CBCS TDC Eng Syllabus 2018 19
CBCS TDC Eng Syllabus 2018 19
CORE COURSES
C-1: British Poetry and Drama: 14th to 17th Centuries
C-2: Indian Writing in English
C-3: British Poetry and Drama: 17th and 18th Centuries
C-4: American Literature
C-5: British Literature: 18th Century
C-6: European Classical Literature
C-7: Women’s Writing
C-8: British Romantic Literature
C-9: British Literature: 19th Century
C-10: Indian Classical Literature
C-11: British Literature: The Early 20th Century
C-12: Modern European Drama
C-13: Postcolonial Literatures
C-14: Popular Literature
*****
ENG-C-3: British Poetry and Drama: 17th and 18th Centuries
Unit 1:
1.1. History of the Literature of the Period
Topics:
Metaphysical Poetry
Restoration Drama
Jacobean Drama
Rise of the Novel
Growth of Periodicals
Suggested Text
Ronald Carter and John McRae, The Routledge History of Literature in English: Britain and
Ireland, 2nd edition, Routledge, London, 2001 (Special Indian Edition).
Unit 2:
2.1. John Milton, Paradise Lost: Book I. (Lines 1 to 125)
Unit 3:
3.1. John Webster, The Duchess of Malfi.
Unit 4:
4.1. Aphra Behn, The Rover.
Unit 5:
5.1. Alexander Pope, The Rape of the Lock. (Canto I)
Suggested Topics and Background Prose Readings for Class Presentations:
Topics:
1. Religious and Secular Thought in the 17th Century.
2. The Stage, the State, and the Market.
3. The Mock-epic, and Satire.
4. Women in the 17th Century.
5. The Comedy of Manners.
Readings:
1. The Holy Bible, Genesis, chaps. 1–4, The Gospel according to St. Luke, chaps. 1–7
and 22–4.
2. Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince, ed. and tr. Robert M. Adams (New York: Norton,
1992) chaps. 15, 16, 18, and 25.
3. Thomas Hobbes, selections from The Leviathan, pt. I (New York: Norton, 2006)
chaps. 8, 11, and 13.
4. John Dryden, ‘A Discourse Concerning the Origin and Progress of Satire’, in The
Norton Anthology of English Literature, vol. 1, 9th edn, ed. Stephen Greenblatt (New
York: Norton 2012) pp. 1767–8.
5. Padmaja Ashok, Social History of England, Orient Blackswan.
Scheme of Examination:
The Core Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*****
ENG-C-4: American Literature
Unit 1:
1.1. Anne Bradstreet ‘The Prologue’.
1.2. Walt Whitman: Selections from Leaves of Grass:
‘O Captain, My Captain’, ‘Passage to India’ (lines 1 – 68).
Unit 2:
2.1. Robert Frost: ‘The Road Not Taken’.
2.2. Langston Hughes: ‘The Negro Speaks of Rivers’.
Unit 3:
3.1. Arthur Miller: Death of a Salesman.
Unit 4:
4.1. Edgar Allan Poe ‘The Purloined Letter’.
4.2. William Faulkner ‘Dry September’.
Unit 5:
5.1. Toni Morrison: Beloved.
Suggested Topics and Background Prose Readings for Class Presentations:
Topics:
1. The American Dream.
2. Social Realism and the American Novel.
3. Folklore and the American Novel.
4. Black Women’s Writings.
5. Questions of Form in American Poetry.
Readings:
Hector St John Crevecouer, ‘What is an American’, (Letter III) in Letters from an American
Farmer (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1982) pp. 66–105.
*****
ENG-C-9: British Literature: 19th Century
Unit 1:
1.1. History of the Literature of the period
Topics:
Characteristics of the Victorian Novel
Pre-Raphaelite Poetry
Women Novelists
The Victorian Compromise
The Dramatic Monologue
Unit 2:
2.1. Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice.
Unit 3:
3.1. Charles Dickens: Great Expectation.
Unit 4:
4.1. Alfred Tennyson ‘The Lady of Shalott’; ‘Ulysses’.
4.2. Mathew Arnold ‘Dover Beach’.
Unit 5:
5.1. Robert Browning, ‘My Last Duchess’; ‘The Last Ride Together’.
5.2. Christina Rossetti, ‘The Goblin Market’.
Suggested Topics and Background Prose Readings for Class Presentations:
Topics:
1. Utilitarianism.
2. The 19th Century Novel.
3. Marriage and Sexuality.
4. The Writer and Society.
5. Faith and Doubt.
Readings:
1. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, ‘Mode of Production: The Basis of Social Life’, ‘The
Social Nature of Consciousness’, and ‘Classes and Ideology’, in A Reader in Marxist
Philosophy, ed. Howard Selsam and Harry Martel (New York: International
Publishers,1963) pp. 186–8, 190–1, 199–201.
2. Charles Darwin, ‘Natural Selection and Sexual Selection’, in The Descent of Man in
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 8th edn, vol. 2, ed. Stephen Greenblatt
(New York: Northon, 2006) pp. 1545–9.
3. John Stuart Mill, The Subjection of Women in Norton Anthology of English Literature,
8th edn, vol. 2, ed. Stephen Greenblatt (New York: Norton, 2006) chap. 1,
pp. 1061–9.
Scheme of Examination:
The Core Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*****
ENG-C-10: Indian Classical Literature
Unit 1:
1.1. Kalidasa. Abhijnana Shakauntalam. Tr. Arthur W. Ryder. Shakuntala.
Unit 2:
2.1. Vyasa. Mahabharata ‘Sabha Parva I’. tr. Pratap Chandra Roy.
Unit 3:
3.1. Sudraka, Mrcchakatika, tr. Arthur W. Ryder The Little Clay Cart.
Unit 4:
4.1 Panchatantra, tr. by Arthur W. Ryder (Selected tales: ‘The Loss of Friend’; ‘The
Wedge-Pulling Monkey’; The Jackal and the War-Drum’; The Jackal at the Ram-Fight’
from Book I.
4.2 Ilango Adigal ‘The Book of Banci’, in Cilappatikaram: The Tale of an Anklet, tr. R.
Parthasarathy (Delhi: Penguin, 2004) Book 3.
Unit 5:
5.1. Bharata, Natyashastra, tr. Manomohan Ghosh,Vol.1,2nd edn.(Calcutta: Granthalaya,1967)
Chap. 6: ‘Sentiments’, pp. 100–18.
1.1. Leslie Fiedler, ‘Towards a Definition of Popular Literature’, in Super Culture: American
Popular Culture and Europe, ed. C.W.E. Bigsby (Ohio: Bowling Green University Press,
1975) pp. 29–38.
Unit 2:
2.1. Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass.
Unit 3:
3.1. J.K.Rowling, The Phisopher’s Stone.
Unit 4:
4.1. Shyam Selvadurai, Funny Boy.
Unit 5:
5.1. Durgabai Vyam and Subhash Vyam Bhimayana: Experiences of Untouchability.
Suggested Topics and Background Prose Readings for Class Presentations:
Topics:
1. Coming of Age.
2. The Canonical and the Popular.
3. Caste, Gender and Identity.
4. Ethics and Education in Children’s Literature.
5. Sense and Nonsense.
6. The Graphic Novel.
Readings:
Scheme of Examination:
The Core Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*****
B A English (Pass) under C B C S
Discipline Specific Core (4)
Prescribed Text
Ronald Carter and John McRae, The Routledge History of Literature in English: Britain and Ireland, 2nd
edition, Routledge, London, 2001 (Special Indian Edition)
Scheme of Examination:
The DSC Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*****
DSC – 2/GE – 201/GE - 601
British Literature II (The Romantics and the Victorians)
Unit 1:
1.1. History of the Literature from late Eighteenth Century to late Nineteenth Century
Topics:
Romantic Poetry
Romantic Fiction and Non-Fiction
Victorian Fiction
Victorian Poetry
Growth of Periodical literature
Unit 2:
2.1. William Wordsworth: ‘The Solitary Reaper’
2.2. Percy Bysshe Shelley: ‘Cloud’
2.3. John Keats: ‘Ode to Autumn’
Unit 3:
3.1. Alfred Tennyson: ‘Ulysses’
3.2. Robert Browning: ‘My Last Duchess’
3.3. Matthew Arnold: ‘Dover Beach’
Unit 4:
4.1. Charles Lamb: Dream Children: A Reverie
Unit 5:
5.1. Charles Dickens: Oliver Twist
Prescribed Text
Ronald Carter and John McRae, The Routledge History of Literature in English: Britain and Ireland, 2nd
edition, Routledge, London, 2001 (Special Indian Edition)
Scheme of Examination:
The DSC Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*****
DSC – 3/GE - 301
British Literature III (The Twentieth Century)
Unit 1:
1.1. History of the Literature of the Period
Topics: Trends in:
Modern Poetry
Modern Drama
Modern Fiction
Unit 2:
2.1. W. B. Yeats: ‘The Second Coming’
2.2. Thomas Stearns Eliot: ‘Preludes’
Unit 3:
3.1. Wystan Hugh Auden: ‘The Unknown Citizen’
3.2. Philip Larkin: ‘Church Going’
Unit 4:
4.1. William Golding: Lord of the Flies.
Unit 5:
5.1. Drama: John Osborne: Look Back in Anger
Prescribed Text
Ronald Carter and John McRae, The Routledge History of Literature in English: Britain and Ireland, 2nd
edition, Routledge, London, 2001 (Special Indian Edition).
Scheme of Examination:
The DSC Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*****
DSC – 4/GE - 401
Indian English Literature
Selections from Modern Indian Literature ed. Dept. of English /Living Literatures ed. Macmillan
Unit 1:
1.1. Toru Dutt: ‘Our Casuarina Tree’
1.2. Nissim Ezekiel: ‘Marriage’; ‘Enterprise’
Unit 2:
2.1. Jayanta Mahapatra: ‘Ash’; ‘Freedom’
2.2. Kamala Das: ‘The Dance of the Eunuchs’.
Unit 3:
3.1. Premchand: ‘The Holy Panchayat’
3.2. R.K. Narayan: ‘The M.C.C.’
Unit 4:
4.1. Mulk Raj Anand: Two Leaves and a Bud
Unit 5:
1.1. Mahesh Dattani: Tara
Prescribed Text for Poetry: ‘Symphony’: Published by Cambrigde University Press, Edited by:
Forum for English Studies, Department of English, Assam University, Silchar
Scheme of Examination:
The DSC Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*************
B A English Honours under C B C S
Discipline Specific Elective (4)
Prescribed Text for Poetry: ‘Symphony’: Published by Cambrigde University Press, Edited
by: Forum for English Studies, Department of English, Assam University, Silchar.
Readings:
1. Namwar Singh, ‘Decolonising the Indian Mind’, tr. Harish Trivedi, Indian Literature,
no. 151 (Sept./Oct. 1992).
2. B.R. Ambedkar, Annihilation of Caste in Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar: Writings and
Speeches, vol. 1 (Maharashtra: Education Department, Government of Maharashtra,
1979) chaps. 4, 6, and 14.
3. Sujit Mukherjee, ‘A Link Literature for India’, in Translation as Discovery (Hyderabad:
Orient Longman, 1994) pp. 34–45.
4. G.N. Devy, ‘Introduction’, from After Amnesia in The G.N. Devy Reader (New Delhi:
Orient BlackSwan, 2009) pp. 1–5.
Scheme of Examination:
The DSE Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
*****
DSE-2: British Literature: Post World War II
Unit 1:
1.1 Kingsley Amis, Lucky Jim.
Unit 2:
2.1 Jeanette Winterson, Sexing the Cherry.
Unit 3:
3.1 John Osborne, Look Back in Anger.
Unit 4:
4.1 Hanif Kureshi, My Beautiful Launderette.
Unit 5:
5.1 Phillip Larkin, ‘Church Going’.
5.2 Ted Hughes, ‘Hawk Roosting’.
5.3 Seamus Heaney, ‘Casualty’.
Suggested Topics and Background Prose Readings for Class Presentations:
Topics:
2. Angry Young Men Generation in Britain
3. Postmodernism in British Literature
4. Britishness after 1960s
5. Intertextuality and Experimentation
6. Literature and Counterculture
Readings:
1. Alan Sinfield, ‘Literature and Cultural Production’, in Literature, Politics, and Culture in
Postwar Britain (Berkley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1989) pp. 23–38.
2. Seamus Heaney, ‘The Redress of Poetry’, in The Redress of Poetry (London: Faber, 1995) pp. 1–16.
3. Patricia Waugh, ‘Culture and Change: 1960-1990’, in The Harvest of The Sixties:
English Literature And Its Background, 1960-1990 (Oxford: OUP, 1997).
Scheme of Examination:
The DSE Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*****
DSE-3: Literary Criticism
Unit 1:
1.1. William Wordsworth, Preface to the Lyrical Ballads (1800).
Unit 2:
2.1. S.T. Coleridge, Biographia Literaria. Chapters XIII and XIV.
Unit 3:
3.1. Virginia Woolf, ‘Modern Fiction’.
3.2. T.S. Eliot, “Tradition and the Individual Talent” (1919).
Unit 4:
4.1. I.A. Richards, Principles of Literary Criticism Chapters 1,2 and 34.
(London 1924).
Unit 5:
5.1. Cleanth Brooks, ‘The Heresy of Paraphrase’, and ‘The Language of Paradox’ in
The Well-Wrought Urn: Studies in the Structure of Poetry (1947).
Suggested Topics and Background Prose Readings for Class Presentations:
Topics:
1. Summarising and Critiquing.
2. Point of View.
3. Reading and Interpreting.
4. Media Criticism.
5. Plot and Setting.
6. Citing from Critics’ Interpretations.
Suggested Readings:
1. C.S. Lewis, Introduction in An Experiment in Criticism, Cambridge University Press
1992.
2. M.H. Abrams, The Mirror and the Lamp, Oxford University Press, 1971.
3. Rene Wellek, Stephen G. Nicholas: Concepts of Criticism, Connecticut, Yale
University 1963.
4. Taylor and Francis Eds. An Introduction to Literature, Criticism and Theory,
Routledge, 1996.
Scheme of Examination:
The DSE Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*****
DSE-4: World Literatures
Unit 1:
1.1. V.S. Naipaul, Bend in the River (London: Picador, 1979).
Unit 2:
2.1. George Ryga, The Ecstasy of Rita Joe.
Unit 3:
3.1. Antoine De Saint-Exupery, The Little Prince (New Delhi: Pigeon Books, 2008).
Unit 4:
4.1. Julio Cortazar, ‘Blow-Up’, in Blow-Up and other Stories (New York: Pantheon, 1985).
Unit 5:
5.1. Judith Wright, ‘Bora Ring’, in Collected Poems (Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 2002)
p. 8.
5.2. Gabriel Okara, ‘The Mystic Drum’, in An Anthology of Commonwealth Poetry, ed.
C.D. Narasimhaiah (Delhi: Macmillan, 1990) pp. 132–3.
5.3. Kishwar Naheed, ‘The Grass is Really like me’, in We the Sinful Women (New Delhi:
Rupa, 1994) p. 41.
Prescribed Text for Poetry: ‘Symphony’: Published by Cambrigde University Press, Edited
by: Forum for English Studies, Department of English, Assam University, Silchar
Topics:
1. The Idea of World Literature.
2. Memory, Displacement and Diaspora.
3. Hybridity, Race and Culture.
4. Adult Reception of Children’s Literature.
5. Literary Translation and the Circulation of Literary Texts.
6. Aesthetics and Politics in Poetry.
Readings:
1. Sarah Lawall, ‘Preface’ and ‘Introduction’, in Reading World Literature: Theory,
History, Practice, ed. Sarah Lawall (Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, 1994)
pp. ix–xviii, 1–64.
2. David Damrosch, How to Read World Literature? (Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell,
2009) pp. 1–64, 65–85.
3. Franco Moretti, ‘Conjectures on World Literature’, New Left Review, vol.1 (2000), pp.
54–68.
4. Theo D’haen et. al., eds., ‘Introduction’, in World Literature: A Reader (London:
Routledge, 2012).
Scheme of Examination:
The DSE Course will be of 100 marks.
Internal Examination: 30 marks.
End Semester Examination: 70 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20).
*****
B A, B Com, BBA (Pass) under C B C S
English as a Language Subject (2)
ENGL I (101)
Unit 1:
Grammar I:
1.1. Determiners, prepositions, verbs, tenses, subject-verb agreement (concord), voice
Unit 2:
Grammar II:
2.1. Direct/indirect speech, tag questions, sentence structure (simple, complex, compound),
synthesis and splitting up of sentence
Unit 3:
Essays:
3.1. Verrier Elwin: ‘A Pilgrimage to Tawang’
3.2. Richard Wright, ‘Twelve Million Black Voices’
Unit 4:
Short Stories:
4.1. Guy de Maupassant, ‘The Necklace’
4.2. Tolstoy, ‘God sees the Truth, but Waits’
Unit 5:
Composition:
5.1. Job Application
5.2. Paragraph Writing
Text Prescribed (for Units 1,2 & 5): Bikram K. Das. Functional Grammar and Spoken and
Written Communication in English, Orient Blackswan, Hyderabad, 2006
Scheme of Examination:
The Course will be of 100 marks
Internal Examination: 30 marks
End Semester Examination: 70 marks
End Semester Examination: 70 marks:
For Units 1 & 2:
14 objective/ Short answer type questions from each unit (1x28=28)
For Units 3 & 4:
One essay type question from each unit (10x2=20), and
One short answer type question from each unit (4x2=8)
For Unit 5:
Job Application (8x1=8)
Paragraph Writing (6x1=6)
*****
ENGL II (201)
Unit 1:
Poetry I:
1.1. William Blake: ‘The Chimney Sweeper’ (from Songs of Innocence & Songs of Experience)
1.2. William Wordsworth: ‘The Daffodils’; ‘Composed upon Westminster Bridge’
Unit 2:
Poetry II:
2.1 P. B. Shelley: ‘Ode to the West Wind’, ‘To a Skylark’
2.2 John Keats, ‘To Autumn’
Unit 3:
Short Stories:
3.1 Saki: ‘The Open Window’
3.2 Ruskin Bond: ‘The Eyes are nor Here’
Unit 4:
Essays:
4.1 Durrell: ‘Vanishing Animals’
4.2 Marcel Junod: ‘The First Atom Bomb’
Unit 5:
5.1 George Orwell: Shooting an Elephant
Prescribed Text for Poetry: ‘Symphony’: Published by Cambrigde University Press, Edited by:
Forum for English Studies, Department of English, Assam University, Silchar
Scheme of Examination:
The Course will be of 100 marks
Internal Examination: 30 marks
End Semester Examination: 70 marks
End Semester Examination: 70 marks:
Five essay type questions taking one from each unit (10x5=50), and
Five short answer type questions taking one from each unit (4x5=20)
*****************
B A , B Com, BBA (Pass) under C B C S
Alternative English (2)
Unit 2:
Speaking Skills:
Monologue
Dialogue
Group Discussion
Effective Communication/ Mis- Communication
Interview
Unit 3:
Reading and Understanding:
Close Reading
Comprehension
Summary Paraphrasing
Unit 4:
Writing Skills I:
Documenting
Making notes
Unit 5:
Writing Skills II:
Report Writing
Letter writing
Recommended Readings:
1. Fluency in English - Part II, Oxford University Press, 2006.
2. Business English, Pearson, 2008.
3. Language, Literature and Creativity, Orient Blackswan, 2013.
4. Language through Literature (forthcoming) ed. Dr. Gauri Mishra, Dr Ranjana Kaul, Dr Brati
Biswas.
Scheme of Examination:
The Course will be of 50 marks.
End Semester Examination: 50 marks.
End Semester Examination: 50 marks:
Five questions of ten marks taking one question from each unit (5x10) =50
*****
B A English Core/BA in English
Skill Enhancement Course
*****
BA in English
Skill Enhancement Course
SEC-3: Business Communication
Unit 1:
1.1 Introduction to the essentials of Business Communication: Theory and practice.
Unit 2:
2.1. Citing references, and using bibliographical and research tools.
2.2. Writing a project report
Unit 3:
3.1. Writing reports on field work/visits to industries, business concerns etc.
/ Business negotiations.
Unit 4:
4.1 Summarizing annual report of companies
Unit 5:
5.1Writing minutes of meetings
5.2 E-correspondence
Suggested Readings:
1. Scot, O.: Contemporary Business Communication. Biztantra, New Delhi.
2. Lesikar, R.V. & Flatley, M.E.; Basic Business Communication Skills for Empowering the
Internet Generation, Tata McGraw Hill Publishing Company Ltd. New Delhi.
3. Ludlow, R. & Panton, F.; The Essence of Effective Communications, Prentice Hall of
India Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi.
4. R.C. Bhatia, Business Communication, Ane Books Pvt Ltd, New Delhi.
Scheme of Examination:
The SEC Course will be of 50 marks.
End Semester Examination: 50 marks.
End Semester Examination (50 marks):
Five questions of ten marks taking one question from each unit (5x10) =50
*****
BA in English
Skill Enhancement Course
SEC-4: Technical Writing
Unit 1:
1.1 Communication: Language and communication, differences between speech and writing
Unit 2:
2.1 Distinct features of speech, distinct features of writing.
Unit 3:
3.1. Writing Skills: Selection of Topic, Thesis statement, developing the thesis introductory,
developmental, transitional and concluding paragraphs, linguistic unity, coherence and cohesion,
descriptive, narrative, expository and argumentative writing.
Unit 4:
4.1. Technical Writing 1: scientific and technical subjects; formal and informal writings; formal
writings/reports, handbooks, manuals, letters, memorandum, notices, agenda, minutes.
Unit 5:
5.1 Technical Writing 2
5.2 Common errors to be avoided.
Suggested Reading:
1. M. Frank. Writing as thinking: A guided process approach, Englewood Cliffs,
Prentice Hall Reagents.
2. L. Hamp-Lyons and B.Heasely: Study Writing; A course in written English. For
academic and professional purposes, Cambridge Univ.Press.
3. R. Quirk, S.Greenbaum, G. Leech and J.Svartik: A comprehensive grammar of the
English language, Longman, London.
4. Daniel G. Riordan and Steven A. Panley: “Technical Report Writing Today”.
Additional Reference Books
Daniel G. Riordan and Steven A. Pauley, Biztantra: “Technical Report Writing Today”.
8th Edition (2004).
Scheme of Examination:
The SEC Course will be of 50 marks.
End Semester Examination: 50 marks.
End Semester Examination (70 marks):
Five questions of ten marks taking one question from each unit (5x10) =50
*****