Planning to introduce certificate courses for non-DU students: VC Yogesh Singh
Delhi University will offer certificate courses to housewives, retirees, working professionals who could take two courses at a time and attain credits.
Download list of Colleges/ Universities Accpeting CUET/CUCET Score with Cut-OFFs
Download NowPress Trust of India | July 18, 2022 | 10:30 AM IST
NEW DELHI : From next year, housewives, retirees and working professionals who want to pursue certain subjects but do not want a degree, may be able to attend classes with regular Delhi University students. Delhi University vice-chancellor Yogesh Singh has said the university is planning to introduce certificate courses for non-DU students from January next year. In an interview to PTI, the VC informed that the matter will be put up in the next Academic Council meeting on August 3.
A person, who is not a DU student, will be able to pursue a maximum of two courses at a time and the credits attained will be added to his/her academic bank of credit. The Academic Bank of Credit (ABC) is a virtual storehouse which will keep digitally stored records of academic credits secured by a student. At the end of the course, students will get a certificate.
Also Read | Delhi University declares results for 26 UG, 18 PG courses
Singh said this will help people who want to learn about a particular topic or skill but do not want to get a full-time degree. "Some students want to pursue just a few subjects and do not want a degree. We are planning to start course-based registration for citizens. and they can come and take classes with students of the varsity," he said. "You will get a certificate at the end and it will be added to your academic bank of credit. The applicant could be a student and also a working person. A person who is retired can also come and study," he added.
The course can be any subject for a particular programme and for which, the applicant will come and sit with DU students to pursue the degree. The details in this regard are being worked out. Explaining further, he said for instance, there are three courses being taught to first year students of BA(Hons) Political Science and someone might want to study about constitutional values, one of the courses, so they will be allowed to do, provided they meet some eligibility criterion that will be decided.
Also Read | Can't compare JNU with single-subject institutes like IISc: JNU VC on NIRF ranking 2022
"We are working on details as to decide the prerequisite requirements and the minimum age to pursue a particular course. We are thinking that a person will be allowed to take only two courses at one time. Otherwise, they will come to pursue their entire degree here," he stated. In this way, a student can gain eight credits in one year. and over the years they can take 176 credits and then will get a degree. "This is good for housewives also. They can come and acquire skills as well learn about whatever they want to learn" the VC explained.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- CBSE Exam 2025: Tips, strategies for Class 10 students to ace Physics, Chemistry and Biology
- Who is the JNU professor booked in NAAC bribe-for-grade case?
- Education Budget 2025: Just adding 10,000 MBBS seats won’t fix India’s healthcare crisis, say experts
- Education Budget 2025: Modi government cuts Rs 1,000 crore from minority, ST scholarships
- Higher Education Budget 2025: Outlay crosses Rs 50,000 crore; massive PMRF boost; IITs to add 6,500 seats
- Education Budget 2025 Highlights: Samagra Shiksha, PM SHRI see outlays rise while JNVs face cuts
- Household Consumption Expenditure Survey 2023-24: Education spending shrinks in villages, swells in cities
- Economic Survey 2024-25 highlights skills mismatch; over 50% graduates, 40% postgraduates underemployed
- Parents paid FIITJEE coaching fees from life insurance payouts, loans; they demand refunds
- ‘They demanded I delete photos’: I was warned off reporting on a zero-enrolment Kolkata school