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The HOD, Staff and Students NBA Expert Committee Members
DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE & ENGINEERING The HOD, Staff and Students Hearty Welcome To NBA Expert Committee Members 1
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A Presentation By Prof.. P. NIRUPAMA H.O.D, C.S.E 2012 To 2013 2
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CONTENTS: Vision and Mission, PEOs and POs. Department Profile
Financial Profile CONTENTS: Physical Resources Teaching Learning Process. Human Resource- Students & Their Activities Human Resources –Faculty and Technical Staff. Continuous Improvement. Curriculum Analysis. PEO and PO Evaluation and Assessment. Future Plans and Conclusion. 3
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DEPARTMENT PROFILE Started in 2001 with 60 students intake.
Intake was increased to 120 in the year 2006. M.Tech program started in 2009 with intake 18. Permanent Affiliation in the year 2010. Located in A-Block, 1st and 2nd Floors. 4
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VISION To be one among the premier institutions of the country in producing ethically strong and technically sound Engineers and managers to serve the Nation. MISSION To create sacred environment for the students to acquire knowledge through innovative and professional approach and utilize it for the welfare of the mankind. 5
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Programme Educational Objectives:
P1. To produce graduates with a strong foundation that will enable them to identify and solve Computer Science Engineering Problems. P2.To prepare students into successful employment as computer Engineers in Industry, service, consulting, and/or for higher studies in government organizations or for advanced study at leading graduate schools in technical or non-technical fields. P3.To train students in identifying, formulating, analyzing and creating computer Engineering solutions to develop novel products and solutions for real life Problems. P4.To provide students with the basic skills to communicate effectively and to develop the ability to function as members of multidisciplinary teams. P5.To offer a curriculum that encourages students to become broadly educated engineers and life-long learners, with an ability to communicate effectively with various audiences and purposes, and a desire to seek out further educational opportunities. 6
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Program Outcomes: An ability to apply knowledge of Mathematics, Science, and Engineering. An ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data, An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health, and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams, An ability to identify, formulates, and solves engineering problems, An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility. An ability to communicate effectively, The board education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solution in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context, A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning, A knowledge of contemporary issues, and An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice. 7
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ACHIEVEMENTS Started M.Tech programme in the year 2009.
Awarded permanent affiliation by JNTUA, Ananthapur. Our student K.Radhika(07F61A0591) got 3rd University rank in 4-1 University results and placed Rank in top 20 in CSE. Placed 50% student placements constantly and achieved above 90% placements in 2011 passed outs. Prof. K. R. Manjula achieved Doctorate degree during this year and granted 3 publications from UGC. 8
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PHYSICAL RESOURCES 9
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Department Human Resources Physical Resources Department Governance 10
ORGANIZATIONAL CHART Human Resources Physical Resources Department Governance Faculty Technical & Supporting staff Students Laboratories Class Rooms Dept Library Curricular Activities Co-Curricular Activities Extra curricular Activities Maintenance of Laboratories /Equipment Dept Office Maintenance Dept Budget Academic Committees Student Counseling Department Development Committee Parents Meeting Class Monitoring Committee Industrial Tours Project Review Committee Alumni Student Seminars Placements Guest Lectures Time Tables Orientation Lectures Examinations Mini Projects Industry Institute Interactions – MoU R & D 10
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PHYSICAL RESOURCES DETAILS
Class Rooms : 07 Laboratories : 08 Staff Rooms/Cabins (including HOD) : 06 Computing Facility in Labs : 55 Systems Internet (5 Mbps) Facility : 55 Systems E-class Lecture Hall : 01 Wi-Fi enabled Internet Department Library 11
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Department Room Details
S.No. Room No. Usage Area(Sq.m) 1 A-308 Class Room for 2nd CSE-1 60 2 A-309 Class Room for 2nd CSE-2 3 A-305 Class Room for 3nd CSE-1 4 A-310 Class Room for 3nd CSE-2 64 5 A-306 Class Room for 4th CSE-1 6 A-307 Class Room for 4th CSE-2 68 7 C-312 Class Room for M. Tech. 30 8 A-303 E-Class Room 79 9 A-202 Dept Library 25 10 A-203 HOD Room 12 12
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11 A-302 Staff Room - I 12 A-304 Staff Room - II 9 13 A-311
S.No. Room No. Usage Area(Sq.m) 11 A-302 Staff Room - I 12 A-304 Staff Room - II 9 13 A-311 Staff Room - III 39 14 A-205 Staff Room - IV 8 15 C-311 Staff Room - V 27 13
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LAB DETAILS S.No. Physical Lab & Room No. Curriculum Lab used Systems
Configuration 1 Lab-1, A-201 IT Workshop Lab P-IV,80 GB HDD, 512 MB RAM, and 15’’ CRTs. 2 Lab-2, A-204 Advanced English Language Communication Skills Lab Dual Core, 320 GB HDD, 1 GB RAM, and 15.6 LCDs. 3 Lab-3, A-206 Case tools and Software Testing Lab /Unix Internals Lab / IT Workshop Lab Core i3, 320 GB HDD, 4 GB RAM, and 19 LCDs. 4 Lab-4, A-207 Web Technologies and data mining Lab / Object Oriented Programming Lab /Software Lab-1 5 Lab-5, A-208 Data Structures Lab / Computer Networks & Operating Systems Lab/Database Management System Lab 14
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LAB DETAILS 15 S.No. Physical Lab & Room No. Curriculum Lab used
Systems Configuration 6 Lab-6,A-210 Computing Facilities / Internet Lab Dual Core, 320 GB HDD, 1 GB RAM, and 15.6 LCDs. 7 Lab-7,A-211 English Language Communication Skills Lab P-IV,80 GB HDD,512 MB RAM, and 15.6 LCDs. 8 Lab-8,C-101 C Programming & Data Structures Lab Core i3, 320 GB HDD, 4 GB RAM, and 19 LCDs. 15
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Laser , Dot Matrix Printers
Systems /Printers/UPSs//Internet S.No. ITEM NAME CAPACITY 1 Total no. of Systems 339 2 Printer cum Scanner 3 Laser , Dot Matrix Printers 1, 2 4 UPSs 5 Internet Speed 10 Mbps-BSNL 20 Mbps-SKYTELL 6 Servers 16
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DEPARTMENT LIBRARY No. of Text Books : 250 No. of Journals : 2
No. of News letter : 04 Soft/Hard copies of mini and main Project reports : 50 University Question papers : 2 to 3 17
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TEACHING LEARNING PROCESS
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ACADEMIC CALENDAR II, III, IV Year B.Tech. – I Semester
I Spell of Instructions : to (09W) I Mid Examinations : to (03 D) II Spell of Instructions : to (08W) II Mid Examinations : to (03 D) Preparation & Practicals : to (06 D) End Examinations : to (02W) Commencement of class work for IV Year B.Tech : Commencement of class work for II and III Year B.Tech : IV Year B.Tech. – II Semester I Spell of Instructions : to (06W) I Mid Examinations : & (02 D) Project Work : to (06W) II Spell of Instructions : to (04W ) II Mid Examinations : & (02 D) End Examinations : to (07 D) Project Viva Voce Examinations : to (10 D) 20
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TIME TABLE & WORK LOAD per WEEK Designation THEORY LAB
PROFESSOR 2 1 Associate Professor Assistant Professor 4 21
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COURSE FILE CONTENTS Syllabus Lesson Plan
Class Time Table Students List Course Information Sheet Course Notes Assignment Topics University Question Papers Unit wise Questions Internal Evaluation Schedule Copies of Assignment Samples Copies of Internal Test Performance Class Attendance Log Book Students Performance in Internal Evaluation. Details of Remedial & Make Up classes Course Assessment Sheet 22
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DELIVERY As per Academic Calendar and Course Structure
Lecturing as per the Lesson Plan given in Handout Remedial & Make-up Classes Contents Beyond Syllabus Tutorials Assignments Unit Tests 23
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Unit Nos. Prescribed for
MONITORING OF COVERAGE OF SYLLABUS Periodically by HOD and Principal Review in Class Monitoring Committee Meetings Review of coverage of syllabus in Faculty meetings at Department Level As per the Requirements of Internal Evaluation Tests based on R09 regulations. Annual/ Semester Unit Nos. Prescribed for MID - I MID-II MID-III Annual (I Year) 1,2 3,4,5 6,7,8 (II & III Year) 1 to 4 5 to 8 Not Applicable 24
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CONTENTS BEYOND SYLLABUS
H E O R Y Additional Topics wherever needed and possible are being covered S. No. Year Subject Topics beyond syllabus 1 II-I Advanced Data Structures Programs on Files, Dynamic arrays in C++, and more examples on B+ trees. 2 III-I Computer Networks Routing techniques and IEEE standards, Application layer functions, and MAC layer. 3 IV-I Web Technologies Lab More Servlet Examples, More client and server applications, and Solving PHP related problems. 4 Compiler Design More Parsing examples, and More examples on intermediate code generations. 25
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2011 - 2012 2010 -11 S.No. Year Subject Topics beyond syllabus 1 II-II
OOPS More examples on Applets, and Network Programming. 2 DAA More examples on Time Complexity. 3 DBMS More examples on Nested Queries, and Normal Forms. 4 FLAT More examples on types of Grammars, and TMs. 5 III-II UI Various Shell Programming commands, and Features. 6 OOAD More examples on UML. S.No. Year Subject Topics beyond Syllabus 1 I C Programming Lab More on Pointers, and data Structures. 2 IT Workshop MS DOS Commands, LATEX Commands, and Internet. 26
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ADD ON CONTENTS IN THE LABORATORIES
Laboratory Add on Contents Network Programming Lab Study of Inter Process Communication mechanisms. Object Oriented Programming Lab Various Problems are designed and solved using applets and Swings. Web Technologies & Data Mining Lab Designing web pages with script languages and client server programming techniques and Mining techniques like classification, association etc . Case tools and Software Testing Lab Create various UML diagrams for analyzing problems and writing test cases, and testing projects in automated tools. 27
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Continuous Evaluation Procedure
1. Assessment for Theory Subjects: THEORY (100 MARKS) INTERNAL (30 MARKS) END EXAM. (70 MARKS) 1ST YEAR SEMESTERS MID TESTS – 3 (Quiz-10M, Desc-20M) EACH TEST – 30 MARKS MID TESTS – 2 (Quiz-10M, Desc-20M) Best two are considered i.e for 30 INTERNAL MARKS for each subject. Best one to be considered for awarding 30 INTERNAL MARKS for each subject 28
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4. Seminar (IV year II semester) – 50 marks, No External marks.
2. Laboratory Marks: LAB (75 MARKS) INTERNAL (25 MARKS) END EXAM. (50 MARKS) DAY TO DAY WORK & For Record Book (25 MARKS) 3. Project Work: PROJECT (200 MARKS) INTERNAL (60 MARKS) BASED ON SEMINAR REVIEWS END EXAM. (140 MARKS) 4. Seminar (IV year II semester) – 50 marks, No External marks. 29
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INCENTIVES AND REWARDS(ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENTS)
Incentive Amounts are fixed for Academic Performance of Staff S.No. Pass % Amount 1 Above 100% Rs: 5,000/- 2 Above 95% Rs: 3,000/- Incentives Given S.No. Year Academic 1 - 2 5 3 6 4 15 30
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Publications / Conferences
Incentives are fixed for research performance Publication Type Amount International Journal Rs: 3,000/- National Journal Rs: 1,500/- International Conference Rs: 2,000/- National Conference Rs: 1,000/- Incentives are given to staff since 3 years shown in beside table Year Publications / Conferences 11 4 5 2 31
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STUDENTS FEEDBACK Students asked to evaluate the faculty based on the following criteria Communication Impartial Way of teaching Punctuality Syllabus Coverage Use of modern aids Based on the feedback, the faculty member who have got <70% will be counseled by the HOD and Principal. If necessary the follow up action will be initiated. 32
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SAMPLE FEEDBACK COPY Sample Copy on Theoretical Subjects:
Sample Copy on Labs 33
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Present Salary (Rs. in Lakhs p.a)
TOP 10 ALUMNI DETAILS Sl. No. Name of the Alumni Batch Organization Name Designation Present Salary (Rs. in Lakhs p.a) 1 SelvaRaj Infosys Team Analyst 12 2 Srinath Team Lead 3 G.M.Mahesh 4 Lakesh Kgan Sr.S/W Engineer 7 5 M.Lavanya Mphasis 6 G.Sumathi Zotto 8 Lipin Wipro P.ShidiNath Oracle 9 CH.Avinash 10 D.A.Naveen Kumar CSC 34
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FINANCIAL RESOURCES 35
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BUDGET 36 Items Budget proposed in (2012-13) (lakhs) Budget spent in
( ) ( ) ( ) Equipments 35 32.25 - 14.40 9.45 Software's purchase 2.0 1.20 0.96 Consumables 0.2 0.1 0.5 0.3 0.25 Maintenance and Spares 0.05 Travel 0.09 0.15 Miscellaneous 1.0 0.72 0.6 0.9 Total 38.4 34.15 1.42 15.49 11.76 36
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HUMAN RESOURCES – STUDENTS & THEIR ACTIVITIES
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Students Admissions Items CAY (2012-13) CAYm1 (2011 – 12)
( ) Sanctioned Intake Strength in the program 120 No. of total admitted students in First year 118 109 No. of total admitted students (including lateral entries in 2nd year, if any), belonging to the same Batch - 120+8=128 118+7=125 109+5=114 % of students Admitted in First B.Tech. only 100 98.3 91 38
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Student Admissions ( Ranks range)
Rank Range 2012 – 13 1 to 10,000 00 01 10,001 to 20,000 20,001 to 50,000 20 28 32 21 50,001 to 1,00,000 29 25 26 1,00,001 to 2,00,000 30 24 2,00,000 & Above 05 02 04 06 Admitted without rank 36 42 37 31 ECET ranks - 08 07 Total 120 128 125 114 39
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ACADEMIC RESULTS S. No. Batch Sanctioned Intake Students Appeared
Students Passed out % Of students Passed 1 129 122 110 90 2 130 128 81 63 3 127 121 92 76 40
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ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Items LYG (2008-2012) LYGm1 (2007-2011) LYGm2
( ) # of students in 100<=Marks<90 00 # of students in 90<= Marks<80 01 # of students in 80<= Marks<70 24 29 30 # of students in 70<= Marks<60 68 47 54 # of students in 60<= Marks<50 18 04 07 # of students in 50<= Marks<40 # of students in <40 Marks 10 Total 110 81 92 Approximating API by percentage of all students(API) 6.872 5.653 6.3 41
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PLACEMENTS Year No. of Students Passed out
No. of Students selected on Campus No. of Students selected Off Campus 110 35 30 81 68 5 92 31 42 42
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VIT / JNTU / SVU / Private Universities / Abroad Universities
HIGHER EDUCATION Year No. Admitted for P.G Various Universities 20 VIT / JNTU / SVU / Private Universities / Abroad Universities 08 07 43
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COMPETITIVE EXAMS QUALIFIED
Nature of Exams: GATE / PGECET/ GRE/TOFEL Year No. of Passed out Students No. of Students Appeared Qualified 129 30 15 130 20 9 120 25 10 44
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ENTREPRENEURSHIP DEVELOPMENT
STUDENT PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY NO. OF STUDENTS REGISTERED: ISTE : ENTREPRENEURSHIP DEVELOPMENT Year Nature of Activity Resource Person Date How to be an Entrepreneur Branch Manager, SBI, Puttur. 45
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EVENTS ORGANIZED FOR STUDENTS
Year Event Name No. of Sub Events No. Participated Siddhartha Quest-2K12 2 106 Access 2KX 9 400 Siddhartha Quest-2K10 3 146 Access AK9 50 Siddhartha Quest-2K9 46
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No. of batches Participated
Performance in Paper Contests / Other Events Awards and Rewards Without Rewards Year No. of Prizes (So far) 1 4 2 Year No. of batches Participated (So far) 4 16 7 18 47
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TECHNICAL MAGAZINES / NEWS LETTERS
S.No. Technical magazine/ News letter Name of the Technical Magazine/News letter Issue No. & Month Name(s) of the Editor(s) Academic Year CAY ( ) 1 CSE info. Volume1,Issue2 10th Nov-2012 Mr. P. Ramesh Babu Associate Professor Mr.B. Krishna Moorthy Assistant Professor 2 Volume1,Issue1 10th Aug-2012 3 Technical Magazine INSIET SIET/TM/001/ Jun-2012 Dr. K.R.Manjula,P.Chandra Sekhar,S.Bhanu, S.Kishore Academic Year CAY m1( ) Volume1, Issue2 May-2012 Volume1, Issue1 Jan-2012 Dec-2011 Dr. K.R.Manjula,P.Chandra Sekhar, S.Bhanu,S.Kishore 48
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BEST 3 PROJECTS PER ACADEMIC YEAR
S. No. Year Title 1 Dynamic and Best route Identification with Security Routing Process Could Computing for Agent based Urban Transportation System Multi cloud Deployment of Computing Clusters for loosely coupled MTC Applications 2 Home Seva India Data Seclusion in Audio Files A Tabu Search Algorithm for Cluster Building 3 Video Steganography using flash video Routing Algorithm using Ant agents for MANETs An automatic Moving object for video surveillance application 49
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HUMAN RESOURCES – FACULTY
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Associate Professors(5)
Faculty Faculty Professors(5) Assistant Professors(21) Associate Professors(5) Faculty = 31 Faculty with B.Tech Program: 24 Total No. of C.S.E Students(Excluding 1st Year) :352 Faculty – Student Ratio = 1: 14.7 Cadre Ratio: 4 : 5 : 14 51
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List of Faculty for B.Tech
No. Name Designation Qualifi-cation Exp. D.O.J 1 Prof.P.Nirupama Prof. & Head M.E. 13 2 Dr.K.R.Manjula Professor Ph.D. 14 3 Mr.A.BalaSubramani M.Tech., (Ph.D.) 19 4 Mr. N. Prakash 5 Mrs.J. Suneetha Asso.Prof. 9.10 6 Mr.S. HrushiKesava Raju M.E.,(Ph.D.) 8.4 7 Mr. P. Ramesh Babu M.Tech.,(Ph.D.) 8 Mr. P.Balaji M.Tech. 7.4 9 Mr.G. Prasad Babu 10 Mr.A.Dhasaradhi Asst.Prof. 11 Mrs R.Swathi 52
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List of Faculty for B.Tech
S.No. Name Designation Qualification Exp. D.O.J 12 Mr.B.Ravindra Naick Asst.Prof. M.Tech. 4 13 Mrs.N. Sridevi 3 14 Mr.V. Balaji 2 15 Ms.I.Kasthuri 1 16 Mr.K. Muddu Swamy 17 Mr. M.Chiranjeevi 5.4 18 Mr.B. Krishna Murthi 5 19 Mr. T. Muni Pratap 20 Mr.B.Chandra Mouli 21 Mr.R.G. Kumar M.Tech . 0.5 22 Mrs.M. Chenchu Lakshmi B.Tech. 23 Ms.A.S. Kumari 24 Mr.C. Hema Sekhar List of Faculty for B.Tech 53
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List of Faculty for I B.Tech, M.Tech Programs
S.No. Name Designation Qualification Exp. D.O.J 1 Dr.R.Rajeswara Rao Professor Ph.D. 14 2 Mr.K. Venkata Guru Natha Naidu Asst.Prof. M.Tech. 3 Ms.M. Praneetha M.Tech . 0.5 4 Mr.K.V.S.K. Prakash B.Tech . 6 5 Ms.G. Prathima Mr.B.Pavan Kumar 1.4 7 Mrs .T. Terisa Average Experience of All the Faculty: 6 years 54
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FACULTY – STUDENT RATIO
Year X Y Z X+Y+Z N TSR Assessment CAY ( 2012 – 2013) 122 126 104 352 24 14.7 20 CAYm1 ( 2011– 2012) 128 105 359 23 15 CAYm2 ( ) 108 124 360 CAYm3 ( ) 131 121 383 25 Av. Assessment Where x = No. of students in 2nd year of the program y = No. of students in 3rd year of the program z = No. of students in 4th year of the program N = Total No. Faculty Members in the program 55
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CADRE RATIO Year X Y N CRI Assessment CAY (2012-2013) 4 5 24 1.21 24.4
CAYm1 ( ) 23 1.17 23.4 CAYm2 ( ) 3 2 0.75 15 CAYm3 ( ) 1 25 0.54 10.8 Av. Assessment 19 where x = No. of professors in the program y = No. of associate professors / readers in the program N = Total No. Faculty Members in the program 56
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FACULTY QUALIFICATION 1 21 2 24 6 18 4 23 6.3 25 09 14 5 20 10
Year X Y Z N FQI Assessment CAY ( ) 1 21 2 24 6 CAYm1 ( ) 18 4 23 6.3 25 CAYm2 ( ) 09 14 5 20 CAYm3 ( ) 10 Av. Assessment 22 Where x = No. of Faculty Members with Ph. D in Engineering y = No. of Faculty Members with M. E / M. Tech z = No. of Faculty Members with B. E / B. Tech N = Total No. Faculty Members. 57
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Faculty Retention for 2012-13
Items CAY ( ) CAYm1 ( ) CAYm2 ( ) CAYm3 ( ) # of faculty with less than 1y (x0) 08 07 00 # of faculty with 1y <= period < 2y (x1) 06 02 09 # of faculty with 2y <= period < 3y (x2) 04 # of faculty with 3y <= period < 4y (x3) 01 03 # of faculty with 4y <= period < 5y (x4) # of faculty with more than 5 y (x5) N 24 23 25 RPI = x1 + 2x2 + 3x3 + 4x4 +5x5 52 54 56 46 Assessment 8.67 9.39 9.33 7.36 Av. Assessment 9 58
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INSTITUTIONAL INVOLVEMENT
S.No. Staff Name Responsibility 1 Dr.K.R.Manjula President-W.E.C 2 Prof. P. Nirupama General Secretary-W.E.C 3 P. Balaji Dept. Exam Cell Coordinator 4 G. Prasad Babu Alumni Coordinator 5 A. Bala Subramani Placement Officer 6 B. Ravindra Naick Sports Incharges 7 P.Ramesh Babu Dept. R & D Cell 8 G.Venkata Guru Natha Naidu EDP Cell 59
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DEPARTMENTAL INVOLVEMENT
S.No. Faculty Name Responsibility 1 Prof.P.Nirupama H.O.D 2 i)G.Prasad Babu, ii)KVSK Prakash, iii)M.Chiranjeevi. B.Tech Projects Coordinator. 3 K.Muddusamy, T.Terisa Time table Incharge 4 A.Dhasaradhi Course Files Incharge 5 P.Ramesh Babu M.Tech Co ordinator , and Dept. R & D cell Coordinator. 6 B.Krishna Murthi News Letter Incharge 7 G.Venkata Guru Natha Naidu Counselling Incharge 60
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Research Publication and IPR
Name of faculty (contributing to FPPR) CAY CAYm1 CAYm2 CAYm3 Pub Point s (x) IPR (y) Pub +IPR Points (3x +y) Pub Points (x) IPR Points (y) Pub + IPR Points (3x +y) P. Nirupama 5 - 15 R.Rajeswara Rao Dr. K.R.Manjula S.HrushiKesava Raju G. Prasad Babu P. Ramesh Babu Sum 60 45 30 N (excluding Asst. Prof.) 4 3 FPPR=(Sum/N) 10 Av. Assessment 14 61
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Externally Funded R & D Project and Consultancy Work
Name of faculty (contributing to IP) IP Points CAY ( ) CAYm1 ( ) CAYm2 ( ) Dr. K.R.Manjula - 5 Sum N (Min. N is 3) (Excluding Asst.Prof.) 3 Assessment FPPC=4 × Sum/N 7 Av.Assessment 2 62
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Interactions of faculty members with outside world
Name of faculty (contributing to IP) IP Points CAY ( ) CAYm1 ( ) CAYm2 ( ) CAYm3 ( ) Prof.P.Nirupama 2 Dr. K.R.Manjula 1 G.M.Padmaja - G.Prasad Babu P.Ramesh Babu S.Hrushikesava Raju P.Balaji Prof.A.Bala Subramani N.Prakash Sum 14 8 7 6 N (Min. N is 3)(Excluding Asst.Prof.) 4 3 Assessment FPPC=4 × Sum/N Av. Assessment 63
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Total Faculty Attended Workshops since past 3 years is as follows
In Number 15 11 5 64
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International Journals / conferences / National Conferences/ Attended
Sl. No. Year No. Published in International Journal No. presented in National Conferences Total 1 10 2 12 3 4 5 65
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CONTINUING EDUCATION Academic Year Name of Workshop Organized
Resource Persons Date (s) No. of Faculty Attended National level seminar on Research Methodologies K.S.Sharma K.Nageswara Prasad,S.V.U. 9th Nov,2012 125 Techno Vision in Information Technology R.Seshadri,SVU P.Viswanadh,RGM 21st Sep,2011 50 NCCTAC2K12, Current Trends in Advanced Computing V.Subba Rao, S.V.University 3rd Dec,2012 85 Workshop on Recent Trends in IT a)R.Seshadri, SVU b)P.Viswanadh,RGM, c)S.Jyothi,SPMVV 25th Feb, 2010 47 66
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PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIP
Year CSI ISTE IEEE IAENG 1 10 2 20 5 3 - 67
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Facilities and Technical Staff
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TECHNICAL SUPPORTING STAFF
No. Staff Name Designation Highest Qualification D.O.J 1 Mr.M. Satheesh Babu IT Manager B.Tech 2 Mr.S.Karuppasamy System Admin. B.Sc 3 Mr.S. Ramaraju Lab Tech. Diploma 18/10/2006 4 Mrs K.Kalyani Programmer 5 Mr.G.Muni Sankar Lab Asst. B.Com. 6 Mr. P.Gopinath 7 Ms. P. Lavanya M.Sc (CS) 8 Mrs. A. Divyaja 9 Mr. N.Devarajulu 10 Mr.Y. Deniel B.Sc (Maths) 69
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SKILLS UP GRADATION S.No. Technical Staff Name Skills Gained 1
Mr.M. Satheesh Babu MCP,MCSA,MCSC Certification 2 Mr.S.Karuppasamy MCP, MCSA, CCNA certification 3 Mr.G.Muni Sankar MCSC Certification 4 Mr.Y. Deniel Hardware Certified 70
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Technical Training Conducted
S.No Name of the Program Conducted by Date 1 Introduction to Computers Dept.of CSE SIETK 24/09/2012 2 Introduction to Ms-Office(Ms-Word) 25/09/2012 3 Introduction to Power Point And Excel 26/09/2012 4 Introduction to Hardware and Networking 27/09/2012 5 Introduction to Office Automation Package 28/09/2012 6 29/09/2012 71
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Computing Facility Lab Details
Title of the Lab Purpose Location Major Equipments Utility computing facilities/ Internet Lab 1.For R&D 2.Report preparation 3. Internet access Lab-6, A-Block, First Floor, 79 Sqm 55 Wipro Dual Core Systems with 1GB RAM, 320GB Hard Disk systems installed with Windows XP. Working between 8AM to 5PM 100% Utility 70
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LIST OF SOFTWARES S.No. Software Name 1 MS-Office 2 Turbo C 3
Borland C 4 Jdk 1.5 5 Rational Rose 6 Weka 5.X 7 Tomcat Server 8 Win Runner, QTP 9 Windows XP 10 Red Hat Linux 72
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Labs with Technical Staff beyond Working Hours
Title of Laboratory Technical Support Working Hours Lab-5 Ms.Lavanya Working Hours 8:45 am to 3:25 pm. Beyond Working Hours 3:30 pm to 5 pm on Monday Lab-4 Mr. P. Gopi nath Beyond Working Hours 3:30 pm to 5 pm on Tuesday Lab-3 Mrs A.Divyaja Beyond Working Hours 3:30 pm to 5 pm on Thursday Lab-1 Mr.S. Ramaraju Beyond Working Hours 3:30 pm to 5 pm on Wednesday Lab-6 Mr. Y.Daniel Beyond Working Hours 3:30 pm to 5 pm on Daily Lab-8 Mr. N.Devarajulu 73
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CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENTS
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Success Index Academic Performance
Items LYG ( ) LYGm1 ( ) LYGm2 ( ) Success Index 0.85 0.62 0.77 Academic Performance Items LYG ( ) LYGm1 ( ) LYGm2 ( ) API 6.872 5.653 6.3 75
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Enhancement of FQI and RTI R & D work and consultancy, and interaction
Items CAY ( ) CAYm1 ( ) CAYm2 ( ) CAYm3 ( ) FQI 6.2 6.3 5 RPI 52 54 56 46 R & D work and consultancy, and interaction Items CAY ( ) CAYm1 ( ) CAYm2 ( ) CAYm3 ( ) FPPR 15 10 FPPC - IP 7 8 Sum 22 23 18 76
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CURRICULUM ANALYSIS 77
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Curriculum Subjects(Year Wise)
I YEAR II YEAR English I Semester Engineering Physics Probability and Statistics Engineering Chemistry Basic Electrical Engineering Mathematics - I Mathematical Foundations of Computer science Programming in C and Data Structures Advanced Data Structures Engineering Drawing Digital Logic Design Mathematical Methods Electronic Devices and Circuits C Programming and data structures Lab. Electrical and Electronics Lab Engineering and IT Workshop Data Structures lab Engineering physics and Engg chemistry lab II Semester English Language and Communications Skills lab Environmental Science Total I Year Subjects = 11 Computer Organization Data base Management Systems Object Oriented Programming Formal Languages and Automata Theory Design and Analysis Of Algorithms Object Oriented Programming lab Database Management Systems Lab Total II Year Subjects = 16 78
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III YEAR IV YEAR 79 I Semester Principles of Programming Languages
Web technologies Software Engineering Software Testing Computer Graphics Managerial Economics and Financial Analysis Compiler Design Data ware housing and Data Mining Operating Systems Advanced computer Architecture Computer Networks Software project Management Advanced English Language and Communications Skills lab Software Testing and Case tools Lab Computer Networks and Operating Systems Lab Web technological And Data Mining lab II Semester Object Oriented Analysis and Design Management science Unix Internals Design Patterns Optimizing Techniques Web Services Microprocessors and Micro Controllers Internet Working with TCP / IP Distributed Systems Seminar Artificial Intelligence Project Work Micro processors and interfacing lab Unix Internals lab Total III Year Subjects = 16 Total I VYear Subjects = 14 79
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COURSE STRUCTURE Subject Category No. % HSS 8 14 Sciences 4 6 Core 33
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Additional Contents to bridge gaps
S. No. Subject Name Contents 1 C & Data Structures Lab Pointers, Sorting Methods 2 Advanced Data Structures ADTs, Circular Linked Lists, and Sorting Methods 3 Computer Graphics User Oriented Color Models, Projections 4 Database Management Systems Nested Queries, Normal Forms, and Concurrency Control 5 Object Oriented Programming System Applets, and Networking 6 Design and Analysis of Algorithms Divide and Conquer Technique, Back Tracking, and Time Complexity. 7 Formal Languages and Automata Theory CFG, and Types of Turing Machines 8 Web Technology CSS, HTML Controls, and Java Script 9 Object Oriented Analysis and Design More examples on visualizing UML. 10 Artificial Intelligence Techniques in Problem Solving, and Knowledge. 81
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Curriculum Updates and PEOs review
The following subjects syllabus are updated by University: C Programming and Data Structures Advanced Data Structures Computer Graphics Data Base Management Systems Object Oriented Programming Computer Networks Web Technologies Unix Internals Artificial Intelligence Data Warehousing and Data Mining. 82
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PEOS, POS ASSESSMENT 83
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S.No. Program Educational Objectives
PEOs Assessment From out gone Students S.No. Program Educational Objectives Percentage of Feedback 1 To prepare the students to excel in postgraduate programmes at leading graduate schools in engineering, business, management, and also to pursue scientific and technical careers beginning with entry-level electronic engineering positions in industry, service and/or government organizations. 18 2. To educate the students in a broad range of areas related to effective and established engineering practice, including a solid foundation in mathematical, scientific and engineering fundamentals required to solve engineering/analytical problems, information technology to pursue higher studies. 40 3. To train the students such as identifying, formulating, analyzing, and creating engineering solutions using appropriate current engineering techniques, designing skills and tools to develop novel products and solutions for the real life problems. 68 4. To encourage the students in teamwork skills, effective communication skills, multidisciplinary approach, preparing them for the professional and ethical attitude and an ability to relate engineering issues to broader social context. 16 5. To offer the students with a curriculum that encourages them to become broadly educated engineers by providing an academic environment aware of excellence, leadership and life-long learning needed for a successful professional career. 11 Avg. Calculation for program educational objectives 31 84
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POs Assessment from 2008-12 Out gone Students Percentage of Feedback
Program Outcomes Percentage of Feedback a An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics , science & engineering. 32 b An in-depth knowledge of Engineering enables the graduates to contribute in the area of expertise. 75 c An ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data 73 d An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability e An ability to communicate effectively. 15 f An ability to identify, formulate and solve real world engineering problems and understanding professional and ethical responsibility. 69 g A recognition and ability to engage in life-long learning and acquiring knowledge of contemporary, environmental and technological issues and their impact on society. 7 h An ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams. 10 i An ability to function effectively as an individual and in a group with the capacity to be a leader or manager as well as an effective team member. 5 j A knowledge of contemporary issues. 53 k An ability to use the techniques, skills, and necessary modern engineering tools. Average Calculation for program outcomes 38 85
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Mapping PEOs with POs a b c d e f g h i j k X PROGRAMME OBJECTIVES
PROGRAM OUTCOMES a b c d e f g h i j k P1 X P2 P3 P4 P5 86
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To add more M.Tech. Programs.
To train Faculty Members in Industries in thrust areas. To take up Sponsored R&D Projects. To undertake consultancy works in collaboration with industries. FUTURE PLANS 87
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Achieved University Rank by K. Radhika.
CONCLUSIONS The Department in the short span of about 11 Years has grown in it’s size in-terms of infrastructure, staff, and students. Achieved University Rank by K. Radhika. Achieved 90% pass for 2012 Passed Outs and Constantly maintained above 60% pass in past three academic years. Achieved above 90% Placements during Excellent Infrastructure facilities. Qualified and Competent Faculty. Well Equipped and Well Maintained laboratories. Active Involvement in Research Activities. Excellent performance of students in academic, co-curricular and extra curricular activities. 88
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THANK YOU 89
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