descriptive/Conceptual        15 marks x 3 = 45
 Section D   Compulsory: Case Study (Application)     15 X 1 = 15
 

PSY532 - THERAPEUTIC INTERVENTIONS-I (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

 This course will give students an insight into topics that provide a foundation for therapeutic interventions. Topics covered include, understanding the concept of psychotherapy and its scope in India, ethical issues, the varied schools of thought and approaches, and an insight into psychodrama and its components.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Explain the nature and scope of psychotherapy.

CO2: Identify and discuss the ethical concerns in psychotherapy.

CO3: Explain the background and goals of various psychotherapies including Psychodrama

CO4: Explain the application of techniques from different therapies.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction
 

Define Psychotherapy, Therapeutic Commonalities, Ethical Concerns in Psychotherapy, Scope of Counseling and Psychotherapy in India

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Psychoanalytical and Humanistic Interventions
 

Psychoanalytical Theory and Interventions: Brief Background and Human nature; Goals, Interventions, Strengths and Limitations, Case Application

Person-centred Theory and Techniques: Brief Background and Human nature; Goals, Interventions, Strengths and Limitations, Case Application.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Cognitive and Behavioural Interventions
 

Behavioural Theory and Techniques: Brief Background and Human nature; Goals, Interventions, Strengths and Limitations, Case Application

Cognitive Theory and Techniques: Brief Background and Human nature; Goals, Interventions, Strengths and Limitations, Case Application.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
REBT and Gestalt Interventions
 

REBT Theory and Techniques: Brief Background and Human nature; Goals, Interventions, Strengths and Limitations, Case Application.

Gestalt theory and Techniques: Brief Background and Human nature; Goals, Interventions, Strengths and Limitations, Case Application.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Psychodrama
 

Brief Historical background, Stages of Psychodrama, Principles of Psychodrama and Techniques.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Capuzzi, D., & Gross, D.G (2007) Counseling and Psychotherapy: Theories and Techniques (4th ed.). Pearson Education, Inc. 
Bhargava, R., Kumar, N. & Gupta, A. (2017) Indian Perspective of Psychotherapy,  J Contemp Psychother,( 47) 95
Grencavage, L. M., & Norcross, J. C. (1990). Where are the commonalities among the therapeutic common factors? Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 21(5), 372–378.
Corey, G. (2016). Theory & practice of group counselling.
American Counseling Association. (2014). ACA code of ethics. 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Prochaska, J.O & Norcross, J.C. (2010). Systems of Psychotherapy – A transtheoretical Analysis. Brooks/Cole.
Sharf, R.S. (2012). Theories of Psychotherapy and Counseling. Brooks/Cole.
Gladding, S. T., & Batra, P. (2007). Counseling: A comprehensive profession. Pearson Education.
Felthman, C., & Horton, I. (2000) (Ed), Handbook of Counselling and Psychotherapy. Sage
Robert, G. L., & Marianne, M.H. (2003), Introduction to Counselling and Guidance, Pearson education, Inc
Sharma, R .N.,& Sharma,R. (2004), Guidance and Counselling in India.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA CIA (Continuous Internal Assessment)-Total Marks- 50 

CIA-1: Activity-based Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
CIA-2: Mid sem Exam-Case/Scenario-based Question- 50 Marks
CIA-3: Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
Attendance- 5 Marks 

ESE PatternESE (End Semester Examination) Total Marks- 100 , 03 HOURS

Question paper pattern

Section A- (Very Short Answers) 02 marks x10Qs =20 Marks
Section B- (Short Answers) 05 marks x 4 Qs= 20 Marks 
Section B- (Essay Type) 15 marks x 3Qs = 45 Marks
Section C-(Compulsory: Case Study) 15 marks x 1Q =15 Marks

PSY551 - PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH METHODS AND ASSESSMENT-I (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course has been conceptualized to capstone experience for psychology undergraduates, in which students identify a research topic, conduct comprehensive literature reviews, and then develop a substantial written small empirical research project. The paper aims to help students collaborate and complete psychological research projects with their peers. This course is planned to also provide a framework for the development of assessment practices. Attention will be given to issues of identifying and selecting test instruments, conducting the assessment process in an ethical and considerate manner, interpreting norm references and criterion-referenced test scores and writing APA formatted reports. The program is designed to enable students to complete a group research project under the supervision of a faculty. The students would develop and defend the research proposal in the semester.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Apply the knowledge of basic research and literature review methods in psychology to develop a research idea and proposal

CO2: Develop, present, and defend a research proposal following APA and ethical guidelines

CO3: Administer psychological scales to a subject, make interpretations and draw conclusions based on the norms given in the manual

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction to research in Psychology
 

Basics of Research in Psychology: What is Psychological Research? The Goals of Psychological Research, Principles of Good Research; Ethics in Psychological Research.  Research Traditions: Quantitative & Qualitative orientations towards research & their steps, Comparing Qualitative & Quantitative Research Traditions. Review of literature: databases, search strategy, critical evaluation of an article.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Proposal Writing
 

Elements of proposal writing: Formulating a problem & developing a testable research question/research hypothesis, developing a rationale, aims, and objectives.  Research Designs: Identifying an appropriate research design and methods for a given research question/hypothesis. Sample and sampling: Probability & Nonprobability sampling methods; Methods of data collection- Case study, Observation, Interview & Focus group discussion, Survey. Protocols in data collection.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:6
Psychological testing
 

Selecting a psychological test, Characteristics of a test – standardization, Reliability and validity of tests, norms, scoring, applications and cultural adaptability. 

Administer any two psychological assessments on an individual subject using any of the following tests- one personality test (NEOPI, 16PF, Eysenck Personality Questionnaire, Type A/B behaviour pattern) and one intelligence test (Ravens Test, Bhatia’s Battery of Intelligence) and write a report

Text Books And Reference Books:

Cohen, R. J., & Swerdlik, M. E. (2013). Psychological testing and assessment: an introduction to tests and measurement. Eighth edition. McGraw-Hill Education.

Coolican, H. (2014). Research Methods and Statistics in Psychology, Sixth Edition. Taylor and Francis.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (7th Ed.).https://doi.org/10.1037/0000165-000

https://christuniversity.in/uploads/userfiles/CRCE.pdf. CHRIST (Deemed to be University) Institutional Ethics Documentation

Evaluation Pattern

Continuous Internal Evaluations (CIAs) – 100 Marks

  • CIA 1: Individual Assignment (20 marks) + Class participation & Supervisor Feedback (05 marks) - Total 25 Marks 
  • CIA 2: Individual Assignment (20 marks) + Class participation & Supervisor Feedback (05 marks) - Total 25 Marks 
  • CIA 3: Department level Exam/Viva- 50 marks 

EST631 - INTRODUCTION TO WORLD LITERATURES (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:75
No of Lecture Hours/Week:5
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Course Description: This paper is informed by David Damrosch’s understanding that world literature is not a canon of Western master works but a mode of cross cultural reading. So the selection reflects similar themes of gender, race, being responsible citizen in oppressive conditions which the students have encountered in their earlier semester. While these themes have been discussed earlier in specific nationalistic contexts, this paper draws on that awareness and brings in comparative approach for analysis.

 

Objectives:

To introduce students to methods of studying literature and culture across national and linguistic boundaries

 

To understand the nature and function of literature from global perspective

Learning Outcome

CO1: Display a basic understanding of historical and cultural contexts of world literatures

CO2: To identify and respond to the ways in which literary texts from diverse cultures, time are interconnected

CO3: Compare and contrast significant similarities and differences between various literary forms, periods, histories in both western and non-western writings

CO4: Will demonstrate tools of literary analysis including appropriate literary terminology for writing analysis of the texts

CO5: Will be able to examine reading experiences, culture from multiple frames of references, specifically frames that define world literatures

CO6: To enhance textual appreciation and writing skills

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Unit 1
 

--

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:20
Poetry
 

--

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:20
Unit 3
 

--

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Play
 

--

Text Books And Reference Books:

·          ‘Frames for World Literatures’, David Damrosch

 

·         Essays on Art, Literature – Tolstoy, Nabakov, Naipaul, Borges

·         Anna Akhamatova – Requiem (Russia)

·         Constantine Cavafy – The City (Greek)

·         Rainer Maria Rilke – Spanish dancer (Czech Republic)

·         Nazik al-Mala'ika - Love Song for Words (Iraq)

·         Imtiaz Dharkar – Purdha I (Pakistan)

·         Ashraful Musaddeq - Cyber Love (Bangladesh)

·         Miriam Wei Wei Lo - Bumboat Cruise on the Singapore River (Singapore)

·         Octavio Paz - Listen to the Rain

 

·         Federico Garcia Lorca - City that Does Not Sleep

Fyodor Dostoevsky – Notes From the Underground

 

Che Guevara - The Motorcycle Diaries

Sophocles – Antigone 

 

 

 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Amichai, Yehudi. The Slected Poetry of Yehuda Amichai. USA: University of California, 1996. . Print.

“Even A Fist Was Once an Open Palm With Fingers” the Selected Poetry of Yahudi AmichaiPoetry in Translation Trans. Bloch, Chana and Mitchell, Stephen.

 http:// www-english.tamu.edu/pers/fac/myers/default.html. Web.

Arendt, Hannah. Eichmann in Jerusalem. New York: Viking, 1963.

Bauman, Zygmunt,Life in Fragments: Essays in Postmodern Morality, Oxford: Blackwell. Print.

Calvino, Italo, The Literature Machine. London: Vintage, 1987. Print.

Cargas, Harry James, ed. Telling the Tale: A Tribute to Elie Wiesel – Saint Louis.

Damrosch, David. What is World Ltierature? Princeton University Press, 2003. Print.

Eco, Umberto,The Role of the Reader.Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Eco, Umberto, On Literature. London: Vintage, 2005. Print.

Farah, Nuruddin. Links. Penguin.Yesterday, Tomorrow: Voices from the Somali Diaspora. London and New York, Cassell, 2000. Print.

Forsdick, Charles. “‘Worlds in Collision:’The Languages and Locations of World Literature”.  A Companion to Comparative Literature. Eds. Ali Behdad and Dominic Thomas. Oxford: Blackwell, 2011. 473–89. Print

Fromm, Erich. Escape from Freedom. New York: Rinehart, 1941. Print.

Ghosh, Amitav. Sea of Poppies. Macmillan.A Guide to twentieth-century literature in English. Ed. Harry Blamires. London; New York: Methuen, 1983. Print.

Lifton, Robert J.  The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide. New York: Basic, 1986.Print.

M. Hollington, Günter Grass: The Writer in a Pluralist Society.  1980.Print.

Moretti, Franco. “Conjectures on World Literature,” New Left Review 1 (January–February2000): 54-64. Print.

Victor Frankl, From Death-Camp to Existentialism. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1979.

 

Villet, John. The Theatre of Bertolt Brecht, A Study from Eight Aspects. Print.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA 1 and 3: Tests on prescribed texts. Five marks are reserved for active classroom participation.

 

Question Paper Pattern

Mid Semester 

 

 

Number of

questions

Number of

questions to

be answered

 

Marks

Total

marks

Section A

One compulsory

annotation

6

4

5

20

Section B

4

3

10

30

 

 

 

 

50

 

End Semester 

 

 

5x20 =100 choosing one question each from Poetry, Drama, Essay & Novel and one additional question.

EST631E - ECOLOGICAL DISCOURSES AND PRACTICES (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Description: This paper is conceptualised to address one of the pressing concerns of our times – Ecology. The paper gives an introduction to the various discourses that surround the ecological movements of the past and present and the ground work they have laid to avoid a perilous future. The paper also critically looks at certain cultural phenomenon like Anthropocentricism and emphasises the urgent need for Eco Activism and cultivation of an Ecological Self. Since the paper does not just aim at getting the students familiarised with theory, it also includes field visit as an integral part.

 

Objectives:

  • To help students understand the complex and various representations of nature in literature and other cultural artefacts
  • To explore an interdisciplinary engagement with Ecology and introduce ecological concerns to the student of English Studies
  • To examine diverse contexts and concerns in the field
  • To promote ecological consciousness
  • To acknowledge field work-based learning as an important academic practice

Learning Outcome

CO1: Analyse the different debates and discourses on ecology

CO2: Understand the role of us in responding to contemporary ecological crises

CO3: to develop a critical understanding of the nature, self and the urgent need to nurture an ecological self

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
THE SOUTHERN CHALLENGE
 

The postmaterialist hypothesis is challenged; The Environmentalism of the poor – Social Action among the desperately disadvantaged in the Third World; An India/Brazil Comparison – ecological degradation and environmental protest in two large and important countries; A Chipko/Chico Comparison – the parallels between two famous forest movements; Redefining Development – bringing back nature and the people

William Cronon's The Trouble with Wilderness; or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Introduction
 

This unit introduces the students to the important debates in the field of ecology and familiarises them to the terms and concepts related to the field.

Nobody Was Supposed to Survive by Alice Walker

Terms and Concepts: Altruism, Ecology, Environment, Biodiversity, Biocentrism, Anthropocentricism, Conservation, Climate Change, Cloning, Food Chain, Carbon Food Print, Ecosystem, Eco-psychology, Ecofeminism, Ecocriticism, Environmental Ethics, Environmental Philosophy, Gaia Theory, Deep Ecology, MOVE, Behavioural Ecology, Genetics, Habitats and Niches, Biomes, Political Ecology, Postmodern Environmentalism, Sustainability, Symbiosis, Environmental Overkill, Ecocreation, Eco-Warrior, Social Ecology, Ecotopian Discourse, Ecological Philosophy, Ecological Self, Romanticism, Utilitarianism

The ECOLOGY OF AFFLUENCE:

The significance of Silent Spring – how a book by a woman scientist changed the world; The Environmental Debate – Science and the discourse of ecological crisis; The Environmental Movement – Environmental Action in Europe and the United States; Radical American Environmentalism – the competing claims of Deep Ecology and Environmental Justice; The German Greens – how a protest movement became a political party.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:10
A History of Anthropocentric Cultural Practices
 

This section introduces the students to the root of the problem in our conception of culture and development and how it impacts our ecology.

 

· Unearthing the Roots of Colonial Forest Laws: Iron Smelting and the State in Pre- and Early-Colonial India by Sashi Sivramkrishna

·  Flowering Tree – Introduction and Short Story by A. K. Ramanujam

· The Great Derangement by Amitav Ghosh

· Excerpts from The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History by Elizabeth Colbert

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:15
Eco Activism
 

This section presents students a selection of texts that bring cases and contexts of eco-activism from across the globe.

· “Integrated Study Needed for Ghats,” an interview with Professor Madhav Gadgil, by Lyla Bavdam

· “Protecting Urban Diversity” by Harini Nagendra

· Kolbert, Elizabeth. “The Lost World: Fossils of the Future”. The New Yorker, December 23, 2013. http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/12/23/the-lost-world-3

· The One Straw Revolution: Introduction to Natural Farming by Masanobu Fukuoka

· Mother Forest: The Unfinished Story of CK Janu by CK Janu

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Ecological Self
 

This section presents students with texts that argue for the need to have an ecological self as the only option to ensure a sustainable future.

·  Where I Lived, and What I Lived for, Excerpts from Walden by Thoreau

· “Greenspace: Tree Man” – by M J Prabhu

·  Irada by Aparnaa Singh

·  Haraway, Donna. “Playing String Figures with Companion Species” in Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene. Durham: Duke University Press, 2016 (9-29).

· McGregor, Fiona. Indelible Ink. Melbourne: Scribe, 2010.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:15
Field Visits and Library work
 

Field visits are to enable the student to gain an experiential sense of biodiversity, forest life, and city ecology.

One hour of library work per week, adding up to 15 at the end of semester is part of the curriculum. This is aimed at enabling the student to freely explore the domain without any teacherly regulation.

Text Books And Reference Books:

·Bavadam, Lyla. “Integrated Study Needed for Ghats.” Interview with Madhav Gadgil. Frontline: 28 July, 2012. Print.

·Bindra, Prerna Singh. Voices in the Wilderness. Rupa & Co. 2010. Print.

·Benton, L.M. and J.R. Short. Environmental Discourse and Practice. Oxford. 1998. Print.

·Guha, Ramachandra. Environmentalism: A Global History. Longman. 2000. Print.

·Nagendra, Harini. “Protecting Urban Diversity.” The Hindu: Survey of Environment 2010: 7-30. Print.

·Ramanujam A.K. A Flowering Tree and Other tales from India. 1997. Print.

·Sivramakrishna, Sashi. “Production Cycles and Decline in Traditional Iron Smelting in Maidan, Southern India, C. 1750-1950: An Environmental History Perspective” Environment and History (2009): 163-97. Print.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

·Bavadam, Lyla. “Integrated Study Needed for Ghats.” Interview with Madhav Gadgil. Frontline: 28 July, 2012. Print.

·Bindra, Prerna Singh. Voices in the Wilderness. Rupa & Co. 2010. Print.

·Benton, L.M. and J.R. Short. Environmental Discourse and Practice. Oxford. 1998. Print.

·Guha, Ramachandra. Environmentalism: A Global History. Longman. 2000. Print.

·Nagendra, Harini. “Protecting Urban Diversity.” The Hindu: Survey of Environment 2010: 7-30. Print.

·Ramanujam A.K. A Flowering Tree and Other tales from India. 1997. Print.

·Sivramakrishna, Sashi. “Production Cycles and Decline in Traditional Iron Smelting in Maidan, Southern India, C. 1750-1950: An Environmental History Perspective” Environment and History (2009): 163-97. Print.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA II: A written test on Unit I

Mid Semester: Written test. 5 out of 7 to be answered. Maximum mark per question: 10.

CIA III: Field Work and Library work based assessment

End Semester: Written test. 5 out of 7 to be answered. Maximum mark per question: 20.

EST641A - CULTURAL STUDIES (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:04

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

  • To provide the opportunity to develop and critically apply knowledge
  • To understand theoretical and critical debates and key historical developments in Cultural Studies

Learning Outcome

CO1: Create awareness of approaches to reading cultures and society

CO2: Demonstrate cross-cultural sensitivity

CO3: Understand of the contexts which influence the relationship between spatiality and cultural studies

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Introduction
 

Ashis Nandy, The Twentieth Century:  The Ambivalent Homecoming of Homo Psychologicus

Henry Giroux, et al.  “The Need for Cultural Studies: Resisting Intellectuals and Oppositional Public Spheres”

Richard Howells “Semiotics”

Roland Richard Howells “Ideology”

CSCS. “Femininity -Masculinity”

CSCS. “Imagining the Nation”

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
City
 

Ravi S. Vasudevan. “The Cities of Everyday Life”

Nitin Govil. “The Metropolis and Mental Strife: The city in science fiction cinema”

Joy Chatterjee. “Long Bus Drive”

Veena Das. “Violence and Translation”;

Rana Dasgupta. “The Face of the Future: Biometric surveillance and progress”

Shuddhabrata Sengupta. “Everyday Surveillance: ID cards, cameras and the database of ditties”

Sam de Silva. “Blind Intelligence”

David Lyon. “Surveillance: After September 11, 2001” 

---  “Urban Transformations and Media Piracy”

---- “Obscenity, Decency and Morality”

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:15
Cinema
 

Pramod Nayar, “Screen Culture”

Ashis Nandy. “Introduction: Indian Popular Cinema as the Slum’s Eye View of Politics”

 

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Cyber culture
 

Warwick Mules. “Cyberculture”

Mark Poster. “Postmodern Virtualities”

Manuel Castells “The Network Society and Organizational Change”

Manuel Castells “Identity in the Network Society”

 

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:10
Research method in cultural studies
 

Research method in Cultural Studies

Text Books And Reference Books:

Course pack compiled by the Dept of English, Christ University, for private circulation

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Barthes, Roland. Mythologies.Trs Annette Lavers. London: Vintage, 1993. Print.

Castells, Manuel “The Network Society and Organizational Change.” Conversations with History Institute of International Studies, UC Berkeley, 2001. Print.

---  “Identity in the Network Society.” Conversations with History Institute of International Studies, UC Berkeley, 2001. Print.

CSCS. “Femininity – Masculinity”  http://courses.cscsarchive.org/courses/ugdip05/paper1/mod8/ >

--- “Imagining the Nation”. Web. <http://courses.cscsarchive.org/courses/ugdip05/paper1/mod5/>

---. “Legal Identity and Culture”. Web. <http://courses.cscsarchive.org/courses/ugdip05/paper1/mod9/>

Giroux, Henry, David Shumway, Paul Smith, and James Sosnoski, “The Need for Cultural Studies: Resisting Intellectuals and Oppositional Public Spheres”. http://theory.eserver.org/need.html. Web.

Howells, Richard. Visual Culture. Cambridge: Polity, 2003.Print.

Liang, Lawrence. “Obscenity, Decency and Morality” http://courses.cscsarchive.org/courses/ugdip05/paper%202/mod%206/.Web.

Liang, Lawrence. “Urban Transformations and Media Piracy” http://courses.cscsarchive.org/courses/ugdip05/paper%202/mod%2010/.Web.

Liang, Lawrence. “The Black and White (And Grey) of Copyright.”. ‘World Information City’.  Bangalore: 14-20 Nov 2005, p 2. Print.

Lyotard, Jean-Francois. The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge. University of Minnesota Press, 1985. Print.

Mark Poster. The Second Media Age Blackwell 1995 http://www.hnet.uci.edu/mposter/writings/internet.html. Web

Mulvey, Laura. “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” (1975) http://www.nwe.ufl.edu/~lhodges/vpnc.html. Web.

Nandi, Ashish ed. The Secret Politics of Our Desires: Innocence, Culpability and Indian Popular Cinema. Delhi: OUP, 1998. Print.

Nayar, Pramod K. Reading Culture: Theory, Praxis, Politics. New Delhi: Sage, 2006. Print.

Ramanujan, A.K “Introduction” Folktales from India, New Delhi: Penguin, 1994.Print.

Thwites, Tony, Lloyd Davis, and Warwick Mules. Introducing Cultural and Media Studies: A Semiotic Approach. New York: Palgrave, Rpt 2005. Print.

Vasudevan, Ravi S. et al. SARAI Reader 02. Delhi/Amsterdam: SARAI, 2002. Print.

 

 

Evaluation Pattern

 

Examination and Assessment

 

 CIA 1: Class Test

 

CIA 2: Mid-Sem Exam for 50 marks

 

CIA 3: Class Presentations / Submissions

 

 

 

End Semester: Exam for 100 marks

 

There will be a written end-semester exam for 100 marks whereby the students will assessed on the basis of their understanding of the basic concepts discussed in the class.

 

EST641B - INTRODUCTION TO ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:04

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

  • To demonstrate a thorough grasp of the main phonological, lexical, syntactical, and other aspects of English, with particular reference to its roles as a means of communication.
  • Predict with reasonable accuracy the learning needs of any group of learners and to modify and update such a needs analysis in the light of observation and testing.
  • Write instructional objectives and prepare appropriate lesson plans.
  • Discuss intelligently lesson forms.
  • Monitor his or her effectiveness as a teacher of English to speakers of other languages.
  • Introduce and nurture familiarity with current methodology.
  • Foster awareness of language structures and ability to teach English language skills (grammar, speaking, listening, reading, writing and pronunciation) .
  • Explore a variety of textbooks and teaching materials; determine how to best utilize these within a curricular framework.
  • Review and practice developing and using a variety of assessment instruments
  • Practice implementing new techniques and materials.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Ability to use theoretical knowledge of various schools of thoughts to understand principles of language learning and teaching

CO2: Ability to create lesson plans with clear outcomes and well defined strategies for teaching

CO3: Ability to develop tasks and activities for reading, writing, speaking, listening, grammar and vocabulary

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Introduction
 

General Linguistics: the science of language; describing language; the functions of language; the structure of language; Linguistics; psycholinguistics; sociolinguistics.

Phonetics and Phonology: the international phonetic alphabet; phonetic transcription; articulatory phonetics; word and sentence stress; vowel sound and articulation of vowels and diphthongs; intonation patterns; presenting the sounds of English to learners; remediation; mother tongue influence and accent neutralization.

Linguistics/ Phonetics and Language Teaching

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
Language Acquisition/ Learning theories
 

B.F.Skinner, Noam Chomsky, Vygotsky, Krashen, Jean Piaget ( in detail)

Factors affecting Second language acquisition.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:15
Skills
 

Receptive Skills: reading and listening materials; reasons and strategies for reading; reading speed; intensive and extensive reading and listening; reading development; reasons and strategies for listening; listening practice materials and listening development.

Productive Skills: speaking and writing; skimming, scanning, taking notes from lectures and from books; reasons and opportunities for speaking; development of speaking skills; information-gap activities; simulation and role-play; dramatization; mime-based activity; relaying instructions; written and oral communicative activities.

Vocabulary: choice of words and other lexical items; active and passive vocabulary; word formation; denotative, connotative meanings.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:20
Application
 

Testing and Assessment: value of errors; problems of correction and remediation; scales of attainment.

Lesson Planning: instructional objectives and the teaching-learning process; writing a lesson plan; the class, the plan, stages and preparation; teacher-student activities; writing concept questions; teacher-student talking time; classroom language; class management and organization.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

 

Bailey, Richard W. Images of English. A Cultural History of the Language. Cambridge:

CUP, 1991. . Print.

Bayer, Jennifer. Language and social identity. In: Multilingualism in India. Clevedon:              Multilingual Matters Ltd: 101-111. 1990. Print.

Cheshire, Jenny. Introduction: sociolinguistics and English around the world. In Cheshire: 1-12. 1991.Print.

Crystal, David. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language. Cambridge: CUP. 1995. Print.

Ellis, R. Understanding Second Language Acquisition. Oxford:OUP. 1991.Print.

Gardner, R.C. Social Psychology and Second Language Learning. The Role of Attitude and Motivation. London: Edward Arnold Ltd. 1985.Print.

Holmes, Janet. An Introduction to Sociolinguistics. London: Longman Group UK Ltd. 1992.Print.

Kachru, Braj B. The Indianization of English. The English Language in India. Oxford: OUP. 1983. Print.

Loveday, Leo. The Sociolinguistics of Learning and Using a Non-Native Language. Oxford: Pergamon Press Ltd. 1982. Print.

Richards Jack C.Curriculum Development in Language Teaching. Cambridge University Press. 2001.Print.

Richards Jack C. and Rodgers Theodore S. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching. Cambridge University Press.1986. Print.

Richards Jack C. and Graves Kathleen. Teachers as course developers. Cambridge University Press.1996. Print.

Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language. (2nd ed.) New York: Gramercy Books. 1996. Print.

Widdowson, H G. Teaching Language as Communication. Oxford University Press.1978. Print.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Bailey, Richard W. Images of English. A Cultural History of the Language. Cambridge:

CUP, 1991. . Print.

Bayer, Jennifer. Language and social identity. In: Multilingualism in India. Clevedon:              Multilingual Matters Ltd: 101-111. 1990. Print.

Cheshire, Jenny. Introduction: sociolinguistics and English around the world. In Cheshire: 1-12. 1991.Print.

Crystal, David. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language. Cambridge: CUP. 1995. Print.

Ellis, R. Understanding Second Language Acquisition. Oxford:OUP. 1991.Print.

Gardner, R.C. Social Psychology and Second Language Learning. The Role of Attitude and Motivation. London: Edward Arnold Ltd. 1985.Print.

Holmes, Janet. An Introduction to Sociolinguistics. London: Longman Group UK Ltd. 1992.Print.

Kachru, Braj B. The Indianization of English. The English Language in India. Oxford: OUP. 1983. Print.

Loveday, Leo. The Sociolinguistics of Learning and Using a Non-Native Language. Oxford: Pergamon Press Ltd. 1982. Print.

Richards Jack C.Curriculum Development in Language Teaching. Cambridge University Press. 2001.Print.

Richards Jack C. and Rodgers Theodore S. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching. Cambridge University Press.1986. Print.

Richards Jack C. and Graves Kathleen. Teachers as course developers. Cambridge University Press.1996. Print.

Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language. (2nd ed.) New York: Gramercy Books. 1996. Print.

Widdowson, H G. Teaching Language as Communication. Oxford University Press.1978. Print.

Evaluation Pattern

Testing Pattern

The students will have to take a semester end examination of 50 marks for 2 hours. They will be assessed for the other 50 marks on a submission of a report and a viva-voce based on the work done by them individually in terms of research or field study.

CIA 1 will be based on demonstration classes taking into consideration classroom aids, teaching methodology and activities.

CIA 3 will be based on blog articles written by students, classroom presentations will also be part of this cia.

Mid Semester Exam

 

Case Study for 50 marks

 

End Semester Exam

Project Work for 100 marks. The project will be practice oriented. Students will earn their marks by preparing or designing a set of course materials for teaching a target adult learner group. The course materials maybe presented in the forms of text books, workbooks, worksheets, audio/cd tapes; visual aids (charts, pictures, cds etc.)

 

EST641C - INTRODUCTION TO SHORT STORY (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:04

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

 ·     Course Description: This paper introduces the short story as a non-literary and literary form. The paper also tries to trace the evolution of short story form and critically appreciate important practitioners of short story as a literary form across the world.

Objectives:

·       To understand short story as a non-literary and literary form

·       To read short stories in an analytical manner

·       To use critical vocabulary while discussing/writing about short stories

Learning Outcome

CO1: Recognize the different elements of short story and Write about short stories using the rhetoric of fiction

CO2: Course would help students to engage with the genre in a more holistic manner (In reading stories as literary and non-literary form)

CO3: Students would acquire basic prerequisites to do analysis of short stories academically

CO4: The course will ensure the use critical vocabulary in the process of analysis of stories

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Introduction to short story
 

·         Different forms of short story – non-literary and literary; brief history of short story

·         Elements of short story

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:20
Story telling before the emergence of short story
 

·         Origin myths – Greek, Nigerian, Indian, Inca

·         Fairy tales – 5 versions of Cinderella – Chinese, German, Kannada, English, Scottish

·         Folk tales – selection from The Flowering Tree and Other Stories

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:30
Modern short stories across the world
 

·         O. Henry – The Last Leaf

·         Amy Tan – A pair of Tickets

·         Tolstoy – How Much Land does a Man Need?

·         D. H. Lawrence- The Rocking – Horse Winner

·         Jamaica Kincaid – Girl

·         William Faulkner – A Rose for Emily

·         Gabriel Garcia Marquez – A very old man with enormous wings

·         Lalithambika  Antharjanam –  Admission of Guilt

·         Pratibha Ray – Salvation 

Text Books And Reference Books:

Course pack compiled by the Dept of English for private circulation

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Cassill, R V. The Norton Anthology of Short Fiction, New York: W.W.Norton & Company, 1995

Carle Bain, Jermoe Beaty,  J Paul Hunter, The Norton Introduction to Literature,  New York: W.W.Norton & Company, 1986

Wayne C Booth, The Rhetoric of Fiction, Penguin, 1991

Ann Charters, The Story and Its Writer: An Introduction to Short Fiction, Sixth Edition, Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2003.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Testing Pattern:

 

CIAs could be

 

·         reading a short story with a focus on structural elements

 

·         retelling a story from a different cultural perspective or to a different audience – to children or a children’s story to adult audience

 

·         converting a short story into a graphic novel form

 

Mid Sem Exam – 50 marks

 

·         Two hour exam, questions based on module I and II

 

·         5 questions to be answered from 8 questions 

 

·         10x5 = 50

 

End Sem Exam – 100 marks

 

·         Three hour exam, questions based on all modules

 

·         5 questions to be answered from 8 questions ; questions will not just test the comprehension of the elements of short story but the ability of the student to analyse, compare different stories – thematically/ structurally

 

·         20x5 = 100

 

EST641D - INTRODUCTION TO FILM STUDIES (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:04

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This introductory course to Film Studies aims to:

·         Enable students to appreciate, understand and read films as audio-visual texts.

·         Help students learn the key concepts of cinema and analyze films in a better light

·         Equip students  to read and write critically about and on films

·         Initiate them to the diverse forms and types of cinemas

Learning Outcome

CO1: Closely read films as audio-visual texts to understand the language and grammar of cinema

CO2: Appreciate and analyze films using the concepts

CO3: Recognize and understand the processes of production and reception of films over the years

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Film as an Art
 

o   Nature of Art

o   Ways of Looking at Art

o   Film and the Other Arts

o   Structure of Art

o   Narrative

o   Character

o   Point of View

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:10
Film Aesthetics : Formalism and Realism
 

o   Mise-en-scene

o   Mise-en-shot

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:10
Film Authorship
 

o   Filmmakers

o   Auteurs

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Film Genres
 

o   Defining genres

o   Theory

o   Problems

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:10
Non-fiction films
 

o   Documentary

Unit-6
Teaching Hours:10
Film Reception
 

o   Review

o   Evaluation and Criticism

Text Books And Reference Books:

Films will be screened regularly to explain the concepts to students. The films screened will be the primary texts and not mere contexts to teach the concepts. Therefore due importance will be given to all the films selected for the paper.

Texts for detailed reference

How to read a Film – James Monaco

Understand Film Studies – Warren Buckland

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

How to read a Film – James Monaco

Film Art: An Introduction - David Bordwell and Kristin Thompson

Introduction to Film Studies – Jill Nelmes

Cinema Studies: Key Concepts – Susan Hayward

Short Guide to Writing about Film – Timothy Corrigan

Evaluation Pattern

Description of the CIA:

CIA I:   A class test based on audio-visual clippings from movies and film posters - 20 marks

The class test will help assess their understanding of the basic concepts and their application in the respective films.

 

·         CIA II:  Mid-semester examination – 50 marks

Question paper pattern -

Section A:  4 x 5 – 20 marks

Section B: 10 x 3 – 30 marks

 

·         CIA III: Reflective journal / scrapbook using fact finder model to read and closely analyze the films of any one filmmaker or study any movement in film history – 20 marks

This will be intimated to them at the beginning of the course so that the CIA submission will be a cumulative of their work throughout the semester. This will help them closely study the features of a movement or films of any one filmmaker off their choice.

 

Objectives of the CIA: To enable students to critically apply knowledge (theoretical) in the understanding of the films and thereby read the films as audio-visual texts to understand their signification clearly.

 

End-Semester Exam: Written examination - 100 marks

Question paper pattern -

Section A: 4 x 5 – 20

Section B: 4 x 20 – 80

 

 

 
     
 

EST641F - REVISITING INDIAN EPICS (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

General Description: This paper will re-visit the two popular Indian epics – the Mahabharata and the Ramayana. The Mahabharata and the Ramayana are not mere literary texts in India; no Indian reader reads them for the first time. As Prof Anantamurthy points out they function as languages and prompt new narratives in literary traditions.

The paper intends to read the critical discussions and creative re-presentations of the epics – The Mahabharata and the Ramayana. The essays will probe the posited meanings in the tellings of the epics. The other two modules will look at the creative interpretations, re-presentations of certain episodes, marginal characters from the epics.

As we read, discuss the re-visited tellings of the epics, we would need a specific telling to refer to. C Rajagopalachari’s telling of the Mahabharata, The Epic and The Ramayana can be considered as a reference point. Pertinent episodes can be read or discussed in class or if time permits the entire narrative can be read/discussed in class.      

 

Objective

  1. To study the two Indian epics and literary works based on them
  2. To understand the process of re-visioning a text
  3. To understand the contexts that prompts the re-visioning of an epic

Learning Outcome

CO1: To study the two Indian epics and literary works based on them

CO2: To understand the process of re-visioning a text

CO3: To understand the contexts that prompts the re-visioning of an epic

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Essays
 

U. R. Ananthamurthy. “Towards the Concept of a New Nationhood: Languages and Literatures in India” ((Talk delivered at Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar, India on 3 September, 2006)

Sheldon Pollock. “Ramayana and Political Imagination in India”, The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 52, No. 2 (May, 1993), pp. 261-297

 

V. S. Sukthankar. “The Mahabharata and its Critics”, On the Meaning of the Mahabharata.

 

Bimal Krishna Matilal. “Moral Dilemmas: Insights from Indian Epics”, Ethics and Epics: The Collected Essays of Bimal Krishna Matilal. New Delhi: OUP, 2002.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
Ramayana
 

Sara Joseph’s Stories –Tr. VasantiSankranarayanan, Retelling the Ramayana: Voices from Kerala, New Delhi: Oxford Unviersity Press, 2005

 

S. Sivasekaram, “The nature of Stone: Ahalya” Tr. Lakshmi Holmstorm Ramayana Stories in Modern South India, compiled and edited by Paula Richman, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2008

 

Buddhadeva Bose, “The Example of Ram”, Tr. Sujit Mukherjee. The Book of Yudhisthir: A Study of the Mahabharata of Vyas. Hyderabad: Sangam Books, 1986.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:20
Mahabharata
 

Bhima: Lone Warrier – M.T.Vasudevan Nair

Parva– S L Byrappa

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Library Guided Reading
 

 15 hours of guided library reading.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Paula Richman.(ed) Many Ramayanas: The Diversity of a Narrative Tradition in South Asia. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1991

Nick Allen. “Just war in the Mahabharata” in The Ethics of War: Shared Problems in Different Traditions (eds) Richard Sorabji and David Rodin, Ahsgate. 2006/7

Bimal Krishna Matilal. “Krishna: In Defence of a Devious Divinity” & “The Throne: Was Duryodhana Wrong?” in Ethics and Epics edited by JonardanGaneri. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002

Velcheru Narayana Rao. “A Ramayana of their own: Women’s Oral Tradition in Telugu” in Paula Richman edsMany Ramayanas. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991

Alf Hiltebietel. “The Epic of Pabuji” &  “Draupadi Becomes Bela, Bela Becomes Sati” in Rethinking India’s Oral and Classical Epics: Draupadi among Rajputs, Muslims, and Dalits. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1999

Marie Gillsepie. “The Mahabharata: From Sanskrit to Sacred Soap. A case study of the Reception of Two Contemporary Televisual Versions” in “Reading audiences Young People and the Media” Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 1993

Laurie J. Sears. “Mysticism and Islam in Javanese Ramayana Tales”. Mandakranta Bose. The Ramayana Revisited. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.

Julie B. Mehta. “The Ramayana in the Arts of Thailand and Cambodia”. Mandakranta Bose. The Ramayana Revisited. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.

KapilaVatsyayan. “The Ramayana Theme in the Visual Arts of South and Southeast Asia” in Mandakranta Bose. The Ramayana Revisited. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.

Malashri Lal and NamitaGokhale. In Search of Sita: Revisiting Mythology. New Delhi: Penguin Books, 2009.

 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Paula Richman.(ed) Many Ramayanas: The Diversity of a Narrative Tradition in South Asia. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1991

Nick Allen. “Just war in the Mahabharata” in The Ethics of War: Shared Problems in Different Traditions (eds) Richard Sorabji and David Rodin, Ahsgate. 2006/7

Bimal Krishna Matilal. “Krishna: In Defence of a Devious Divinity” & “The Throne: Was Duryodhana Wrong?” in Ethics and Epics edited by JonardanGaneri. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002

Velcheru Narayana Rao. “A Ramayana of their own: Women’s Oral Tradition in Telugu” in Paula Richman edsMany Ramayanas. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991

Alf Hiltebietel. “The Epic of Pabuji” &  “Draupadi Becomes Bela, Bela Becomes Sati” in Rethinking India’s Oral and Classical Epics: Draupadi among Rajputs, Muslims, and Dalits. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1999

Marie Gillsepie. “The Mahabharata: From Sanskrit to Sacred Soap. A case study of the Reception of Two Contemporary Televisual Versions” in “Reading audiences Young People and the Media” Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 1993

Laurie J. Sears. “Mysticism and Islam in Javanese Ramayana Tales”. Mandakranta Bose. The Ramayana Revisited. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.

Julie B. Mehta. “The Ramayana in the Arts of Thailand and Cambodia”. Mandakranta Bose. The Ramayana Revisited. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.

KapilaVatsyayan. “The Ramayana Theme in the Visual Arts of South and Southeast Asia” in Mandakranta Bose. The Ramayana Revisited. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.

Malashri Lal and NamitaGokhale. In Search of Sita: Revisiting Mythology. New Delhi: Penguin Books, 2009.

 

Evaluation Pattern

CIA I: A written assignment for 20 Marks

Mid Semester: Written test for 50 Marks

CIA III: Field Work and Library work based assessment

End Semester: Written test for 100 Marks

MUS631 - HISTORY OF WESTERN MUSIC - II (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course continues from MUS531, both chronologically and conceptually. It explores musical examples of deeper phenomenological themes that present themselves throughout our everyday lives. These themes are analysed in terms of both their historical and musical significance to modern society. The course introduces key figures and contributions of composers in modern styles of western music, from the twentieth century through to current research approaches.

Course Objectives

  • Introduce students to post-romantic approaches of western music.
  • Inform students of stylistic developments since the twentieth century.
  • Clarify the seminal perspecctives that underpin Post-Romantic musical styles.
  • Contextualise modern uses of music and its structure in research.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Critically listen and analyse musical examples for characteristics of musical style.

CO2: Analyse post-romantic approaches to music from across the western world.

CO3: Evaluate underpinning sociocultural and historical themes of seminal works.

CO4: Apply seminal sociocultural and historical insights to modern-day life.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Introduction, Outline and Overview.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:10
Worlds Within Us
 

Imagined Worlds: Idealism, Realism and Extremism; Emotional Worlds: Impressionism and Expressionism; Serialism and Indeterminism; Complexity and Minimalism.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:8
Worlds Around Us
 

Social Worlds: Nationalism and Globalism; Arnold Schoenberg: Egalitarianism in Music; Roots, Community and Situated Identity; Global Villages: Cultural Conservation and Cross-Cultural Collaboration.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Worlds Ahead of Us
 

From Gramophone to iPhone: Musical Transactions; Ownership and Trade: Musical Economies; Musical Neuroscience; Music and AI Development; Music and Learning.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Materials will be provided by the professor in charge on Moodle platform.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Materials will be provided by the professor in charge on Moodle platform.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Critical Listening

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Artistic Representation of Musical Ideas

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Centralised End-of-semester Examination

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS641A - MUSIC PEDAGOGY-II (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course builds on teachings, learnings and courses created in MUS541A Music Pedagogy I. It focuses on incorporating higher organisational structures which connect a course into a programme. 

Course Objectives

  • Guide students to developing a learner-centred programme featuring multiple courses.
  • Analyse components of course design which align to global perspectives.
  • Evaluate ethical aspects of pedagogical approaches in music education.
  • Connect students with active music communities.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Demonstrate multitasking using concurrent conducting skills.

CO2: Develop the course built from MUS541A by including an aligned programme outcomes scaffold.

CO3: Co-operate with each other as a team to develop a community outreach music programme by combining courses developed in MUS541A.

CO4: Deliver a module from the developed outreach programme to community members.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Introduction, Overview and Outline

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:6
Basic Conducting
 

Basic Beat Patterns; Starting and Stopping; Giving Cues.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:10
Creating Educational Programmes
 

Sustainable Development Goals; Graduate Attributes; Programme Outcomes; Outcomes Alignment

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Community Outreach Project
 

Students will work as a committee using the courses they designed in MUS541A to collaboratively design and deliver an educational programme to the community.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Essential references provided by the professor undertaking the course.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Essential references provided by the professor undertaking the course.

Evaluation Pattern

 

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Outcomes Alignment and Module Creation

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Programme Design and Contribution

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

Research Presentation

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

 

MUS641B - CHOIR CONDUCTING TECHNIQUES-II (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course leads from MUS 541B Choir Conducting Techniques - I. Conductors are the leaders of the classical music world, requiring not only a specialised set of skills for orchestrating live performances but also are expected to lead up to thousands of people at a time. This course continues the combination of psychology, philosophy, pedagogy and practice procedure to professionally prepare students to grow toward artistic leadership. Students will lead small ensembles toward a class-directed performance at the end of the semester.

Course Objectives

  • Analyse the components of choral conducting from musical and management perspectives.
  • Develop students through leadership-based models of rehearsal management.
  • Prepare students to lead choral ensembles through rehearsal and performance.
  • Continue to develop conducting methods and non-discursive communication skills.

Learning Outcome

  1. Lead a choral ensemble through a series of rehearsals to a performance.
  2. Evaluate appropriate repertoire selection based on skill levels of ensemble members.
  3. Demonstrate competency in conducting skills and non-discursive communication.
  4. Analyse concomitant aspects of choral directing techniques.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:2
Introduction
 

Introduction, Outline and Overview.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:6
Components of the Choral Sound
 

Ensemble Aspects; Types of Choirs; The Four Groups of Related Voices

 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:8
Preparation and Self-Development for Rehearsal
 

Developing and Ensemble; Conducting Psychology; Music Leadership; Self-reflection and Autonomy.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:4
Methods and Techniques of Learning Music with a Choir
 

Conveying Musical Elements; Choosing Appropriate Repertoire.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:10
Practical Work
 

Independent learning of a new piece of music with a choir or vocal ensemble.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Materials will be provided by the professor in charge on the online platform.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Pavel Chesnokov (2010). The Choir and How to Direct It. Musica Russica: Moscow.

Evaluation Pattern

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighting Adjustment

CIA I & III

Rehearsal Plan and Conducting Tasks

20 Marks (each)

 

CIA II

Rehearsal and Direction of Small Ensemble

50 Marks

 

 

Total CIA

90 Marks

Reduced: 45 Marks

 

Attendance

 

5 Marks

ESE

End-of-semester Examination: Conduct Rehearsed Piece

100 Marks

Reduced: 50 Marks

 

Total Mark

 

100 Marks

MUS651A - MAJOR IN PIANO - VI (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Major is a student's practical music specialization. It is the most important course among all music courses as it is the medium through which musical communication occurs. This course offers small-group and one-on-one interaction between instructor and learner. These interactions help in efficiently determining the theoretical and practical level of each student. The instructor will develop individual course plans to suit each student’s needs and requirements. The Major is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. The course concentrates on developing an individual’s piano techniques.  

Learning Outcome

CO 1: Combine aspects of interpretation, sociocultural context and technical ability to generate emotional expression within performance.

CO 2: Demonstrate appropriate posture and playing techniques for fluent performance.

CO 3: Translate musical notation, language and nomenclature of each piece and interpret relevant musical information from the score.

CO 4: Design appropriate practice regime to suit individual performance requirements.

CO 5: Develop Stage presence, presentation, and communication skills.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Individual Development
 

Students will be directed individually with respect to the following guidelines:

  • Implement theoretical understandings from other courses into practice.
  • Perform selected repertoire with appropriate technical ability and musical expression.
  • Understand personal strengths and weaknesses and develop practice habits accordingly.
Text Books And Reference Books:

Willl be provided by the Faculty in-charge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

NA

Evaluation Pattern

Formative assessment outline:

•      There will a Performance and Technical Exam scheduled either before or after the week of your theory MSE’s. Dates will be informed by the faculty in-charge in advance. 

•      The syllabus and the evaluation pattern for the technical exam remains the same as summative exam.

•      For the performance exam you need to perform at least one of the two pieces assigned. Evaluation rubrics and pattern remains the same as the Summative exam. 

•      Formative assessment is mandatory. You are not allowed to answer the summative exam if you fail to appear for the formative assessment.

•      If any changes on the above, the decision taken by the faculty in-charge in this regard will be final. 

 

Summative assessment outline:

Assessment Description:

The Assessment pattern will consist of two or more contrasting western classical piano pieces to be performed at the end of each semester. Repertoire selected by the instructor is tailored to each student's personal abilities.  

 

Task

Marks Allocated

Weighing adjustment

CIA 

No CIA I, II & III

-

 

ESE

End of semester Practical Examination: Solo Piano performance

100 marks

-

 

Practice Journal

10 marks

-

 

Total ESE

110 Marks

Reduced: 100marks

 

Total Marks

100 Marks

 

 To appear for the summative assessment:

1.     Min class attendance percentage for Major in Piano VI should be 85%

2.     The student should have appeared for the formative assessment.

 If any changes in the above, the decision made by the piano coordinator will be final.

MUS651B - COLLABORATIVE PIANO VI (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Collaborative piano is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. The course is divided into technical, accompaniment and ensemble Units. The former unit concentrates on developing fundamental piano techniques through primary technical exercises, the latter focusing on general mentalities and nonverbal communication skills that contribute to successful group performances in differing piano ensemble settings (4-hands, 6-hands, multiple pianos, any other ensemble setting.) and/or vocal accompaniments.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Combine aspects of interpretation, sociocultural context and technical ability to generate emotional expression within the ensemble performance.

CO2: Develop appropriate ensemble practice techniques to solve various musical and technical problems within performance of repertoire.

CO3: Clearly communicate with ensemble members (musically and linguistically) to manage musical goals thus contributing to the ensemble performance.

CO4: Develop solid piano techniques through primary exercises which directly contributes to technical development of a students? piano repertoire.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:7
Ensemble
 

This unit focusses on general mentalities and nonverbal communication skills that contribute to successful group performances in differing piano ensemble settings (4-hands, 6-hands, multiple pianos, choir etc.) 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:7
Accompaniment
 

Focuses primarily on how to work with in a group (especially accompanying a vocalist). Developing skills like  coordination, fluency, sight-reading, etc while accompanying. 

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:1
Technical
 

This unit concentrates on developing fundamental piano techniques through primary technical exercises such as scales, arpeggios, broken chords, to name a few. 

Text Books And Reference Books:

Will be provided by the faculty in-charge

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

NA

Evaluation Pattern

Formative assessment outline:

•      There will a Ensemble Performance and Technical Exam scheduled either before or after the week of your theory MSE’s. Dates will be informed by the faculty in-charge in advance. 

•      The syllabus and the evaluation pattern for the technical exam remains the same as summative exam.

•      Formative assessment is mandatory. You are not allowed to answer the summative exam if you fail to appear for the formative assessment. 

•      If any changes on the above, the decision taken by the faculty in-charge in this regard will be final. 

 

Summative Assessment Description:

The testing pattern will consist of:

1. Technical exercises to be performed at the end of each semester as per the technical exam syllabus.

2. Contribute to collaborative event (piano ensemble, piano accompaniment, choir) and any event that involves team work as directed by the faculty in-charge.

Please note:

Min class attendance percentage for Collaborative Piano should be 85% to appear for the Final ESE. Else the student will not be able allowed to answer the practical exam and will be marked Fail. The student shoudl also have appeared for the formative exam. 

If any changes on the above, the decision of the piano coordinator is final. 

 

Exam

Task

Marks Allotted

Weighting adjustment

CIA

NO CIA I, II & III

-

-

ESE

End Semester practical exam:

-

-

 

Ensemble 

100

40

 

Accompaniment 

50

30

 

Technical 

50

30

 

Total ESE marks

200

100

 

Min. overall pass marks

-

40

MUS652A - MAJOR IN VOICE VI (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

A Major is a student's practical music specialization. It is the most important course among all music courses as it is the medium through which musical communication occurs. This course offers small-group interactions between instructors and learners. These interactions help in efficiently determining the theoretical and practical level of each student's vocal abilities. The instructor will determine and develop groups to suit each student’s needs and requirements. The Major is a six-part course that will be completed throughout the three years of study in the music program. 

Learning Outcome

By the end of the program students will be able to:

  • Implement theoretical understandings from other courses into practice.
  • Perform selected repertoire with appropriate technical ability and musical expression. 
  • Evaluate personal strengths and weaknesses and develop practice habits accordingly.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:15
Personal Development
 

The individual student will be taught vocal technique, customised to individual strengths and weaknesses

  • Implement theoretical understandings from other courses into practice.
  • Perform selected repertoire with appropriate technical ability and musical expression.
  • Understand personal strengths and weaknesses and develop practice habits accordingly.
Text Books And Reference Books:

Not required

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Not required

Evaluation Pattern

The testing pattern will consist of music to be performed at the end of each semester. 

The repertoire selected by the instructor is tailored to each student's personal abilities.

No CIA I, II & III 

End semester examination – practical exam; 100 marks  

MUS652B - COLLABORATIVE VOICE VI (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:15
No of Lecture Hours/Week:1
Max Marks:100
Credits:1

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course offers small to large group interaction between the instructor and the students. These interactions help students by giving them the opportunity to sing in various combinations of choral groups to a professional standard. The course joins with a Major in Voice (solo) and is part of holistic performance education.

Learning Outcome

  • Demonstrate teamwork skills when working in different vocal group settings
  • Prepare repertoire for group performances across departments.
  • Evaluate appropriate solutions for overcoming any group-based issue.
  • Create relevant administrative resources to guide team members toward common goals.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:5
Technical Work
 

Vocalise, Scales, Arpeggios, Articulations, Exercises

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:5
Self-Accompaniment
 

Playing of Vocal Exercises on Piano

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:5
Ensemble Project
 

Participation, Dependability, Punctuality, Communication, Musicality

Text Books And Reference Books:

Not required

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Not required

Evaluation Pattern

No CIA I, II or III

End semester examination – practical exam; 100 marks

PSY632 - THERAPEUTIC INTERVENTIONS-II (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course will give students an insight into topics that provide a foundation for the use of expressive arts in therapeutic interventions. Topics covered include an introduction to expressive arts, art, dance, music and play therapy. 

Learning Outcome

CO1: Understand the meaning and process of expressive arts therapy, and its uses

CO2: Critically analyze the different forms of expressive arts therapies

CO3: Reflect on and apply expressive arts therapy to different settings and with different client populations

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction to Expressive Arts
 

History of Expressive Arts, Expressive Arts in a Therapeutic context, Crafting Therapeutic Experiences in Expressive Arts

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Art Therapy
 

Introduction to Art therapy, Role of art material in art therapy, Art based assessment, Therapeutic Applications

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Dance and Movement Therapy
 

Introduction to Dance and Movement Therapy, Therapeutic Applications

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Music Therapy
 

History, Introduction to Music Therapy, Therapeutic Applications

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Play Therapy
 

Introduction to Play Therapy, Therapeutic Applications

Text Books And Reference Books:

Malchiodi, C. A. (2005). Expressive therapies. Guilford Press.
Atkins, S. & Williams, L. (2007). Sourcebook in expressive arts therapy. Boone, NC: Parkway.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Appalachian Expressive Arts Collective. (2003). Expressive arts therapy: Creative process in art and life. Boone.
Knill, P. & Levine, E. G., & Levine, S. K. (2005). Principles and practice of expressive arts therapy: Towards a therapeutic aesthetics. Jessica Kingsley Publishers.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA CIA (Continuous Internal Assessment)-Total Marks- 50 

CIA-1: Activity-based Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
CIA-2: Mid sem Exam-Case/Scenario-based Question- 50 Marks
CIA-3: Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
Attendance- 5 Marks 

ESE PatternESE (End Semester Examination) Total Marks- 100 , 03 HOURS

Question paper pattern

Section A- (Very Short Answers) 02 marks x10Qs =20 Marks
Section B- (Short Answers) 05 marks x 4 Qs= 20 Marks 
Section B- (Essay Type) 15 marks x 3Qs = 45 Marks
Section C-(Compulsory: Case Study) 15 marks x 1Q =15 Marks

PSY641A - POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

This course introduces undergraduate students a strength-based approach in understanding human behaviour. Each unit is designed with personal mini-experiments which have personal implications. The course brings in an understanding about the basic principles of Positive Psychology. The significance of this course lies in orienting the students in applying these principles for self-regulation and personal goal setting. 

Learning Outcome

CO1: Explain basic assumptions, principles and concepts of positive psychology

CO2: Critically evaluate positive psychology theory and research

CO3: Apply positive psychology principles in a range of environments to increase individual and collective wellbeing

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction
 

Positive psychology: Definition; goals and assumptions; Relationship with health psychology, developmental psychology, clinical psychology Activities: Personal mini-experiments; Collection of life stories from magazines, websites, films etc and discussion in the class

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Positive emotions, Well-being and Happiness
 

 Positive emotions: Broaden and build theory; Cultivating positive emotions; Happiness- hedonic and Eudaimonic; Well- being: negative v/s positive functions; Subjective well –being: Emotional, social and psychological well-being; Model of complete mental life Test: The positive and negative affect schedule (PANAS-X); The satisfaction with life scale (Diener et al, 1985); Practice ‘Be happy’ attitude

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Self control, Regulation and Personal goal setting
 

The value of self-control; Personal goals and self-regulation; Personal goal and well-being; goals that create self-regulation; everyday explanations for self-control failure problems Activity: SWOT analysis

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Positive Cognitive States and Processes
 

Resilience: Developmental and clinical perspectives; Sources of resilience in children; Sources of resilience in adulthood and later life; Optimism- How optimism works; variation of optimism and pessimism; Spirituality: the search for meaning(Frankl); Spirituality and well-being; Forgiveness and gratitude Test: Mental well-being assessment scale; Test: Signature strength

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Applications of Positive Psychology
 

Positive schooling: Components; Positive coping strategies; Gainful employment Mental health: Moving toward balanced conceptualization; Lack of a developmental perspective. Activity: An action plan for coping Test: Brief COPE assessment scale

Text Books And Reference Books:

Baumgardner, S.R & Crothers, M.K.(2014). Positive Psychology. U.P: Dorling Kindersley Pvt Ltd.

Carr, A. (2004). Positive psychology, The science of happiness and human strengths.New York: Routledge.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Singh, A.(2013).Behavioral science: Achieving behavioral excellence for success. New Delhi: Wiley India Pvt ltd.
Snyder, C.R. & Lopez, S.J. (2007). Handbook of positive psychology. (eds.). New York: Oxford University Press.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA CIA (Continuous Internal Assessment)-Total Marks- 50 

CIA-1: Activity-based Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
CIA-2: Mid sem Exam-Case/Scenario-based Question- 50 Marks
CIA-3: Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
Attendance- 5 Marks 

ESE PatternESE (End Semester Examination) Total Marks- 100, 03 HOURS

Question paper pattern

Section A- (Very Short Answers) 02 marks x10Qs =20 Marks
Section B- (Short Answers) 05 marks x 4 Qs= 20 Marks 
Section B- (Essay Type) 15 marks x 3Qs = 45 Marks
Section C-(Compulsory: Case Study) 15 marks x 1Q =15 Marks

 

 

PSY641B - MEDIA PSYCHOLOGY (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Course description: Media psychology is the application of psychological theory and research to the analysis of media and technology use, development and impact. The idea is that it will spark an interest where the student might want to continue future exploration in both the fields, Media and Psychology. The main purpose of this course is to provide students with an overview of the ways in which the media—primarily electronic media-affect the viewer psychologically. A second purpose is to examine how the science of psychology is presented in the media. An examination will be made of several psychological theories that help to explain media effects. A particular emphasis will be placed upon the following media psychology-related topics: Aggression, advertising, news, portrayals of minorities, emotion, and health behaviours. 

Learning Outcome

CO1: Identify the benefits of applying media psychology

CO2: Evaluate media, media contents, literacy and their psychological implications

CO3: Explain media applications in educational, entertainment, health services, commercial or public policy environments

CO4: Examine the implications of media sources, usage and processes on the cognitive, emotional, motivational, behavioural and social realms

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction to Media Psychology
 

What is Media Psychology; Implications; Understanding the history and emergence of Media Psychology; TV as an emotional medium. Media issues, misrepresentation, roles of media psychologists. Methods for studying media and psychology; Theory, Research and Application Theories of Media Psychology: Media character and enjoyment: Affective Disposition Theory (ADT), Simulation Disposition Theory (ST), Psychological Theory of Play

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Psychological Process and Media
 

Media and Emotion: Three-factor Theory of Emotion and Empathy, Excitation Transfer Theory; Motivation: Approach and avoidance motivation and achievement goals. Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and wellbeing; Attention.  Attention and Television viewing, Media attention, media exposure, and media effects, Measuring attention to mediated messages; Cognitive processing of mediated message- Media effects: Advances in theory and research, Media, Mind and Brain, Media Withdrawal

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Developmental Psychological Issues with Respect to Media
 

Young children and media – Socialization through media. Media use and influence during adolescence. Media violence, heroes, addiction, Aggression, Violence, Video Games, Cyber-Bullying & Fear: media and persuasion/body image, eating disorders and the media/media and advertising, Classical Conditioning and Advertising; Bandura’s Social Cognitive theory. Modelling and Operant Conditioning

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Social Psychology of the Media
 

 Attitude Formation – Theories, cognitive dissonance, role of media in attitude formation  Persuasion  Prejudice; Gender representation in media, Representation of minority groups  Media representation of disability  Media representation of mental health  Audience participation and reality T.V. media and culture, Media and cultural contexts.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Trends in Media Psychology
 

Media and politics, media and the audience, celebrity and parasocial relationships; Audience participation media; Theory of Planned Behavior Action and Social norms-lifestyle concerns, global movements, social media, telehealth, sports, environment and climate change; Psychology of film analysis

Text Books And Reference Books:

Rutledge, P. B. (2013). Arguing for Media Psychology as a Distinct Field. In K. Dill (Ed.), Oxford Handbook of Media Psychology, Oxford University Press. 

Giles, D, (2010). Psychology of the Media. Palgrave Macmillan. 

Brewer, G, (2011). Media Psychology. Palgrave Macmillan.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Chaffee, S. H., & Berger, C. R. (1987). What do communication scientists do? In C. R. Berger & S. H. Chaffee (Eds.), Handbook of communication science. Sage. 

Bandura, A. (2001). Social Cognitive Theory of Mass Communication. Media Psychology, 3(3), 265-299

Gee, J. P. (2007). What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Learning and Literacy (Revised & Updated) (2nd ed.). Palgrave Macmillan.

Giles, D. C. (2010). Psychology of the Media. Palgrave Macmillan.

Baym, Nancy  K. (2010). Personal Connections in the Digital Age.  Digital Media and Society Series. Polity.

 Weinschenk, S. M. (2009). Neuro Web Design: What Makes Them Click?. New Riders

Evaluation Pattern

CIA CIA (Continuous Internal Assessment)-Total Marks- 50 

CIA-1: Activity-based Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
CIA-2: Mid sem Exam-Case/Scenario-based Question- 50 Marks
CIA-3: Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
Attendance- 5 Marks 

ESE PatternESE (End Semester Examination) Total Marks- 100, 03 HOURS

Question paper pattern

Section A- (Very Short Answers) 02 marks x10Qs =20 Marks
Section B- (Short Answers) 05 marks x 4 Qs= 20 Marks 
Section B- (Essay Type) 15 marks x 3Qs = 45 Marks
Section C-(Compulsory: Case Study) 15 marks x 1Q =15 Marks

PSY641C - ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND HUMAN-MACHINE INTERFACE (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Course description: This course has been conceptualized to help the learner understand the complex dynamics that underlie a human-machine interface, critically evaluate the design components and design an effective interface. This course helps introduce students to ways of thinking about how Artificial Intelligence will and has impacted humans, and how we can design interactive intelligent systems that are usable and beneficial to humans, and respect human values. 

Learning Outcome

CO1: Identify problems where artificial intelligence techniques are applicable

CO2: Apply selected basic AI techniques; judge applicability of more advanced techniques.

CO3: Critically evaluate existing interface designs and to improve them

CO4: Design user-centric interfaces keeping in mind cultural, environmental, and individual factors.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:10
Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Human Machine Interface (HMI)
 

 History and Classic studies, Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Human Machine Interface (HMI), Types of Human Machine Interfaces; Artificial intelligence and computational approaches, Machine reasoning: Logical reasoning and decision making by machines., 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:15
Human factors fundamentals
 

Sensation, Perception, Apperception
Information Processing
Working memory and situational awareness
Decision-making models

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:15
Design Guidelines and Design Thinking
 

Schneiderman’s eight golden rules of design
Norman’s model of interaction 
Nielsen’s ten heuristics 
Human Errors in HMI

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:10
Applications of HMI
 

Design for individual differences: Individuals with functional limitations, Design for Ageing, Design for children, connect psychological theories to underlying standards and heuristics in interface design, explain how knowledge of human characteristics affects the design of technical systems, ethical issues 

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:10
Applications of HMI
 

Applications of HMI: Health, Aviation, Artificial Intelligence; professionals in the field, challenges, Current trends and development

Text Books And Reference Books:

Dix, A., Dix, A. J., Finlay, J., Abowd, G. D., & Beale, R. (2003). Human-computer interaction. Pearson Education.

Norman, D. A. (1988). The psychology of everyday things. Basic books.

Guastello, S. J. (2014). Human factors engineering and ergonomics. Florida: Taylor & Francis Group.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Amershi, S., Weld, D., Vorvoreanu, M., Fourney, A., Nushi, B., Collisson, P., Suh, J., Iqbal, S. T., Bennett, P., Inkpen, K., Teevan, J., Kikin-Gil, R., and Horvitz, E. (2019) Guidelines for Human-AI Interaction. 

Lazar, J., Feng, J. H., & Hochheiser, H. (2017). Research methods in human-computer interaction. Morgan Kaufmann.

Tenner, E. (2015). The Design of Everyday Things by Donald Norman. Technology and Culture, 56(3), 785-787.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA CIA (Continuous Internal Assessment)-Total Marks- 50 

CIA-1: Activity-based Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
CIA-2: Mid sem Exam-Case/Scenario-based Question- 50 Marks
CIA-3: Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
Attendance- 5 Marks 

ESE PatternESE (End Semester Examination) Total Marks- 100, 03 HOURS

Question paper pattern

Section A- (Very Short Answers) 02 marks x10Qs =20 Marks
Section B- (Short Answers) 05 marks x 4 Qs= 20 Marks 
Section B- (Essay Type) 15 marks x 3Qs = 45 Marks
Section C-(Compulsory: Case Study) 15 marks x 1Q =15 Marks

PSY641D - CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Course description: This course has been conceptualized in order to enable students to develop an appreciation for the influence consumer behaviour has on various marketing efforts.  Students apply psychological and social concepts to consumer decision making. Topics include the importance of consumer behaviour and research; internal influences such as motivation, personality, self-concept, learning, information processing, and attitude formation and change; external influences such as social class, reference groups and family, and consumer decision making.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Understand the concepts related to consumer behaviour and the factors that influence market segmentation

CO2: Understand the scope and current trends in consumer psychology

CO3: Evaluate the consumer decision-making process and choices using psychological theories and concepts

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction to Consumer Behaviour
 

Definition, Significance, Applying consumer behaviour knowledge, Consumer decision-making model

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Understanding consumers and market segments
 

Market segmentation, bases of market segmentation, product positioning and repositioning

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Determinants of consumer behaviour
 

Personality and self-concept, Motivation, Information processing, Learning in understanding consumer behaviour

 Influence of groups and social media, online consumer behaviour

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Attitudes and persuasive communication
 

ABC model of attitude, the formation of attitude, the role of persuasion in changing consumer attitudes

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Consumer Decision processes
 

Types of consumer decisions, problem recognition, information search process, information- evaluation process, purchasing processes- choosing a store, in-store purchasing behaviour, nonstore purchasing process, purchasing patterns, post-purchase behaviour

Text Books And Reference Books:

Loudon, D. L., & Della, B. A. J. (2010). Consumer behavior: Concepts and applications. McGraw-Hill.

Solomon, M.R. (2018). Consumer Behavior: Buying, Having and, Being. Pearson Education Limited.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Schiffman, L. G., Kanuk, L. L., S, R. K., & Wisenblit, J. (2010). Consumer behaviour. Pearson publications

Evaluation Pattern

CIA CIA (Continuous Internal Assessment)-Total Marks- 50 

CIA-1: Activity-based Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
CIA-2: Mid sem Exam-Case/Scenario-based Question- 50 Marks
CIA-3: Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
Attendance- 5 Marks 

ESE PatternESE (End Semester Examination) Total Marks- 100, 03 HOURS

Question paper pattern

Section A- (Very Short Answers) 02 marks x10Qs =20 Marks
Section B- (Short Answers) 05 marks x 4 Qs= 20 Marks 
Section B- (Essay Type) 15 marks x 3Qs = 45 Marks
Section C-(Compulsory: Case Study) 15 marks x 1Q =15 Marks

PSY641E - INTRODUCTION TO FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

The course is intended to develop a basic understanding among the students about criminal behaviour and to the field of Forensic Psychology.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Outline the basics of forensic psychology, crime and criminal behaviour through case analysis

CO2: Identify the role of a forensic psychologist in crime scene analysis, offender profiling, and eye witness testimony

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction to Forensic Psychology
 

Forensic Sciences; Forensic Psychology: Past and Present; Psychology & Law; Psychologist as an Expert Witness.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Understanding Crime & Criminal Behaviour
 

 Psychology of Crime; Determinants of Criminal Behavior: Biological, Psychological, Neuropsychological and Social.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Forensic Psychology in Crime Investigation
 

 Psychological Examination of Crime Scene; Offender Profiling; Forensic Interviewing; Eye-Witness Testimony; Examination of High-risk offenders.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Forensic Psychology as an Aid to Investigation
 

 Psychological Profiling; Detection of Deception: Polygraph Examination, fMRI, Lie Detection, Brain Electrical Oscillation Signature Profiling, Narcoanalysis, Forensic Hypnosis, Voice-stress Analysis;  Theories, Techniques, Instrumentation, Methodology, Procedure & Critical Evaluation.

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Forensic Psychology as a Profession
 

In Criminal Proceedings: Competency to stand trial, Criminal Responsibility, Diminished Capacity, Risk Assessment, Eye-Witness Testimony.

 In Civil Proceedings: Domestic Law & Rights of Adults, Children;  Civil Competency, Personal Injury Evaluations, Work-related Compensation, Evaluation of Disabilities, Trauma Due to Abuse. Forensic Psychology as a profession; For Social & Individual Protection; Professional Issues: Licensing, Advocacy, liaisoning and Ethical Considerations.

Text Books And Reference Books:

Fulero, S,& Wrightsman, L, (2014). Forensic Psychology. Wadsworth Publishers.

Goldstein A.M (2012) Forensic Psychology: Emerging Topics and Expanding Roles. John Wiley

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Bartol, C., &Bartol, A. (2008). Introduction to Forensic Psychology: Research and Application (Second ed.). SAGE.

Haward, L. R. (1981). Forensic psychology (pp. 56-57). Batsford Academic and Educational.

Weiner, I. B., & Hess, A. K. (Eds.). (2006). The handbook of forensic psychology. John Wiley & Sons.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA CIA (Continuous Internal Assessment)-Total Marks- 50 

CIA-1: Activity-based Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
CIA-2: Mid sem Exam-Case/Scenario-based Question- 50 Marks
CIA-3: Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
Attendance- 5 Marks 

ESE PatternESE (End Semester Examination) Total Marks- 100, 03 HOURS

Question paper pattern

Section A- (Very Short Answers) 02 marks x10Qs =20 Marks
Section B- (Short Answers) 05 marks x 4 Qs= 20 Marks 
Section B- (Essay Type) 15 marks x 3Qs = 45 Marks
Section C-(Compulsory: Case Study) 15 marks x 1Q =15 Marks

PSY641F - HEALTH AND WELLBEING (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Health is defined as an optimal state of physical, emotional, mental, social and spiritual wellbeing.  The same explanation applies to wellbeing. This course is designed for college students to understand the need for maintaining a healthy lifestyle.  We will explore personal health, health-related attitudes and beliefs, individual health behaviours and impact of drugs, alcohol, tobacco; diet, nutrition; infectious diseases, cancer, cardiovascular disease, personal care; exercise, consumer health; and several other topics related to maintaining a healthy lifestyle.  The course focuses on current research and the latest trends in health and wellbeing.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Understand the basic components and models of health and wellbeing

CO2: Explain the role of biological, physical, social, and psychological factors and their interconnectedness on health and wellbeing

CO3: Evaluate policies and interventions to enhance health and wellbeing

CO4: Apply the knowledge to manage and enhance personal health and well-being, and in a wide range of real life issues

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction to Health and Wellbeing
 

Introduction - the concept of health, wellbeing and wellness,illness- wellness continuum,Historical development - of health and wellness and wellbeing, Models and theories of health and wellbeing – Bio medical model,Bio-psycho-social model of health, the theory of planned behavior, health belief model -  Protection motivation theory, Determinants and Components of wellness (WHO) and wellbeing and the role of psychology in health

Assessment: General wellbeing scale: administration and interpretation.

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Physical Health
 

Stress its impact on health and wellbeing, mechanisms to deal with stress; theories on stress – Fight/flight, GAS, Tend and Befriend, Theory of appraisal, psychoneuro immunology, body image issues and sexual health; Definition, types of pain, physiology of pain psychological factors affecting pain; Lifestyles-sleep, food habits, adverse physical environment, health-enhancing behaviors-dieting, exercise, yoga – management of stress and pain

Assessment: Physical health Questionnaire

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Mental and Social health
 

Introduction to Mental and social health – Status of mental health Services,  the role of  mental health professionals, Barries acessing mental health services, stigma, discrimination and labelling, Mental health: Moving toward balanced conceptualization (from languishing to flourishing); Trauma, suicide and mental health; Risks factors to mental health- adverse childhood experiences, disability, ageing, workplace, family history of mental illness, psychos social issues; Pathways to mental health care (including cultural and traditional beliefs and practices). Interpersonal relationships and its impact on health and wellbeing, need for cultivating positive emotions and attending to healthy relationships and self-care

Assessment: WHO Mental health Inventory

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Health compromising behaviors & Illness
 

Health compromising behaviors: Smoking, Alcoholism and substance abuse, Illness – acute and chronic, CHD and Strokes, Cancer, HIV – AIDS, Diabetes, psychosocial interventions for illness and health compromising behaviors

Assessment: Adolescent risk behavior assessments 

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Policies, programs and current trends
 

Evaluating existing policies and programs; mental health act, PWD act, Community mental health programmes - National mental health Program (NMHP), District Mental Health Program (DMHP);  Developing health and wellness interventions, awareness programs, Promoting Environmental Health, Making Smart Health Care Choices, public health measures, need for Awareness and Lifestyle Impact programs; current trends in health and wellbeing- yoga, mindfulness-based interventions and others. 

Text Books And Reference Books:

Anspaugh, D.J., Hamrick, M.H., & Rosato, F.D. (2009).  Wellness: Concepts and Applications, 7th ed., McGraw-Hill.

Donatelle, R. J., & Davis, L. G. (2011). Health: the basics. Benjamin Cummings.

Edlin, G., & Golanty, E. (2007). Health and wellness (9th ed.). Jones & Bartlett Publishers. 

Hoeger, W.K.& Hoeger, S.A. (2015). Lifetime Physical Fitness and Wellness. (13th Ed.) Cengage Learning.

 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Insel, P.M., & Roth, W.T. (2002). Core concepts in health (9th ed.). McGraw- Hill.

Powers, S.K., & Dodd, S.L. (2003). Total fitness and wellness (3rd ed.).Benjamin Cummings.

Siegel, B. S. (1998). Prescriptions for living. Harper Collins.

Taylor, S.E. (2006). Health Psychology. Tata Mc Graw-Hill

Sarafino, E.P. & Smith, T.W. (2012). Health Psychology: Biopsychosocial interventions. Wiley

Evaluation Pattern

CIA CIA (Continuous Internal Assessment)-Total Marks- 50 

CIA-1: Activity-based Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
CIA-2: Mid sem Exam-Case/Scenario-based Question- 50 Marks
CIA-3: Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
Attendance- 5 Marks 

ESE PatternESE (End Semester Examination) Total Marks- 100 , 03 HOURS

Question paper pattern

Section A- (Very Short Answers) 02 marks x10Qs =20 Marks
Section B- (Short Answers) 05 marks x 4 Qs= 20 Marks 
Section B- (Essay Type) 15 marks x 3Qs = 45 Marks
Section C-(Compulsory: Case Study) 15 marks x 1Q =15 Marks

PSY641G - COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:60
No of Lecture Hours/Week:4
Max Marks:100
Credits:4

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

The course offers an introduction to the concepts and techniques of community psychology practice. The areas covered in this paper span across identifying community needs using community participation techniques and eliciting community participation and cooperation through the application of community-focused models and theories. The paper would lead the learner through the widening scope of community psychology in an Indian context. 

Learning Outcome

By the end of the course the learner will be able:

  1. Understand the relevance and practice of community psychology in different field settings.
  2. Demonstrate knowledge and skills related to community needs identification and working through the felt needs of the community.
  3. Design community based prevention or promotion strategies.

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Introduction
 

Origins of Community Psychology; Understanding Community dynamics; Roles of psychologists working with communities; Multicultural issues in community; Ethical alignments while working in a community; Scope of Community Psychology.

 

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:12
Principles and Practices
 

Principles of community level practices; Needs assessment and Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA) techniques; Community Resource Mapping; Reinforcement and Modelling strategies while working in Communities; Challenges in Community Practice and working with challenges.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:12
Theories and Models
 

Ecological Perspective; Empowerment Theory; Social Development Model; Theory of Social Change; Social Action Model; Sense of Community Theory; Social Climate Theory; Community Engagement Model.

Unit-4
Teaching Hours:12
Application
 

Application of psychosocial practices in Schools; NGOs; Rural/Tribal areas; Working with vulnerable groups; Appreciating indigenous approaches in mental health promotion; Use of Technology in Community Psychology

Unit-5
Teaching Hours:12
Recent trends and status in India
 

Community Mental Health Model of NIMHANS; Community based health intervention models; Total Health Programme in Schools; KAVAL - Work with Children in Conflict with Law; Gatekeeper Training; TTK’s model for working with persons with substance use; Parenting Skill Training

Text Books And Reference Books:

Rappaport, J., & Seidman, E. (Eds.). (2000). Handbook of community psychology. Springer Science & Business Media.

Spielberger, C. D. (Ed.). (2013). Current Topics in Clinical and Community Psychology: Volume 1 (Vol. 1). Academic Press.

Moritsugu, J., Vera, E., Wong, F. Y., & Duffy, K. G. (2019). Community psychology. Routledge.

 

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

Reich, S., Riemer, M., Prilleltensky, I., & Montero, M. (2007). International community psychology. New York: Springer Science+ Business Media, LLC.

Nelson, G., & Prilleltensky, I. (Eds.). (2010). Community psychology: In pursuit of liberation and well-being. Macmillan International Higher Education.

Orford, J. (2008). Community psychology: Challenges, controversies and emerging consensus. John Wiley & Sons.

Viola, J. J., & Glantsman, O. (Eds.). (2017). Diverse careers in community psychology. Oxford University Press.

Evaluation Pattern

CIA CIA (Continuous Internal Assessment)-Total Marks- 50

CIA-1: Activity-based Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
CIA-2: Mid sem Exam-Case/Scenario-based Question- 50 Marks
CIA-3: Individual Assignment- 20 Marks 
Attendance- 5 Marks 

ESE PatternESE (End Semester Examination) Total Marks- 100 , 03 HOURS

Question paper pattern

Section A- (Very Short Answers) 02 marks x10Qs =20 Marks
Section B- (Short Answers) 05 marks x 4 Qs= 20 Marks 
Section B- (Essay Type) 15 marks x 3Qs = 45 Marks
Section C-(Compulsory: Case Study) 15 marks x 1Q =15 Marks

PSY651 - PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH METHODS AND ASSESSMENT-II (2021 Batch)

Total Teaching Hours for Semester:30
No of Lecture Hours/Week:2
Max Marks:100
Credits:2

Course Objectives/Course Description

 

Course description: This course has been conceptualized in order to capstone experience for psychology undergraduates, in which students identify a research topic, conduct comprehensive literature reviews, and then develop a substantial written small empirical research project. The paper aims to help students collaborate and complete psychological research projects with their peers. The program is designed to enable students to complete a group research project under the supervision of a faculty. They are expected to conduct the research and submit the final research report. The Research report will be in the form of a professional journal article manuscript, though it is not required to submit it to a journal. Students are expected to do a presentation of the research findings as a poster or oral presentation at the undergraduate research conference.

Learning Outcome

CO1: Collect, Organise, analyze, and interpret data as per ethical guidelines

CO2: Write a research project manuscript, appropriate for submission to a professional journal in psychology or a related discipline

CO3: Present their research findings as scientific poster format in a coherent and concise manner.

CO4: Administer psychological scales to a subject, make interpretations and draw conclusions based on the norms given in the manual

Unit-1
Teaching Hours:12
Data Analysis and Interpretation
 

Ethical issues in data collection and recording, organization of data collection process, dissemination, the concept of data audit Data organization and audit. Hypothesis testing/evaluating the research questions, data analysis and reporting results, discussing the findings with research evidence

Unit-2
Teaching Hours:10
Report Writing and Dissemination of Research findings
 

APA styles of writing the project report, elements of a research project, referencing, plagiarism, doing peer review and feedback. Abstract writing, Publication in journal/ newspapers, selecting a journal, oral presentation and poster presentation; participating in research forums/seminars.

Unit-3
Teaching Hours:8
Psychological Assessments
 

Develop a profile for an individual based on a minimum of three to a maximum of five psychological assessments and a brief interview that would help the individual gain positive insights about themselves. The profile would be on the career or healthy living and assessments used may include Career assessments, DBDA, Interest inventory, learning styles, academic adjustment, quality of life, happiness index, PANAS, character strengths or motivation, personal value inventory/ locus of control; students would learn elements of a client profile report, writing a report without biases and being professional in writing and communicating reports

Text Books And Reference Books:

Cohen, R. J., & Swerdlik, M. E. (2013). Psychological testing and assessment: an introduction to tests and measurement. Eighth edition. McGraw-Hill Education.

Coolican, H. (2014). Research Methods and Statistics in Psychology, Sixth Edition. Taylor and Francis.

Essential Reading / Recommended Reading

American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (7th Ed.).https://doi.org/10.1037/0000165-000

https://christuniversity.in/uploads/userfiles/CRCE.pdf. CHRIST (Deemed to be University) Institutional Ethics Documentation

Evaluation Pattern

Continuous Internal Evaluations (CIAs) – 100 Marks 

CIA 1: Individual Assignment (20 marks) + Class participation & Supervisor Feedback (05 marks) - Total 25 Marks 
CIA 2: Individual Assignment (20 marks) + Class participation & Supervisor Feedback (05 marks) - Total 25 Marks 
CIA 3: Department level Exam/Viva- 50 marks