Eng or Kan Typewriting – III (Speed 35 or 25Wpm) detail DTE Kar Diploma syllabus for Commercial Practice (CP), C15 scheme is extracted from DTE Karnataka official website and presented for diploma students. The course code (15CP35E), and for exam duration, Teaching Hr/week, Practical Hr/week, Total Marks, internal marks, theory marks, duration and credits do visit complete sem subjects post given below. The syllabus PDFs can be downloaded from official website.
For all other cp 3rd sem syllabus for diploma c15 scheme dte karnataka you can visit CP 3rd Sem Syllabus for Diploma C15 Scheme DTE Karnataka Subjects. The detail syllabus for eng or kan typewriting – iii (speed 35 or 25wpm) is as follows.
Pre-requisites:
Knowledge of Basic English and Basic knowledge of Typewriting speed at the rate of 25 WPM.
Course Objectives:
- To Attain the Speed of 35 WPM.
- Regular practice of passages with speed and accuracy at the rate of 35 Words per minute.
DEVELOPMENT OF LEARNING SKILLS:
For complete syllabus and results, class timetable and more pls download iStudy Syllabus App. Its a light weight, easy to use, no images, no pdfs platform to make students life easier.
Course Outcomes:
- To typewrite for 15 minutes an ordinary printed passage of 525 words impeccably.
COURSE CONTENTS
- Practicing of the graded exercises of typing speed passages at 25 WPM. 10
- Practicing of the graded exercises of typing speed passages at 30 WPM. 15
- Practicing of the graded exercises of typing speed passages at 35-40WPM. 50
- Three Internal Assessment Tests of 15 Minutes duration. 03
Resources:
For complete syllabus and results, class timetable and more pls download iStudy Syllabus App. Its a light weight, easy to use, no images, no pdfs platform to make students life easier.
Model Question Paper:
Instructions to the candidates:
- Typewrite only on one side of the paper.
- Usedouble line spacing.
- Set the marginal stops between 10 and 75 degrees.
- Pay special attention to neatness and accuracy.
It is fascinating to watch those eternally active little insects, the ants, scurrying about out-of-doors. Yet by far the greater part of the ants ‘complex social activities goes on inside the nest out of our sight. The only way we can watch them care for their young, distribute food, dig and build and carry, meet intruders and perform other acts of their private lives is to provide an artificial observation nest for a colony,
No one type of artificial nest will allow us to observe all kinds of any behavior to best advantage. In nests containing soil, we can watch ants make tidy homes with a network of galleries. To study their feeding, growth, grooming, fighting and other
intimate behavior, however, it is better to have a nest without soil. In making any kind of artificial nest we must keep in mind a few basic needs of all ants. Fresh air and moisture are very important. If the soil and atmosphere become too dry, the ants will dry; if too wet, moulds will develop. Usually the feeding area of the nest can be well lighted, for most ants forage for food in bright daylight. However, ants will not rear their young or behave naturally if the brood rooms and galleries within the nest are not dark enough. Fortunately for human observers, however, ants are not sensitive to the longer wave lengths of the spectrum. A piece of red glass or cellophane, laid over the clear glass of the artificial nest, transmits only red rays and makes it possible to watch the ants
without disturbing them. With a little experimenting, you can find a shade that you can see through easily but that will be dark enough so that the ants continue to work normally. If the workers pick up larvae and pupae and scurry about as though to seek shelter, it is too light for them. If you do not have a red glass or cellophane cover, you can keep the brood area covered with cardboard or cloth, removing the cover only for short periods of observation.
As a beginning or emergency nest, you may simply place ants and earth in a shallow dish set in a pan of water, which will prevent the ants from escaping. Add small amounts of food and water directly to the soil. A nest with a separate food chamber will be much, more satisfactory than a dish. But bees store pollen and honey in their nests to provide food for their young. Pollen is collected by the hairs on a bee’s legs and body and also by specialized structures, called pollen brushes, which are found on the hind legs and sometimes on the abdomen of female bees. After pollen is collected, it is brushed off by the insect’s head and feet, dampened with dew or some other form. If you should want to clear the brood chamber of ants for any reason, you can expose it to light and darken the feeding area.
SCHEME OF VALUATION:
Half Mark is to be deducted for each of the following types of Mistakes:
- Omission of words,
- Commission of words,
- Mis-Spelt words,
- Space between the Letters of the same Word,
- Failure to leave space between the Words,
- Failure to leave required space after Full stop and other Punctuations,
- Failure to observe Upper and Lower Cases,
- Wrong Splitting of Words,
- Improper Indentation of Paragraphs.
For detail syllabus of all other subjects of BE Cp, C15 scheme do visit Cp 3rd Sem syllabus for C15 scheme.
Dont forget to download iStudy Syllabus App for latest syllabus and results, class timetable and more.