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COMMON UNDERSTANDING OF CREDITS

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Bachelor with Honours. Masters. Postgraduate Certificate & Diploma ... 360 credits for Bachelor (Gen) 1 Honours year in England. Academic load per week ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: COMMON UNDERSTANDING OF CREDITS


1
COMMON UNDERSTANDING OF CREDITS
  • Workshop to improve the academic credit system in
    Malaysia

31 Jan-2 February 2005
2
Why we need common understanding
  • Secure standards of qualification
  • Facilitate credit transfer within and among
    institutions inside outside the country
  • Facilitate credit transfer within and among
    sectors skills, vocational technical, academic
    professional
  • Facilitate credit transfer between formal, non
    formal informal education
  • Facilitate mutual recognition of qualifications

3
Current practice
  • Variation among and within institutions
  • Required student activities outside the contact
    hours not well accounted for vary considerably
    in the calculation of credits, especially those
    related to lab and field work
  • Need common understanding in calculating credits
    for industrial attachments, research or project
    work, field assignments etc
  • Less value placed on student centered, hands-on
    approaches, e.g 4 hours of PBL/week 2 credits
    only but 1 hr lecture/week 1 credit

4
Common Understanding Credit is.
  • A MEASURE OF THE TOTAL ACADEMIC LOAD OR LEARNING
    EFFORT OR VOLUME OF LEARNING A STUDENT MUST
    UNDERTAKE TO ACHIEVE A DEFINED GROUP OF LEARNING
    OUTCOMES
  • all forms of learning in hours contact hours,
    work-based, research, experiential, practical
    activities, private study, preparation for
    assessment etc
  • expressed as Minimum Total Credits (specify
    range) for the qualification level, the field and
    exit level of program.

5
1. Qualification Levels
  • Certificate
  • Diploma
  • Advanced Diploma
  • Graduate Certificate Diploma
  • Bachelor with Honours
  • Masters
  • Postgraduate Certificate Diploma
  • Doctoral/PhD

6
. Learning Outcomes
  • The LEVELS are distinguished from each other
    principally by learning outcomes
  • Other distinguishing characteristics may include
  • minimum entrance requirement,
  • typical duration
  • cumulative duration in full time equivalent
    (part-time courses)
  • Note distinguishing characteristics need to be
    reviewed in light of flexible education modeled
    on Life Long Learning

7
Learning Outcomes
  • Abilities in various domains of learning that
    students are expected to demonstrate as evidence
    of competency.
  • Mastery of body of knowledge (depth, breadth and
    relative difficulty of specific content)
  • practical or psychomotor skills (range and
    complexity),
  • scientific method, critical thinking, problem
    solving, autonomy in decision-making
  • communication skills, leadership and team work
  • information management and life long learning
    skills
  • personal attributes, ethics, shared values and
    professionalism
  • social responsibility and accountability

8
Leaning outcomes
9
. Purpose /character of qualification
  • At the same level, there may be different nature
    or purpose of qualifications example
  • MASTERS LEVEL
  • scholarship (Masters by course work)
  • preparation for research and deepening subject
    knowledge (Masters by research)
  • Research scholarship (combined coursework
    research)
  • professional and practice-related (e.g postgrad
    Medicine)
  • CERTIFICATE LEVEL
  • skills training
  • occupational oriented
  • preparation for higher education.

10
. Credit or academic load
  • measure of the learning effort or volume of
    learning a student must undertake to achieve a
    defined group of learning outcomes
  • all forms of learning in hours - lectures,
    tutorial, work-based, research, experiential,
    practical activities, private study, preparation
    for assessment etc
  • formal contact hours additional hours of work
    students are expected to undertake on their own.
  • Qualifications with the same name have the same
    minimum total credit requirement.
  • Qualifications at the same level may have
    different credit requirements (e.g between MMed,
    MS and MOG).

11
Specification of credits
  • Range of credits for each qualification level
    (bachelor, masters etc)
  • Minimum credits for a field at a particular level
    (Medicine, Engineering, Science)
  • Minimum credits at exit level
  • Limit total credit that can be transferred
  • Eliminate practice of condonement
  • Some flexibility in program design

12
NOTIONAL CREDITS
13
Example from EU
  • 1 credit 25 hours (countries can determine
    their own notional hours, depending on the
    structure of the education system)
  • UK 1 credit10 hours
  • Hungary 1 credit18 hours
  • Undergraduate program 180-240 credits
    (1200-1800 hours/year, average 1500 hours)
  • Postgraduate programme 60-120 credit
  • 1 year 60 credits (30 credits for 6 months and
    20 credits for a term or trimester)

14
Notional hours for Malaysia
  • 1 credit40 hours
  • Equivalence Example
  • 120 credits for Bachelor (Hons) in Malaysia 4800
    hours is equivalent to
  • 480 credit for Bachelor (Hons) in Scotland (4800
    hours)
  • 192 credits for Bachelor in in EU system (range
    from 4500-6000 hours)
  • 360 credits for Bachelor (Gen) 1 Honours year
    in England

15
Academic load per week
  • Need to cap the student workload per week to
    allow them sufficient time for other campus
    activities self development
  • Allows flexibility in determining program length
    depending on policies for academic
    year/semester/term which vary because of the
    diversity in imported programs

16
Recommended academic load per week
  • 8 hours a day for 5 days
  • 6 hours at the weekend
  • Total 46 hours
  • Exceptions to professional courses which may have
    higher (punishing) workload
  • For a 14 week semester, the load is 644 hours
    (16 credits)

17
Program duration
  • Depends on
  • minimum total credit
  • organisation of the academic calender
  • Example
  • Bachelor (Hons) 120 credits (4800 hours)
  • No of weeks required4800/46104.3 weeks
  • If 1 semester 14 weeks, duration of program7.5
    semesters
  • If semester is 17 weeks, duration of program is 6
    semesters.

18
Advantages of credits based on student activity
  • distributes academic load evenly within a program
  • eliminates confusion due to institutional
    differences in interpretation of contact hours
    and academic semesters or year.
  • facilitates credit transfer
  • gives autonomy to the institutions to creatively
    design programs to meet various needs
    characteristics of students (full time, part
    time, weekend, distance, e-learning,
    problem-based, hands-on etc)

19
Group Discussion
  • Discuss
  • the definition of credit
  • Notional credit hours
  • Workload per week
  • Recommend guidelines for estimating private
    study and experiential learning (e.g industrial
    attachment) state the basis for such
    recommendations (e.g due to differences in the
    field or qualification level)

20
  • TERIMA KASIH
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