Syllabus of ICAR-JRF (PGS) in Social Science
UNIT-I: Importance of
Agriculture in national economy; basic principles of crop production;
cultivation of rice, wheat, chickpea, pigeon-pea, sugarcane, groundnut, tomato
and mango. Major soils of India, role of NPK and their deficiency symptoms.
Structure and function of cell organelles, mitosis and meiosis; Mendelian
genetics; elementary knowledge of photosynthesis; respiration, and
transpiration; structure and functions of carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic
acids, enzymes and vitamins. Major pests and diseases of rice, wheat, cotton,
chickpea, sugarcane and their management. Important rural development
programmes in India; organizational set up of agricultural research, education
and extension in India; Elements of statistics. Measures of central tendency
and dispersion, regression and correlation; concept of probability, sampling
techniques and tests of significance.
UNIT-II: Theory of
consumer behavior, theory of demand, elasticity of demand, indifference curve
analysis, theory of firm, cost curves, theory of supply, price determination,
market classification, concept of macroeconomics, money and banking, national
income. Agricultural marketing—role, practice, institutions, problems and
reforms, role of capital and credit in agriculture, crop insurance, credit
institutions, cooperatives, capital formation in agriculture, agrarian reforms,
globalization, WTO & its impact on Indian agriculture.
UNIT-III: Basic principles
of farm management, concept of farming system and economics of farming systems,
agricultural production economics-scope and analysis, factor-product
relationship, marginal cost and marginal revenue, farm planning and budgeting,
Agricultural finance: nature and scope. Time value of money, Compounding and
discounting. Agricultural credit: meaning, definition, need, classification.
Credit analysis: 4R’s, 5C’s and 7 P’s of credit, repayment plans. History of
financing agriculture in India. Commercial banks, nationalization of commercial
banks. Lead bank scheme, regional rural banks, scale of finance. Higher
financing agencies, RBI, NABARD, AFC, Asian Development Bank, World Bank, role
of capital and credit in agriculture; credit institutions, co-operatives and
agrarian reforms in India.
UNIT-IV: Extension
Education- concept, meaning, principles, philosophy, scope and importance;
Extension programme planning and evaluation- steps and principles, models of
organizing agricultural extension; historical development of extension in USA,
Japan and India. Rural development, meaning, importance and problems; Rural
development programmes in India-
Pre-independence era to recent ones; Extension teaching methods, definition and
concept of sociology, differences between rural & urban communities, social
stratification., social groups, social organization and social change. Rural
leadership, educational psychology- learning and teaching, role of personality
in agricultural extension Indian rural system- its characteristics; value
system, cast and class; structure and customs; rural group organization and
adult education.
UNIT-V: Communication,
principles, concepts, process, elements and barriers in teaching methods.
Different kinds of communication methods and media and AV aids/materials. Media
mix, Campaign, Cyber extension- internet, cybercafé, Kisan Call Centers,
teleconferencing, agriculture journalism, diffusion and adoption of
innovations- adopter categories, capacity building of extension personnel and
farmers- training to farmers, women and rural youth.
Suggested book for ICAR-JRF
(Social Science)
S. No |
Title
of Book |
Name
of Author |
| ||
1. |
Extension communication & management |
G.L. Ray |
2 |
Extension education |
Adivi Reddy |
3 |
Agricultural communication process & methods |
A.S. Sandhu |
4 |
Agricultural Economics |
Reddy, Ram, Shastry, Devi |
5 |
Micro and macroeconomics |
K.K. Dewett |
6 |
Farm Management |
VT Raju |
7 |
Agricultural marketing |
Acharya & Agrawal |
8 |
instant extension education |
Shruti |
9. |
An Introduction to Agricultural Social Sciences |
Subhash Chandra |
10 |
Objective Agricultural Economics |
K. Nirmal Ravi |
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