Odisha Public Service Commission: SL No Subject No of Vacancies No of Posts Reserved For S.T. S.C. Sebc U.R
Odisha Public Service Commission: SL No Subject No of Vacancies No of Posts Reserved For S.T. S.C. Sebc U.R
Odisha Public Service Commission: SL No Subject No of Vacancies No of Posts Reserved For S.T. S.C. Sebc U.R
(2) LAST DATE FOR RECEIPT OF APPLICATION FEE AT ANY STATE BANK OF
INDIA BRANCH (SBI) IS 31.08.2013
Applications are invited Online through the Proforma Application form to be made
available on the WEBSITE (http://opsconline.gov.in) from 23.07.2013 to 27.08.2013
(Note: 31.08.2013 is the last date for payment of application fees) for recruitment to 272 posts of
Junior Lecturer under Higher Education Department in Group-B of Odisha Education Service in the
state pay scale of Rs.9,300 to Rs.34,800 carrying Grade Pay of Rs.4,600/- with usual Dearness and
other allowances as may be sanctioned by the Government of Odisha from time to time. The posts are
temporary but likely to be made permanent.
2. VACANCY POSITION: As per requisition filed by the Higher Education Department, Govt. of
Odisha, the vacancy position along with reservation thereof is given below:-
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)
1 ANTHROPOLOGY 04 01 01 02
2 BOTANY 41(13-w) 09(3-w) 06(2-w) 05(1-w) 21(7-w) 1(PD) 1 -
3 CHEMISTRY 08(2-w) 02(1-w) 01 01 04(1-w) - - -
4 ECONOMICS 32(9-w) 07(2-w) 05(1-w) 04(1-w) 16(5-w) 1(B) 1
5 EDUCATION 10(3-w) 02(1-w) 02(1-w) 01 05(1-w) - - -
6 ENGLISH 26(8-w) 06(2-w) 04(1-w) 03(1-w) 13(4-w) 1(B) 1 -
7 GEOGRAPHY 01 - - - 01 - - -
8 GEOLOGY 03 01 - - 02 - - -
9 HINDI 04 01 01 - 02 - - -
10 HISTORY 21(6-w) 05(2-w) 03(1-w) 02 11(3-w) 1(B) 1 -
11 HOME SCIENCE 05 01 01 01 02 - - -
12 MATHEMATICS 17(5-w) 03(1-w) 03(1-w) 02 09(3-w) - 1 -
-2-
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)
13 ODIA 42(13-w) 09(3-w) 07(2-w) 05(1-w) 21(7-w) 1(PD) 1 -
1(B)
14 PHYSICS 19(5-w) 04(1-w) 03(1-w) 02 10(3-w) - 1 -
15 POLITICAL 09(3-w) 02(1-w) 01 01 05(2-w) 1(B) - -
SCIENCE
16 PSYCHOLOGY 08(2-w) 02(1-w) 01 01 04(1-w) 1(B) - -
17 SOCIOLOGY 06(1-w) 01 01 01 03(1-w) - - -
18 STATISTICS 02 01 - - 01 - - -
19 ZOOLOGY 14(4-w) 03(1-w) 02(1-w) 02 07(2-w) - - -
TOTAL 272(74-w) 60(19-w) 42(11-w) 31(4-w) 139(40-w) 08 07 -
d) The number of vacancies to be filled up on the basis of this recruitment is subject to change by the
Government without notice, depending upon administrative exigencies of public service at the
discretion of the State Government.
3. AGE LIMITS:
A candidate should be under 32( thirty-two) years and over 21( twenty-one) years of age on
the 1st January, 2013 i.e. he/she must not have been born earlier than 2nd January, 1981 and not later
than 1st January, 1992.
The upper age-limit prescribed above is relaxable by 5 (five) years for candidates belonging to
the categories of Scheduled Castes(S.C.), Scheduled Tribes(S.T.), Socially & Educationally Backward
Classes(S.E.B.C.), Women and Ex-Servicemen, and by 10 (ten) years for Physically Handicapped
candidates, whose disability should not be less than 40%.
Provided that in case a candidate who comes under more than one category mentioned above,
he/she will be eligible for only one age relaxation benefit, which shall be considered most beneficial to
him/her.
Date of birth entered in the High School Certificate or equivalent Certificate issued by the
concerned Board/Council will only be accepted by the Commission.
4. EDUCATIONAL QUALIFICATION:
A candidate should posses a Master’s Degree in the concerned subject from a recognized
University with at least 55% marks or its equivalent grade with a Second Class in the Bachelor’s
Degree or Ph.D., D.Sc., D.Litt., M.Phill and M.litt. with at least 50 % marks in Master’s Degree with a
2nd class in the Bachelor’s Degree .
Provided that candidates belonging to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes shall posses
a Master’s Degree in the concerned subject from a recognized University with at least 50% of marks or
its equivalent grade with a 2nd class in the Bachelor’s Degree .
5. PLAN OF EXAMINATION:
i) Written Examination;
ii) Viva Voce (Personality Test)
(b) The written Examination will be in General English, General Knowledge and concerned
subject. General English and General Knowledge will be covered in one paper consisting of
100 marks. The Examination in the concerned subject will cover 400 marks consisting of two
papers i.e. Paper-I and Paper-II having 200 marks each. Each paper will be of 3 hours duration.
Candidates are required to answer the papers in English except the language papers.
(c) The candidates shall be called for interview by the Commission in order of merit equal to 03
times the number of vacancies in any subject if the vacancies are up to 50 and such numbers
not less than twice and not more than thrice the number of vacancies as the Commission may
determine, when the vacancies exceed 50.
Provided that for the vacancies up to 02 , ten candidates and for the vacancies
between 03 to 05, fifteen candidates shall be called by the Commission for Viva Voce test.
(d) The Commission shall conduct the Viva Voce for 50 marks.
(e) The Commission shall be competent to fix-up the qualifying marks in any or all the subjects of
the Examination and Viva Voce.
6. PLACE OF EXAMINATION:
The written examination will be held at Balasore, Berhampur, Bhubaneswar, Cuttack and
Sambalpur depending on the number of candidates from the respective Zone. In case sufficient
numbers of candidates are not available for any of the Zones of Balasore, Berhampur, Bhubaneswar
and Sambalpur, the candidates opting for those Zones will be accommodated at Cuttack.
The candidates are to mention their choice of Examination zone at the appropriate place in the
Online Application form. REQUEST FOR CHANGE OF ZONE WILL NOT BE
ENTERTAINED.
7. APPLICATION FEE -
A candidate is required to pay a non-refundable and non-adjustable fee of Rs.300/-(Rupees
three hundred) only. Candidates belonging to Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe of Odisha only
and PH candidates, whose disability is not less than 40 % are exempted from payment of this fee.
The candidates are required to take a printout of the finally submitted Online
Application Form for future use and take a printout of Online Challan (Pay-in-Slip) for payment
of requisite fee at any branch of State Bank of India (SBI). The Fee(s) paid shall not be refunded
under any circumstances nor can the fee(s) be adjusted or held in reserve for any other
examination or recruitment.
(ii) The candidate should be able to speak, read and write Odia fluently and must have passed at
least an examination in Odia language equivalent to that of Middle English School Standard
conducted by the Board of Secondary Education, Odisha or the Education Department of the
Government of Odisha or any other Board or Council of Secondary Education approved by the
Government of Odisha in support of passing of Odia language (M.E. School Standard) or have
passed High School Certificate or equivalent examination with Odia as medium of examination
in non language subject.
(iii) A candidate, who has more than one spouse living, will not be eligible for appointment unless
the State Government has exempted his/her case from operation of this limitation for any good
and sufficient reasons;
-5-
(iv) Government servants, whether temporary or permanent, are eligible to apply, provided that
they possess the requisite qualification and are within the prescribed age-limit as provided
under Para-3 & 4 of the Advertisement. They must inform their respective Heads of Offices
in writing regarding submission of their applications for this recruitment and obtain “No
Objection Certificate”;
(v) If a candidate has at any time, been debarred for a certain period/chance(s) by the Odisha
Public Service Commission or other State Public Service Commission or U.P.S.C. from
appearing at any examination/interview, he/she will not be eligible for such recruitment for that
specified period/chance(s);
(vi) Only those candidates, who fulfill the requisite qualification & within the prescribed age
limit etc., by the closing date of filling of online application, will be considered eligible;
(vii) Every candidate selected for appointment shall be examined by the Medical Board. A
candidate, who fails to satisfy the Medical Board, shall not be appointed.
9. OTHER CONDITIONS:
(i) A candidate found guilty of seeking support for his/her candidature by offering illegal
gratification or applying pressure on any person connected with the conduct of the recruitment
process or found indulging in any type of malpractice in course of the selection or otherwise,
shall, in addition to rendering himself/herself liable to criminal prosecution, be disqualified
not only for the recruitment for which he/she is a candidate, but also may be debarred,
either permanently or for a specified period, from any recruitment or selection to be
conducted by the Commission;
(ii) The provisions of the Odisha Conduct of Examination Act 1988 (Odisha Act-2 of 1988) are
applicable to the examination conducted by the Odisha Public Service Commission.
(iii) Online applications submitted to the OPSC if found to be incomplete in any respect
are liable to rejection without entertaining any correspondence with the applicants on
that score;
(v) This advertisement should not be construed as binding on the Government to make
appointment.
-6-
(vi) The posts are temporary but likely to be made permanent. Every Junior Lecturer on his her first
appointment to the service shall be on probation for a period of two years with effect from the
actual date of joining to the post. The appointment can be terminated on one month’s notice
from either’s side without assigning any reason thereof.
(vii) Concessions meant for S.C., S.T. & SEBC by Birth are admissible to the Scheduled
Caste, Scheduled Tribe and Socially & Educationally Backward Class of Odisha only;
(viii) Candidates are required to take due care to annex with the copy of the printout /Hard Copy of
Online Application , the copies of Certificates and other requisite documents as stated under
Para-10 of this Advertisement.
(ix) If a candidate intends to apply for more than one discipline should submit separate online
application forms and submit its printout along with requisite documents separately as per
provision made in the advertisement.
(x) No one will be admitted to the written examination unless he/she holds a certificate of
admission which will be uploaded in the website of OPSC. The eligible candidates will be
required to down load their Admission Certificate from the website of the Commission and
produce the same before the Centre Supervisor for admission to the Examination. No separate
Admission Certificate will be sent to the candidates.
(xi) All persons appointed under the Government of Odisha on or after 1st January, 2005 shall not
be eligible for pension as defined under sub-rule(1) of Rule-3 of the Odisha Civil Service
(Pension) Rules, 1992; but shall be covered by the defined Contribution Pension Scheme in
accordance with the Odisha Civil Service (Pension) Amendment Rules, 2005.
(xii) Any misrepresentation or suppression of information by the candidate in the online Application
form, will result in cancellation of his/her candidature or penalty, as may be decided by the
Commission.
(xiii) Mere empanelment in the select list shall not confer any right for appointment unless the
Government is satisfied after making such enquiry as may be deemed necessary that the
candidate is suitable in all respects for appointment to the service.
(xiv) No request for withdrawal of candidature will be entertained under any circumstances.
If a candidate fails to furnish any of the original documents in respect of the attested copies
submitted with the application for verification on the date of interview before the interview starts,
he/she shall not be allowed to appear at the interview.
-7-
(i) H.S.C. or equivalent certificate in support of declaration of age issued by the concerned
Board/Council;
(iv) Master’s Degree certificate in the concerned discipline in respect of educational qualification
prescribed for the recruitment.
(v) Ph.D./D.Sc./D.Litt./ M.Phill. / M.Litt. Certificate in the concerned discipline issued by the
recognized University.
(vi) Mark-list(s) of Bachelor’s Degree & Post Graduate Degree Examination(s) including fail
marks, if any;
NOTE - (a) Candidates, who have not been awarded percentage of marks, but only
“GRADE MARKS”, should, along with their applications, produce the
conversion certificate from the concerned University indicating the actual
equivalent percentage of marks and the conversion formula, failing which,
their applications are liable to be rejected.
(b) While filling up the relevant box of the online Application Form, the
candidates has to mention details of marks secured in each Semester/
Annual examination leading to award of Degree.
(vii) (a) Two recent passport size photographs (unsigned & unattested) which has been
uploaded in the online application form .
(b) Certificates of conduct from the Principal/Proctor/Dean or Professor in charge of a
Department of Teaching of the college or University in which he/she last studied;
(ix) Required Odia pass certificate from the Board of Secondary Education, Odisha indicating
Odia as a language subject equivalent to M.E. School Standard or a certificate from the
Principal/Headmaster of the School indicating that the candidate has passed Odia in M.E.
standard, if not passed odia as a subject in the High School certificate /equivalent
examination.
(x) Discharge Certificate issued by the Commanding Officer of the Unit last served wherever
applicable.
(xi) Identity Card of sports persons issued by the Director of Sports, Odisha, wherever applicable;
(xiv) if a candidate claims to posses qualification ,equivalent to the prescribed qualification ,the
rule/authority (with number and date ) under which it is so treated ,must be furnished with the
printout/hard copy of the online Application form .
(xv) A candidate who claims change in his/her name after having passed the High School
Certificate examination or equivalent examination, is required to furnish the copy of
publication of the changed name in the local leading daily news paper as well as copy of
notification in the Odisha Gazette in support of his/her change of name .
(ii) OBC Certificates will not be accepted in lieu OF S.E.B.C. Certificates and
candidates submitting such certificate will be treated as UR candidates.
(iii) Candidate if submits S.E.B.C. certificate which is more than three years old as on
the date of advt., will be treated as belonging to UR category.
(iv) Community (Caste status) once mentioned by the candidates in the online
application shall not be changed under any circumstances.
NOTE 2: Degree Certificate, Caste Certificate, Odia Test Pass Certificate, Discharge
Certificate of Ex-servicemen, Identity Card of Sportspersons and Disability
Certificate of Physically Handicapped Persons must have been issued by the
competent authority within the last date fixed for receipt of online application
form as indicated above.
-9-
a. Candidate must go through this detailed Advertisement before filling up online application
form.
b. Candidates must apply online through the concerned website of the OPSC
http://opsconline.gov.in. Applications received through any other mode would not be
accepted and summarily rejected.
c. Before filling up the online Application Form, the candidates must go through the following
documents available at OPSC portal.
d. Candidates are requested to upload the scanned image of latest passport size photograph along
with scanned image of his/her full signature and scanned image of Left hand Thumb
Impression(LTI) in the online application form. The Uploaded photograph, Full Signature and
LTI must be clearly identifiable / visible, otherwise the application of the candidate is liable to
be rejected by the Commission and no representation from the candidate will be entertained.
e. Candidates should keep at least 2 copies of latest passport size photograph which is uploaded to
the online application form for future use.
g. Thereafter, the candidates who are required to pay the fee shall take a printout of Online
Challan (Pay-in Slip) for payment of requisite fee of Rs.300/- (Three hundred only) at any
branch of State Bank of India .The fee paid shall neither be refunded under any circumstance
nor can the fee be adjusted or held in reserve for any other examination or recruitment.
h. Candidates are required to send the Printout/Hard copy of the Online Application Form
duly signed under the declaration along with OPSC Copy of Fee deposit challan
(wherever applicable ) and requisite certificates and documents etc. as provided under
para-10 of this advertisement by Regd. Post/Speed Post/Courier Service to the Special
Secretary, Odisha Public Service Commission, 19. Dr. P. K. Parija Road, Cuttack-
753001, so as to reach the same in O.P.S.C on or before 11. 09 .2013. The SC/ST/P.H
candidates are not required to enclose the copy of challan showing payment of fee.
- 10 –
i. Candidates intending to apply for more than one discipline should submit separate on line
application form. They are also required to send the printout of online application form and
requisite documents as provided under para-10 of this advertisement, separately for respective
discipline.
j. The candidates are advised to submit the Online Application Form well in advance without
waiting for the closing date to avoid last hour rush.
k. Certificate of Admission to the Written Examination and V.V test to the eligible candidates
will be uploaded in the Website of OPSC prior to the date of written examination and V.V. test
which will be published in the Website of OPSC and News paper. The candidates are required
to download their Admission Certificate from Website. No separate correspondence will be
made on this score.
For any technical guidance for filling up the online application form the candidate may
contact facilitation counter of OCAC over toll free Telephone No18003456770 or 155335
between 10.30 A.M. to 1.30 P.M & 02.00 P.M. to 5.00 P.M. on any Odisha Govt. working day.
Regarding difficulty in payment of fee, if any, the candidates may contact SBI over
Telephone No.0671-2368267 & 9437039604
JUNIOR LECTURERS
(ODISHA EDUCATION SERVICE)
General English
The question paper in General English will be designed to test the candidate’s
understanding of English and workmanlike use of words. The pattern of questions would be
as follows :
Total- 50 marks
General Knowledge
The paper in General Knowledge will include knowledge of current events and
matters as of everyday observation and experience in the scientific aspects of life as may be
expected of an educated person. The paper will also include questions on History of India
and Geography of such standard which the candidates should be able to answer without
special study. Total 50 marks.
2
Anthropology
PAPER – I
3
Unit – IV - Emergence Of Anthropology As An Empirical Discipline,
Anthropology As Natural Science And Natural History, Classical
Evolutionism, Diffusionism, Structuralism, Structural-Functionalism,
Functionalism, Neo-Evolutionism, Configurational Approach And
Culturological Approach To The Study of Culture, Post-Structuralism,
Symbolic And Interpretive Anthropology, Postmodern Anthropology,
Concepts of Culture And Personality. Individual, Culture and Society,
Types of Personality Formation and Determinants, Types of Personality,
Personality and Social Structure, Functions of Personality, Psychology of
Culture Change, Diachronic And Synchronic Study of Culture and
Personality. Relation between Language and Culture, Classification of
Language, Functional Study of Language, Structural Analysis in
Linguistics and Anthropology, Language and Communication.
4
Unit – VIII – Problems of Development. Socio-cultural Barriers and Stimulants to
Development. Economic Development and Social change, Modernization
and Development. Culture of Development & Development of Culture.
Planned Development in India, Planning in India: Centralised, De-
centralised, Top-bottom, Bottom-top, Sectoral and Integrated.
Constitutional safequards and protective legislations for SCs and STs in
India. Gender and Development. Environment and Development, Health
and Development, Education and Development. Theories of Economic
Development (Adam Smith, Devis Richarod, Thomas Malthus, J.S. Mills
Myrdal, Schumacher, Marx, Schumpteter and Amartya Sen) Globolization,
Liberlisation and Development.
PAPER-II
Unit – I - Aims and scope of Biological Anthropology, History and development of
Biological/Physical Anthropology, Application of biological
anthropology, Recent trends in biological anthropology. Theories of
organic evolution: Lamarckism, Darwinism, Synthetic theory, Origins of
Man: “Out of Africa model” and “Multiregional Model”, Principles of
evolution: Convergence evolution and Divergent evolution. Evolution and
adaptation
Unit – II - Man’s place in Animal Kingdom, Characteristic features of living
primates , Primate evolution with special reference to skull, law, limbs,
dentition and brain, Primate fossils: Aegyptopithecus, Propliopithecus,
Dryopithecus, Ramapithecus ; Primate social behavour; Erect posture and
bipedalism , Stages of human evolution: Australopithecine stage, Homo-
erectus stage, Neanderthal stage( Conservative and progressive variety
)Homo-sapien-sapiens stage : (Cro-Magnon Man , Grimaldi Man &
Chancelade Man )
Unit – III - Living Human variation: Concepts of race, Biological concept of race
Racial classification of major races of world population, Racial Criteria:
Metric, Non-metric, genetic, Racial Classification of Indian population
(Risley, Guha and Sarkar), Distribution of Genetic variation: ABO Blood
group, Rh Blood group, MN blood group; distribution of genetic
disorders: sickle cell anaemia, Thalassemia, G6PD Deficiency.
Unit – IV - Human genetics: Scope and development, Mendel’s Law and its
application to human population, Inheritance of genetic traits in Man:
Autosomal, Sex-linked characters, methods of studying Heredity: Twin
method, Pedigree method, Hardy-Weinberg Law & its application in
human population, Genetic polymorphism: Balanced & Transient,
Chromosome Karyotypes in man, Chromosomal abnormality in man,
Structure & function of DNA and RNA, Replication of DNA, Recombinant
Technology, Application areas of human genetics: Pre-natal diagnosis,
genetic counseling, paternity determination, DNA finger printing. Factors
affecting genetic structure of human population: mutation, selection, drift
and gene flow
5
Unit – V - Definition & Scope of prehistoric Archaeology, Geological frame work :
An outline of Pleistocene epoch, Glacial and Interglacial period in Europe
and India, Causes and consequences of glaciations; methods of dating:
Relative dating – study of stratigraphy, Pollen Analysis, Paleontology;
Absolute dating – Radio carbon dating, Potassium – Argon method;,
Thermoluminiscence method; Concept of Three age system of cultural
chronology; Prehistoric Technology & Tool types of Paleolithic, Mesolithic
and Neolithic Cultures. History and development of museums in the
world.
Unit – VI - Lower Paleolithic Cultures of Africa and South Asia (India): Pebble
tool culture in Africa(evidence from Olduvai Gorge) and India (Sohan
valley Culture), Achulian Culture of Africa and Achulian Cultural of
peninsular India, Middle stone age cultures of Africa and Middle
Palaeolithic culture of India, Late stone age culture of Africa, Upper
Paleolithic culture in India, Mesolithic and Neolithic culture of Europe of
India, Proto-historic culture of South Asia (India) – Chalcolithic culture of
India , Indus Valley civilization: Salient features (Town planning,
settlement, Agriculture, Art & Craft, Metal technology, Trade, religion,
burials etc. Origins and causes of decline of the Indus civilization.
6
Botany
PAPER-I
Unit-IV - Anatomy - Anatomy of typical dicot stems, root and leaf; Secondary
growth and anomalous secondary growth of stems.
PAPER-II
Unit– II - Cell Biology - Cell structure, Cell wall, Cell membrane, Plastids,
Mitochondria, Golgi bodies, Glyoxisomes, Perosisomes, Ribosomes,
Nucleus and Nucleolus; Structure of Chromosomes; Cell cycle –
Mitosis and Meisosi.
Unit – III - Genetics - Mendel’s laws of Inheritance, Interaction of genes; Linkage,
Recombination and Gene mapping; Extra-Nuclear inheritance;
Mutation-Types and induction, DNA damage and repair; Types of
polyploidy, Role of mutation and polyploidy in crop improvement.
Chemistry
PAPER-I
Unit-I:
Classical thermodynamics
8
Non-equilibrium thermodynamics
Statistical thermodynamics
Unit-II:
Chemical dynamics
Electrochemistry
Unit-III:
Surface chemistry
9
Unit-IV
Quantum Mechanics
Huckel theor of conjugated systems – Free valence index, bond order and charge
density calculations – application to ethylene – butadiene – cyclopropylene radical,
cyclobutadiene
Unit-I
Chemical periodicity, VSEPR theory for different types of molecules, Walsh diagram
(tri- and penta – atomic molecules), dп-pп bond, bent rule and energetic of
hybridization some simple reactions of covalently bonded molecules.
Hard-soft acid base concept – acid base strength – theoretical basis of hardness and
softness. Non aqueous solvents: types and characteristics – reactions in non-aqueous
solvents.
10
Unit-II
General characteristics of 1st row transition elements and inner transition elements
with special reference to electronic structure, ionic radii, oxidation states, complex
formation, magnetic behaviour and spectral properties.
Unit-III
Stepwise and overall formation constants and their interrelation, factors affecting
the stability of metal complexes – chelate effect and its thermodynamic origin –
determination of binary formation constants by pH-metry and spectrophotometry,
Job’s method of continuous variation.
Nuclear chemistry
Metal л complexes
Organometallic Chemistry
Preparation, properties and applications alkyl and aryls of group-I and II metal (Li,
Mg, Zn) and transition metals (Ti, Ni,. Cu and Pd).
Bioinorganic Chemistry
Essential and trace metals in biological processes – role of alkali and alkaline earch
metal jons - Na+- K+ Pump – metalloporphyrins with special reference to
hemoglobin and myoglobin, Metal complexes in transmission of energy –
chlorophylix, photosystem-I and photosystem-II in cleavage of water - ATP as
energy currency in biological system.
PAPER-II
Unit-I
The SN2, SN1, mixed SN1 and SN2 and SET mechanisms. The neighbouring group
mechanism, neighbouring group participation by p and s bonds, anchimeric
assistance Classical and non-classical carbocations, phenonium ions, norbormy1
system, common carbocations rearrangements – Application of NMR spectroscopy
in the detection of carbocations.
Bimolecular mechanisms – SE2 and SEi. The SE1 mechanism, electrophilic substitution
accompanied by double bond shifts. Effect of substrates, leaving ground and the
solvent polarity on the reactivity.
Unit-II
The arenium ion mechanism, orientation and reactivity, energy profile diagrams, the
ortho/para ratio, ipso attach, orientation in other ring systems – Quantitative
treatment of reactivity in substrates and electrophiles – Diazonium coupling –
Vilsmeir reaction, Gattermann - Koch reaction.
The SNAr, SN1, benzyne and SRN1 mechanisms. Reactivity – effect of substrate
structure, leaving group and attacking nuleophile. The von Richter, Sommelet –
Hauser, and Smiles rearrangements.
13
Addition to Carbon – Carbon Multiple Bonds
Elimination Reactions
The E2, E1 and E1CB mechanisms and their spectrum –Orientation of the double
bond Reactivity – effect of substrate structures, attacking base, the leaving and the
medium. Mechanism and orientation in pyrolytic elimination.
Unit-III
Pericyclic Reactions
Photochemical Reactions
14
Photochemistry of Aromatic Compounds : Isomerisations, additions and
substitutions.
Unit-IV
Disconnection approach
Unit-I
15
Environmental samples and their analyses
Analytical methods for measuring BOD, DO, COD, fluoride, nitrate (As, Cd, Cr, Hg,
Pb, Se etc.)
Unit-II
Infrared Spectroscopy
Mass Spectrometry
Principles, Ion production – EI, CI, FD and FAB – factors affecting fragmentation,
ion analysis and abundance – Mass spectral fragmentation of organic compounds,
common functional groups – Molecular ion peak – Metastable peak, Mc Lafferty
rearrangement. Nitrogen rule – High resolution mass spectrometry – Examples of
mass spectral fragmentation of simple organic compounds with respect to their
structure determination.
16
Unit-III
Ion exchange: Type of ion exchange resins, synthesis and characteristics of ion
exchange resins, action of ion exchange resins, ion exchange equilibria, technique of
ion exchange, application of ion exchange in analytical chemistry.
Chromatographic methods
Spectroscopic methods
X-ray diffraction method : Wiese indices, Miller indices, Laue method, Bragg’s law
and applications in determination of crystal structure.
Unit-IV
Principles zero filed splitting and Kramer’s degeneracy, factors affecting the g value,
hyperfine splitting and applications to sample radicals.
Electroanalytical methods
17
Commerce
PAPER-I
PAPER II
Data Sources & Tabulation and Analysis; Sampling, Need, Errors & Methods
of Sampling; Analysis & Interpretation of Data; Measures of Central Tendency;
Measures of Dispersion; Correlation & Regression; Hypothesis Testing; T-Test, F-
Test, Z-Test & Chi-Square Test.
Stock & Shares; Profit & Loss; Invoicing & Discounting of Bills of Exchange;
Logarithms; Annuities & Interest Rates; Simple & Compound Interest; Set Theory
and Functions; Matrices & Determinants; Differentiation & Integration; Permutation
and Combination.
18
Unit III : Business Management & Entrepreneurship
Indian Contract Act, 1872; Sales of Goods Act, 1930; Special Contract Act –
Indemnity & Guarantee, Bailment & Pledge, Contract of Agency; Partnership Act,
1932.
Economics
PAPER – I
UNIT-I : Microeconomics : A critic of the cardinal approach, Indifference Curve
Approach, Revealed Preference Approach, Laws of returns and returns to scale, Cost
curves, Duality in production, Value determination under Perfect Competition,
Monopoly, Discriminating Monopoly, Monopolistic Competition, Non-collusive
oligopoly, Collusive oligopoly-cartel and price leadership, Profit maximization
hypothesis vs. sales maximization hypothesis. Full cost pricing, Bain’s Limit Pricing
Theory, Marginal Productivity Theory, Euler’s theorem,. Theories of rent, wage,
interest and profit, Macro theories of distribution, General equilibrium (2X2X2)
model, Efficiency of general equilibrium, Pareto welfare optimality, New welfare
economics, Social Welfare Function.
20
PAPER-II
UNIT-V : Indian External Sector: Structure and features of India’s foreign trade,
Reforms in India’s external sector, EXIM Policy and FEMA, Balance of payments of
India, Efforts for external balance, Global financial situation and India’s external
sector, India and WTO.
21
Education
PAPER-I
22
Unit-VII Importance of Statistics in Educational Research; Descriptive and
Inferential Statistics; Properties of Normal Probability Curve and its
Applications; Significance of difference between means, ‘t’ test for
independent and non-independent samples; One-way ANOVA, Chi-
Square, Pearson coefficient of correlation, Bi-serial and Point bi-serial
correlation.
PAPER-II
23
Unit-V Educational Management – Meaning, Nature and Scope, Difference
between Administration and Management, Leadership in Educational
Management – Meaning, Nature and Styles of Leadership, Theories of
Leadership, Measurement of leadership, Educational Planning –
Meaning, Nature and Need, Approaches to Educational Planning,
Types of Educational Planning, Problems of Educational Planning in
India, Institutional Planning – Meaning, Nature, Scope and Steps.
24
English
PAPER-I
The candidate shall answer questions from each Unit which are compulsory.
Unit-1 There shall be one question with a suitable alternative relating to major
developments in English literature from Renaissance to the Age of Moderns from the
following topics.
i) Lyric
ii) Ballad
iii) Ode
iv) Sonnet
v) Epic
vi) Elegy,
vii) Verse libre
viii) Tragedy
ix) Comedy
x) Romantic Comedy
xi) Revenge Tragedy
xii) Comedy of Humours
xiii) Comedy of Manners
i) Allegory
ii) Anagnorisis
iii) Aporia
iv) Catharsis
v) Conceit
vi) Comic Relief
vii) Expressionism
viii) Epiphany
ix) Fancy
x) Hubris
xi) Imagery
xii) Irony
xiii) Metaphor
xiv) Myth
xv) Naturalism
xvi) Negative Capability
xvii) Objective Correlative
xviii) Peripeteia
xix) Paradox
xx) Pun
26
xxi) Personification
xxii) Pathetic Fallacy
xxiii) Poetic Justice
xxiv) Realism
xxv) Symbol
xxvi) Surrealism
xxvii) Three Dramatic Unities
PAPER-II
The candidate shall answer questions from each Unit which are compulsory.
Unit- 1 The candidate shall write an essay on a subject of general interest in not
less than 1200 words choosing one out of five topics.
Unit- 2 The candidate shall attempt a précis in 200-210 words of a given passage
of about 600 words.
Unit- 4 The candidate shall be required to write a report on a given topic in not
more than 300 words.
Unit- 6 The candidate shall answer objective type questions each carrying 1 mark
relating to grammar in context. The following items are to be covered.
27
Geography
PAPER – I
General Geography
28
Unit – III – Social Geography and Geographical Thought
- Races of Mankind, Cultural Realms of the World,
Man and Environment relation.
- Population: Growth and Distribution of Global Population,
Urban Population and Trend of Urbanisation.
- Evolution of Settlement: Types and Pattern of Rural and Urban
Settlement.
- Geographical Thought in (Ancient) India.
- Contribution of Humboldt, Karl Ritter, Blache and Peter Hagett
to development of Geography.
Unit – IV – Economic Geography and Political Geography
29
PAPER-II
A – India
Unit-I ( Physical)
- Physiography and Relief of India.
- River system of India.
- Climate of India, Climatic regions, Mechanism of Indian
Monsoon.
- Soils of India : Types and Distribution.
- Natural Vegetation and its Classification and distribution in
India.
30
Unit – V (Human Economic & Regional)
- Population : Factors responsible for the density and distribution
of Population, Population growth and distribution.
- Mineral resources of Odisha (Iron Ore, Bauxite and Coal).
- Agriculture : its types and Problems.
- Indsutries ; Iron, Steel & Aluminum Industires.
- Transport System in Odisha (Road, Railway and Air Transport).
- Geographical account of Mahanadi Valley, Coastal Plain.
Geology
PAPER-I
Weathering and erosion, Geological action of River, wind and glacier. Physiography
of India, Application of geomorphology.
Unit – II Mineralogy
Concept of stress, strain and rock deformation. Structural analysis of folds, joints and
faults, Lineation and foliation. Unconformities and basement cover relation.
Superposed deformations.
Form, texture and structure of igneous rocks. Silicate melt equilibria, binary and
ternary phase diagrams, magmatic differentiation, assimilation. Petrology and
geotectonic evolution of granites, basalts, anorthosites, ophiolite, kimberlite. Texture
and structure of metamorphic rocks, regional and contact metamorphism.
Characteristics of different grades and facies of metamorphism. Plate tectonics and
metamorphic zones. Metasomatism, granitisation, migmatites and paired
metamorphic belts.
31
Unit – V Sedimentology and Geochemistry
PAPER-II
Unit – I Palaeontology
Morphology and time ranges of fossil groups. Evolutionary changes in mollusks and
mammals in geological time. Siwalik vertebrate fauna, Gondwana flora. Evidence of
life in Precambrians. Different microfossil groups and uses in biostratigraphic
correlation.
Unit – II Stratigraphy
Origin and classification of coal, Indian coal deposits: Gondwana, Tertiary and
lignite.
32
Unit – V Hydrogeology and Environmental Geology
Hindi
PAPER-I
(B) (i) Kavya Kala tatha anyanya Nibandh (Jai Shankar Prasad)
(ii) Dusri Parampara Ki Khoj (Prof. Namvar Singh.
PAPER- II
34
History
PAPER– I
Unit – III -1. Growth of Capitalism and Colonialism and the World Order
2. Word War I : Causes, Course and Effects
3. League of Nations : Achievements & Failures
4. Totalitarianism in Europe: Nazism, Fascism
5. Growth of Left Movement: Socialism & Communism
6. Word War II : Context & Implications for the Global Order
History of India
PAPER-II
Unit – II - 1. The Imperial Guptas : Society, Religion, Art, Literature, Trade and
Commerce
2. Emergence of Turkish Rule in North India : Iltutmish & Balban
3. Consolidation of Internal Administration: Allauddin Khalji’s
Expansion, Market & Administrative Reforms
4. Muhammad-Bin-Tughluq’s administrative experiments and Firoz
Tughluq’s public works
5. Economy, Society, Art and Architecture during the Sultanate
period
6. Bhakti & Sufi Movements in Medieval India : Kabir, Nanak,
Chaitanya
36
Unit – III – 1. Akbar : Rajput and Religious Policies; Assessment of Akbar as a
Ruler
2. Aurangzeb : Deccan & Religious Policies and Decline of the
Mughals
3. Rise of the Maratha State : Shivaji’s Administration and Military
Organisation
4. Mughal Art, Architecture and Culture
5. Economy during the 16th and 17th centuries: Agriculture, Craft
production, Technology, Trade and Commerce
6. Society during the Mughal Rule : Conditions of Peasants,
Famines, Position of Women
Unit – IV - 1. Mode of Expansion and Consolidation of British Colonial rule:
Subsidiary Alliance, Doctrine of Lapse
2. Economic Impact of Colonial Rule in India : Stages of Colonialism,
Drain of Wealth, ‘De-Peasantisation’, ‘De-Industrialization’
3. Resistance to Colonial Rule : Early Uprisings of Peasants and
Tribals; Revolt of 1857
4. Nature and Character of Socio-religious Reform Movements in the
19th century India
5. Rise and Growth of Indian Nationalism: Phases of Moderates and
Extremists; Gandhian Movements : Non-Cooperation, Civil
Disobedience and Quit India
6. Rise & Growth of Communalism: Partition, Transfer of Power and
Independence
37
Home Science
PAPER-I
38
Unit-V : (Child Development)
PAPER-II
Interior decoration: Basic elements (Line, form, colour, texture) and principles
(Balance, Rhythem, proportion, Harmony, Emphasis) of design and their
application in interior decoration. Study of colour – importance, use and
characteristics of various colour combinations and its application. Consumer
Education: Strategies, Rights and responsibility of consumer, Consumer
protection legislation and Consumer aids.
39
Unit-IV : (Extension Communication)
Unit-V : (Textiles)
40
Group-B: INDUCTIVE LOGIC
PAPER-II
1. Bacon
2. Descartes
3. Spinoza
4. Leibnitz
5. Locke
6. Berkeley
7. Hume
8. Kant
(Metaphysics and Epistemology only)
1. Carvaka
2. Budhism
3. Jainism
4. Samkhya
41
5. Yoga
6. Nyaya
7. Vaisesika
8. Mimamsa
9. Samkara Vedanta
10. Ramanuja Vedanta
(Metaphysics and Epistemology only of all except Mimamsa; Epistemology
only of Mimamsa)
1. Utilitarian theories
2. Deontological theories
3. Virtue Ethics
4. Bio-medical ethics
5. Environmental ethics
6. Business Ethics
Group-D: MORAL PHILOSOPHY (INDIAN)
Mathematics
PAPER – I
42
UNIT –II ANALYSIS –I
43
Transportation and Assignment : General Transportation Problem, Finding
Initial Basic Feasible Solution, Test of Optionality, Transportation Algorithm,
Transhipment Problems.
PAPER-II
UNIT-I ANALYSIS
Normed Linear space Linear spaces, Subspaes, Quotient spaces, properties of norm,
Riesz Lemma, Continuity of linear maps, Bounded linear operations, Equivalent
norms, Hahn Banach theorem and its consequences.
44
Banach spaces Uniform boundedness principle, closed graph theorem and its
consequences, open mapping theorem and its consequences.
Spaces of Bounded linear functional Duals and transposes, Duals of lp, Lp[a,b],
C[a,b], Weak convergence, weak* convergence, Reflexivity.
Lattice and Boolean Algebra – Binary relations, Equivalence relations, prset, Lattice,
Hasse Diagram, Algebraic properties of Lattice, Paths and closures, Directed graphs
and adjacency matrix, Boolean Algebra, Boolean functions, Minimization of Boolean
functions.
Recurrence relation –
Graph Theory –
Trees and their properties, spanning trees, Binary trees, Euler’s formula,
Euler’s circuits, Hamiltanian Graphs
45
Series Solution of differential equations: Power series method, Bessel, Legendre and
Hypergeometirc equations. Bessel, Legendre functions and their properties . Sturm-
Liouville problem, Orthogonality of eigen functions. Orthogonality of Bessel fuctions
and Legendre polynomials.
Music
“VOCAL MUSIC”.
PAPER-I
i) Puriya – Marwa
v) Meghmalhar – Surmalhar.
46
4. Theoretical knowledge of the following Talas with different Layakriyas :
Raganga Prabandha (from Unit 1), Champu (From Unit 3), Chhanda or
Devotional Song (From Unit-3).
7. Ability to compose one song based on appropriate Raaga and Tala according to
it’s mood.
PAPER-II
a. Time of vedic
b. Moghul period
c. Time of Bharat
d. Time of Sarangadena
e. Modern time
47
9. Study of different Gharanas and comparative study of different gharanas
of Hindustani Music.
Odia
PAPER-I
–I : ଓ ( )|
– II : , ଓ |
– III : ଆ ( , , ଓ )|
– IV : |
– V: ( )|
[ ଓ , , ]
–VI : ( )|
[ ଓ , ]
–VII : ( )|
[ , ]
–VIII : ( )|
[ ନବ , - , ଧ, , , ଓ
]
48
PAPER-II
–I : , , , |
– II : , , , |
– III : , , , ରଥ |
– IV : , , , |
– V: , , , |
–VI : , କର, , |
–VII: ଚରଣ , , ,
|
–VIII : , , , |
Physics
PAPER– I
1. Complex variable :
Cauchy’s theorem, Cauchy’s integral formula, classification of singularities,
branch point and branch cut, Residue theorem, evaluation of integral using
residue theorem.
2. Special functions :
Basic properties and solutions (series expansion, recurrence and orthogonality
relations) of Bessel, Legendre, Laguerre functions, Solution of inhomogeneous
partial differential equation by method of Green’s function.
3. Group theory :
Definitions, isomorphism and homomorphism, point group, group
representation, reducible and irreducible representation, Lie group and Lie
algebra with SU(2) and 0(3).
4. Tensors:
Cartesian tensors, covariant, contravariant and mixed tensor, tensor algebra,
properties of symmetric and anti symmetric tensor Levi Civita and metric
tensor.
49
Unit-II: Classical Mechanics
1. Hamilton’s principle:
Hamilton’s principle, Lagrange’s equation from Hamilton’s principle,Solution
of Lagrange equation of motion for Simple harmonic oscillator. Hamilton’
equations of motion, canonical equations from variational principle, principle
of least action
2. Canonical transformation:
Generating function and Legendre transformation, Integral invariant of
Poincare, Lagrange and Poisson’s brackets, infinitesimal canonical
transformation, conservation theorems in Poisson bracket formalism, Jacobi
Identity.
3. Rigid body:
Independent coordinates, orthogonal transformation and rotations (finite and
infinitesimal), Euler’s angles, Euler’s theorem on the motion of rigid body,
Inertia Tensor and principal axis transformation, angular momentum and
kinetic energy of rotation in terms of Euler’s angles. Euler’s equation of
motion, torque free motion of rigid body,heavy symmetrical top with one
point fixed. , motion in a non inertial frame of reference, Coriolis force
4. Small oscillation:
Theory of small oscillation, Normal modes and normal frequencies,
application to tri atomic molecules.
5. Hamilton-Jacobi theory:
Hamilton-Jacobi equation for Hamilton’s principal function, Harmonic
oscillator problem, Hamilton’s Characteristic function, Action angle variable
and its application to Kepler’s problem.
50
4. Radiation, scattering and Diffraction:
Field due to localized oscillating source, electric dipole,magnetic diapole,
electric quadrupole field radiation, centre-fed linear antenna with sinusoidal
current,scattering by a small dielectric sphere in long wave length limit,
Raleigh scattering,
1. Wave packet:
Gaussian wave packet, spreading of wave packet, coordinate and momentum
representation, x and p in these representation, Dirac delta function,
2. Operator method in Quantum Mechanics:
Formulation of Quantum Mechanics in vector space language, uncertainty
product of two arbitrary operators, one dimensional harmonic oscillator by
operator method.
Matrix representation of operators, Schrodinger, Heisenberg and interaction
pictures. Dirac bracket notation.
3. Three dimensional potential well, Fermi energy, Radial solution of Hydrogen
atom and its total wave function .
4. Symmetry , invariance principle and conservation Laws:
Space translational invariance , time translational invariance and rotational
invariance and conservation laws.
5. Angular momentum:
Angular momentum algebra, addition of two angular momenta j_1=1/2,
j_2=1/2. Clebsch–Gordon Coefficients, examples, matrix representation of
j_1=1/2 and j_2=1. Spin angular momentum, Pauli spin matrices and their
properties, eigen value and eigen function,
6. Approximation methods:
Time independent perturbation theory, First and second order correction to
energy and eigen functions, Degenerate perturbation theory, application to
one electron system, relativistic mass correction, Spin-Orbit coupling, Zeeman
effect, linear Stark effect. Fine structure of spectral line of H-like atom
51
3. Grand canonical ensemble:
Grand canonical partition function, chemical potential, density fluctuation,
chemical potential of an ideal gas,
4. Quantum Statistical Mechanics:
Density matrices for micro canonical, canonical and grand canonical
ensembles, B-E and F-D distribution. Equation of states for B-E system, Bose
condensations, Planck’s law of black body radiation, equation of state for ideal
Fermi gas at low density-high temperature and at high density-low
temperature, theory of white dwarf star, relation between chemical potential
and Fermi energy,
5. Phase Transition:
First and second order phase transition in matter, Landau theory of phase
transition and its application to ferromagnetism.
PAPER-II
1. WKB Approximation:
Connection formulae, Bohr quantization rule, barrier penetration and α-decay,
2. Variational method:
He atom as an example, First order perturbation, exchange degeneracy.
3. Time dependant perturbation theory:
Interaction picture, Transition probability, constant and harmonic
perturbation, Fermi Golden Rule, electric dipole radiation, selection rule,
Spontaneous emission, Einstein’s A and B coefficients, Principle of Laser
4. Scattering theory:
Laboratory and center of mass system, differential and total scattering cross
section, scattering amplitude, scattering by spherically symmetric
potential, Partial wave analysis and phase shift, scattering by rigid sphere and
square well, Coulomb scattering, Formal theory of scattering, Green’s
function in scattering theory, Born approximation,
5. Symmetry and Conservation laws:
space and time translational invariance, rotational invariance of the
dynamical systems, Discrete symmetries- space reflection, charge conjugation
and time reversal symmetries..
6. Identical Particles:
Symmetric and anti-symmetric wave functions, Slater determinant, symmetric
and anti-symmetric wave functions of two identical spin ½ particles.
1. Klein-Gordon Equation:
Klein-Gordon equation and its drawback, need for a relativistic equation.
2. Dirac Equation:
Dirac equation, properties of Dirac γ-matrices,Non-relativistic reduction of
Dirac equation,magnetic moment of electron, Spin-Orbit coupling, Covariance
of Dirac equation and bilinear covarints.
52
3. Solution of Dirac Equation:
Free particle solution of Dirac equation and its physical interpretation,
projection operator for spin and energy,Zitterbewegung, Hole theory.
4. Symmetry in Dirac equation:
Charge conjugation, space reflection, time reversal symmetries of Dirac
equation, Continous systems and fields, transition from discrete to continous
systems, Lagrange and Hamiltonian formulation, Noether’s theorem.
5. Quantization of Free field:
Second quantization, covariant quantization of electromagnetic field,
quantization of neutral scalar field and Dirac field.
Unit-III : Electronics
1. Amplifiers:
Frequency response of linear amplifier, amplifier pass band, R-C, L-C and
transformer coupled amplifier, feed back amplifier, book-strapping the FET,
stability, noise
2. Operational amplifier: differential and integral amplifier,input and out put
impendance, summing integrating and differentiating amplifier, comparators
3. Oscillators:
Feedback criteria for oscillation, phase shift, Wien bridge, crystal controlled
and Klystron oscillators, multi vibrators- astable, monostale and bistable
4. Digital Circuits:
Logic fundamentals, Boolean theorem, Logic gates-RTL,DTL,TTL, RS flip-
flop, JK flip-flops
5. Boolean algebra, De Morgan theorem, AND,NAND,NOT,NOR
gates(CMOS,NMOS), MOS circuits, two phase inverter, dynamic MOS shift
register.
7. Superconductivity:
Phenomenological description of superconductivity, Meissner effect, Type-I
and type-II superconductors, London’s equation, outlines of BCS theory, High
T_c superconductor.
1. Nuclear Properties:
Basic nuclear properties: nuclear size, nuclear radius and charge distribution,
nuclear form factor, mass and binding energy, Angular momentum, parity
and symmetry, Magneticdipole moment and electric quadrupole moment,
2. Two body bound state;
Properties of deuteron, Schrodinger equation and its solution for ground state
of deuteron, rms radius, spin dependence of nuclear forces, electromagnetic
moment and magnetic dipole moment of deuteron and the necessity of tensor
forces.
3. Two-body scattering:
Partial wave analysis and phase shifts, scattering length,
magnitude of scattering length and strength of scattering, Significance of the
sign of scattering length; Eeffective range theory, low energy p-p scattering,
Nature of nuclear forces, charge independence, charge symmetry and iso-spin
invariance of nuclear forces.
4. β-decay :
β- emission and electron capture, Fermi's theory of allowed β-decay, Selection
rules for Fermi and Gamow-Teller transitions, Parity non-conservation and
Wu's experiment.
5. Nuclear Structure:
Liquid drop model, Bethe-Weizsacker binding energy/mass formula, Fermi
model, Shell model and Collective model.
6. Nuclear Reactions and Fission.
Different types of reactions, Quantum mechanical theory, Resonance
scattering and reactions, Breit-Wigner dispersion relation; Compound nucleus
formation and break-up Optical model; Principle of detailed balance, Transfer
reactions. Nuclear fission: Experimental features, spontaneous fission, liquid
drop model, barrier penetration, statistical model, Super-heavy nuclei.
54
7. Particle Physics:
Basic forces, classification of elementary particle, Gellmann-Nishijima
scheme,meson and Baryon octet, isospin, strangeness, spin ,parity, Lepton
and baryon number. conservation, parity conservation and non conservation ,
time reversal and consequence of time time reversal invariance, charge
conjugation, G-parity, Statement of CPT theorem and its consequences,
Hadron classification by isospin and hypercharge, SU(2) and SU(3) Groups,
algebras and generators;Elementary idea of SU(3) symmetry and Quarks
model, need for Color; Elementary ideas of electroweak interactions and
standard model.
Political Science
PAPER-I
PAPER-II
56
Constitutionalism: Meaning and Challenges.
57
Unit-V: Development Administration in India :
Good Governance.
Psychology
PAPER-I
UNIT-I
Principles of Learning:
58
UNIT-III
UNIT-IV
UNIT-V
PAPER-II
Applied Psychology
UNIT-I
The Self, Self Concept, Self Esteem, Self-efficacy, Self Monitoring Behavior, Self
Focusing Gender – maleness of Femaleness as a Crucial Aspect of identify.
59
Unit-II
Definition meaning and goals of counseling, Work settings and activities of the
counselors. Training of counselors, Characteristics of effective counselors.
Ethical and legal guidelines for counselors, Contemporary trends and issues in
counseling.
Family Counseling
Premarital and marital counseling, Counseling for women – family violence, women
abuse. Women in career, Dual career couple, The elderly people : Psychosocial
perspective for active aging.
Work and mental health, Occupational stress and counseling, Development of soft
skills, Pre-retirement and retirement counseling, Burnout: Prevention and
intervention.
Group counseling
UNIT-III
Health related behavior and health promotion, developmental, gender, and socio-
cultural factors in health. Programmes for health promotion.
Community Interventions:
60
Unit-IV:
Strategic HRM: Meaning, steps, types, challenges and role implementation. Policies
and practices of HRM.
Work Stress and its Management: Concept of stress, types, forms sources and
consequences. Copies with stress and stress management.
Unit-V:
LIFESPAN DEVELOPMENT
The study of human development – the life span perspectives, the transitions of
life., Developmental study as a science. Research methods – Observation,
Experimental, Other research methods – survey, case study, longitudinal and cross
sectional methods.
Sanskrit
PAPER-I
LITERATURE
61
PAPER-II
Sociology
PAPER– I
Status and Role, Religion, Culture, Norms and Values, Social control,
Socialization, Social Stratification and Social change.
62
Unit-IV:Classical Sociological Tradition. Emile Durkheim: Rules of Sociological
method, Division of Labour, Theory of Suicide, Theory of Religion.
Talcott Parsons,
Ralph Dahrendorf
- Phenomenology
- Ethnomethodology
- Exchange Theory
- Post-Modernism,
- Critical Sociology
PAPER – II
* Indological/Textual perspective :
G.S. Ghurye,
L. Dumont
M. N. Srinivas,
S. C. Dube
* Marxian Perspective :
D. P. Mukherjee,
A.R.Desai, &
R. K. Mukherjee.
* Subaltern Perspective :
David Hardiman
B. R. Ambedkar
63
Unit-II : Composition of Indian Society : Linguistic groups, Religious groups, Ethnic
groups, Cultural groups.
Unit-IV :Social Change : Theories : Linear Theory, Cyclical Theory, Conflict Theory
& Functionalist Theory.
Concept of Development:
64
Statistics
PAPER-I
Classical definition and axiomatic approach. Sample space. Laws of total and
compound probability. Probability of m events out of n. Conditional probability.
Bayes’ theorem. Random variable – discrete and continuous. Distribution function.
Mathematical expectation, moments and cumulants, Characteristic function and
probability generating function. Inversion, uniqueness and continuity theorems.
Markov, Holder, Jenson, Liapnov and Chebyshev’s inequalities.
Simple and composite hypothesis, kinds of error. Critical region. Different types of
critical regions and similar regions. Power function. Most powerful and uniformly
most powerful tets. Neyman-Pearson fundamental lemma. Unbiased tests.
Likelihood ratio test. Non-parametric tests- sign, median, run, Wilcoxon, Mann-
Whitney, Wald-Wolfowitz.
65
PAPER-II
Census versus sample survey. Pilot and large-sale sample surveys. Simple random
sampling with and without replacement. Stratified sampling and sample allocations,
Cost and variance functions. Ratio and regression methods of estimation. Sampling
with probability proportional to size. Cluster, multi-phase, multi-stage and
systematic sampling.
The life table, its constitution and properties. Makehams and Gompertz curves.
Abridged life table. U.N. model life tables. Stable and stationary populations.
Different birth rates. Total fertility rate. Gross and net reproduction rates. Different
mortality rates. Standardized death rate. Internal and international migration: net
migration. International and post censual estimates. Projection methods including
logistic curve fitting. Decennial population census in India.
Different types of control charts for variables and attributes. Acceptance sampling
by attributes-single, double, multiple and sequential sampling plans. OC and ASN
66
functions. Concepts of AOQL and ATL. Acceptance sampling by variables, use of
Dodge-Romig and other tables.
Telugu
PAPER-I
Study of History and Evolution of Telugu language – From the early period to
Modern period- The place of Telugu among the language families of India in general and
the Dravidian family in particular.
Study of evolution of Telugu literature from the early period to king poets of
Tanjavore.
Study of classical poets-their age and works-particular selections from Nannaya, Tikkana,
Errapragada, Saiva Poets, Srinatha, Potana, Krishna Devaraya poets and king poets of
Tanjavore.
UNIT-V. GRAMMAR.
PAPER-II
67
UNIT-II. Sahitya Vimarsa ( LITERARY CRITICISM).
Chandassu- Akankaras.
UNIT-V. Sanskrit.
Urdu
PAPER-I
68
Unit – II – Novels, Short Stories and Dramas.
Books Prescribed :
1. Godan – Premchand
2. Umrao-Jan-Ada – Ruswa
3. Urdu ke-Tera Afsane – Athar Parwez
4. Naqsh-i-Akhir – Ishteyaq Husain Qureshi
5. Anarkali – Imtiyaz Ali Taj.
Unit – III – Poetry.
Books Prescribed :
1. Intekhab-e-kalam-e-Meer – Abdul Haque
2. Majmua-e-Nazme-Hali – Hali
3. Bal-e-Jibreel – Iqbal
4. Kalam-e-Shaad – Shaad Azimabadi
5. Kulliat-e-Akber – Akber Ilahabadi
Unit – IV – Prose
Books Prescribed :
1. Sabras – Mulla Wajhi
2. Rasail-e-Shibli – Shibli
3. Ab-e-Hayat – Mohammed Husain Azad
4. Ghubar-e-Khatir – Moulana Abul Kalam Azad
5. Mazamin-e-Sir-Sayed – Sir Sayed Ahmed.
PAPER-II
Unit – I - Philolgy, Rhetoric & Prosody in Urdu
Books Prescribed :
1. Hindustani Lesaniyat – Dr. Mohiuddin Quadri Zor.
2. Zaban-o-Ilm-e-Zaban - Dr. Abdul Quadir Sarwari.
3. Jadid Ilmul-Balaghat – Prof. Abdul Majeed.
4. Jadid Ilmul-Urooz – Prof. Abdul Majeed.
Unit – II - Poetry & Criticism
Books Prescribed:
1. Qasaid-i-Zauque – S. Suleman.
2. Sehrul-Bayan – Mir Hasan.
3. Marsiya-e-Anees – Masud Husain
4. Moqaddama-e-Sher-o-Shaeri – Hali
69
5. Tanquidi-Nazariye - Ihtesham Husain.
6. Tanquid Kya Hai – Aale Ahmed Suroor.
7. Urdu Shairi-per-ek-Nazar – Kalimuddin Ahmed.
Unit – III – Ghalib – His prose and poetry
Books Prescribed:
1. Diwan-e-Ghalib – Abdur Rahman Bijnori
2. Ghalib – Nama – S.M. Ikram.
3. Khutoot-e-Ghalib – Mahesh Prasad.
Unit – IV - Dr. Nazir Ahmed and his Novels
Books Prescribed:
1. Miratul-Uroos – Dr. Nazir Ahmed
2. Banatun-Nas - -do-
3. Taubatan-Nasuh - -do-
4. Ayyama - -do-
5. Ibnul-Waqt -do-
Zoology
PAPER-I
PAPER-II
Electron transport chain and ATP synthesis; Carbohydrate metabolism and its
regulation; Protein synthesis, three dimensional structure of protein and
protein folding; Kinetics and mechanism of enzyme action; Metabolism of
amino acids-transamination, oxidative deamination; Oxidation of fatty acids;
DNA structure, types and its organization in the chromatin; Synthesis and
processing of mRNA; Regulation of gene expression in prokaryotes; Blotting
techniques – Southern, Northern and Western; Gene, genome and genetic
code.
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UNIT-IV IMMUNOLOGY AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
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