Common NBA Accreditation Mistakes That Cost Institutions Their Grade

Contents

NBA accreditation is not just paperwork.

It is a rigorous, outcome-driven evaluation of your entire engineering programme. NBA assessors look for evidence. They look for consistency. They look for alignment.

And they find gaps. Hundreds of them. Every single visit.

The most painful truth about

NBA accreditation mistakes is this: most are avoidable. They are not caused by poor academic quality. They happen because of poor preparation, misunderstood frameworks, and preventable documentation errors.

This guide covers the 15 most common NBA accreditation mistakes. Each one is explained clearly. Each one has a practical fix.

Read this before your next NBA submission. Or before your next visit preparation cycle begins.

Before you fix mistakes, know where you stand. BGC’s NBA Readiness Assessment identifies every gap before the assessor does. Book your assessment today.

Quick Reference: Mistake vs. Fix

Area❌ Common Mistake✅ What It Should Be
OBE FrameworkCOs written as topics, not outcomesCOs must use Bloom’s action verbs
CO-PO MappingAll COs mapped at Level 3 to all POsJustified, varied mapping with rationale
CO AttainmentTarget set at 100% — unrealisticAttainment target: 60-70% is standard
SARSAR filed last-minute without dataSAR built over rolling 12-month cycle
Programme OutcomesPOs copied verbatim from NBA templatePOs must reflect your institution context
Assessment ToolsOnly internal exams used for attainmentMix of direct and indirect assessment tools
RubricsNo rubrics for assignments or labsEvery assessment needs a defined rubric
Faculty AwarenessOnly coordinator knows OBE frameworkAll faculty trained and aligned
PSOsPSOs missing or vaguePSOs specific to programme and industry
Exit SurveyExit survey done in last week before visitExit surveys conducted each semester
CAY DataCurrent Academic Year data incompleteCAY data updated in real-time monthly
Curriculum GapNo formal curriculum gap analysis doneAnnual gap analysis with industry input
CO-PO MatrixMatrix present but not justifiedMatrix with Bloom’s level justification
DocumentationEvidence not organised criterion-wiseIndexed, date-stamped evidence folders

Part 1: OBE Mistakes — The Foundation Errors

OBE (Outcome Based Education) is the philosophical backbone of NBA. If your OBE implementation is weak, everything else crumbles.

Mistake 1: Writing Course Outcomes (COs) as Topics, Not Outcomes

This is the single most common OBE mistake in India.

Hundreds of institutions write COs like this: “Unit 1: Introduction to Thermodynamics.” That is a topic. It is not an outcome.

An outcome describes what the student will

do after learning. Not what they will be

taught.

❌ Wrong CO: “Study of different types of concrete mixes.”

✅  Fix: “Analyse the compressive strength of M20 and M30 concrete mixes using IS 456 standards.”

Every CO must begin with a Bloom’s Taxonomy action verb. Use words like analyse, design, evaluate, demonstrate, apply, and formulate.

BGC’s Outcome Based Education Services help departments rewrite every CO correctly — at the right Bloom’s level.

Common NBA Accreditation Mistakes to Avoid  by Bhavya Gyan Consultants

Mistake 2: Setting Bloom’s Level Incorrectly for COs

Each CO must be assigned a Bloom’s Taxonomy level. Many institutions assign Level 1 (Remember) to COs that should be at Level 3 (Apply) or Level 4 (Analyse).

NBA assessors check Bloom’s alignment carefully. A mismatch between the CO level and the assessment tool triggers immediate questioning.

✅  Fix: Map each CO to the correct Bloom’s level based on the course’s academic demand and industry relevance.

Mistake 3: Programme Outcomes (POs) Copied Verbatim from the NBA Template

NBA provides 12 graduate attributes as a template. Institutions are expected to adapt these to their context.

Copying them word-for-word is not acceptable. Assessors ask faculty to explain how POs relate to their specific programme.

If faculty cannot answer, it signals that OBE is cosmetic — not embedded.

✅  Fix: Customise POs to reflect your programme’s disciplinary focus, regional industry context, and graduate profile.

Mistake 4: Programme Specific Outcomes (PSOs) That Are Too Vague

PSOs define what makes your programme unique. They go beyond the 12 generic POs.

Many institutions write PSOs like: “Graduates will have knowledge of engineering.” That is meaningless.

❌ Wrong PSO: “Students will be good engineers with practical skills.”

✅  Fix: “Graduates will design and implement embedded systems for IoT applications in the automotive sector.”

PSOs must be verifiable. They must connect to your industry environment and placement record.

Are your COs, POs, and PSOs correctly framed and mapped? Let BGC audit your entire OBE framework. Explore BGC’s OBE Services for end-to-end OBE implementation support.

Part 2: CO-PO Mapping Mistakes

CO-PO mapping shows how each Course Outcome contributes to Programme Outcomes. Mistakes here are among the most frequently cited by NBA assessors.

Mistake 5: Mapping All COs to All POs at Level 3

This is one of the most obvious red flags for assessors.

Every subject cannot contribute equally to all 12 POs. A course in Fluid Mechanics cannot legitimately address PO9 (Individual and Team Work) at the same level as PO3 (Design).

When every cell shows “3,” assessors know the mapping was done for the sake of completion.

✅  Fix: Use a justified, varied mapping. Most courses should have 4-6 relevant POs. Levels should range from 1 to 3 based on contribution strength.

Mistake 6: No Justification Column in the CO-PO Matrix

Many institutions submit the CO-PO matrix as a grid of numbers. No explanation. No rationale.

NBA assessors ask: “Why is CO3 mapped to PO7 at Level 2?” If no one can answer, the mapping has no credibility.

✅  Fix: Add a justification column or a separate document explaining each significant mapping with reference to course content.

Mistake 7: Missing CO-PSO Mapping

Most institutions remember CO-PO mapping. Many forget CO-PSO mapping entirely.

NBA requires that Course Outcomes also map to Programme Specific Outcomes. Missing this is a direct documentation deficiency.

✅  Fix: Prepare a separate CO-PSO matrix for every course. Include it in the course file alongside the CO-PO matrix.

Mistake 8: CO Attainment Targets Set Too High or Too Low

NBA requires that institutions set a target attainment level for each CO. Then they must show whether the target was met.

Setting a target of 100% is unrealistic and raises suspicion. Setting it at 30% shows no ambition.

✅  Fix: The standard practice is 60-70% of students achieving 60% or more marks in the relevant assessment. Set targets accordingly and justify them.

BGC’s dedicated CO-PO Mapping Support Services build your entire attainment framework from scratch — correctly.

Part 3: SAR Errors — Self-Assessment Report Mistakes

The SAR (Self-Assessment Report) is the primary document NBA evaluates. SAR errors are directly linked to score loss.

Mistake 9: Preparing the SAR in the Last Two Months Before Submission

The SAR is not a report you write. It is a report you compile — over years.

Institutions that start SAR preparation two months before submission date are almost always scrambling for data.

Assessors spot this immediately.

✅  Fix: SAR preparation must run as a continuous, academic-year-aligned process. Update SAR data quarterly.

Mistake 10: Incorrect or Incomplete CAY and CAY-1 Data

NBA evaluates performance across the Current Academic Year (CAY) and two previous years (CAY-1, CAY-2).

Incomplete CAY data — missing student intake numbers, incomplete result data, or absent placement statistics — directly reduces your score.

✅  Fix: Assign a dedicated data manager or SAR coordinator to update CAY data in real-time every semester.

Mistake 11: Quantitative Metrics Not Backed by Supporting Documents

SAR asks institutions to self-rate against criteria. Many institutions give high scores without evidence.

Assessors verify every claim. A score of 25/25 on Faculty Qualification without supporting faculty credential documents is a major red flag.

✅  Fix: Every quantitative claim in the SAR must have a supporting document. Index them criterion-wise and keep them accessible during the visit.

Mistake 12: SAR Data Inconsistent Across Criteria

SAR has multiple criteria. Data on student count, pass percentage, and placement figures often appears in multiple sections.

Inconsistent numbers across sections — even minor discrepancies — signal data fabrication to assessors.

✅  Fix: Create a single master data sheet. All SAR sections must pull data from this one verified source.

BGC’s NBA Documentation Framework Services build a consistent, assessor-ready SAR structure for your institution.

A poorly structured SAR can cost you 20-30 marks even with good academic performance. Let BGC build your SAR correctly. Explore BGC’s NBA Process Guidance Services today.

Part 4: Assessment Design and Documentation Mistakes

Mistake 13: Using Only Internal Exams for CO Attainment Measurement

Many institutions measure CO attainment using only CIE (Continuous Internal Evaluation) marks.

NBA expects a mix of direct and indirect assessment tools. Direct tools include assignments, lab records, and SEE (Semester End Exam). Indirect tools include exit surveys and alumni feedback.

✅  Fix: Use at least two direct assessment tools and one indirect tool per CO. Document the rationale for tool selection.

Mistake 14: Assessments Without Rubrics

NBA assessors look for rubrics. Every assignment, project, and lab assessment must be graded against a defined rubric.

Rubrics show that grading is objective. Without rubrics, CO attainment calculations have no credibility.

✅  Fix: Design Bloom’s-aligned rubrics for every assessment. Attach rubrics to course files with signed samples.

Mistake 15: Exit Surveys Conducted Once — Just Before the Visit

Exit surveys are an indirect tool for CO and PO attainment measurement. They must reflect genuine student feedback.

Conducting them in the week before the NBA visit is transparent and inadequate. Assessors check survey dates.

✅  Fix: Conduct exit surveys at the end of every semester. Archive results systematically. Show trend analysis across years.

For institutions that need structured faculty orientation on assessment design, BGC’s Faculty Development Programs and Documentation Workshops cover every aspect of NBA-compliant assessment.

Discover the most common NBA accreditation mistakes  by Bhavya Gyan Consultants

Part 5: Institutional and Cultural Mistakes

Only One Person Knows the OBE Framework

This is perhaps the most dangerous institutional mistake of all.

When only the NBA coordinator understands OBE, the programme is one resignation away from collapse.

NBA assessors interact with all faculty. They ask HODs, lab assistants, and faculty to explain COs and POs. Blank responses sink grades.

✅  Fix: Conduct mandatory OBE orientation for all faculty twice a year. Document attendance and feedback.

No Curriculum Gap Analysis Process

NBA expects institutions to review their curriculum against industry requirements regularly.

Many institutions have no formal mechanism for this. No industry advisory board. No documented gap analysis report.

✅  Fix: Form a formal Board of Studies with at least one industry expert. Conduct and document annual curriculum gap analysis.

Website Not Updated with NBA-Required Data

NBA expects institutions to publicly disclose programme-level data. This includes admission intake, pass rates, placement data, and faculty qualifications.

An outdated institutional website is a visible compliance gap. Assessors check it before the visit.

✅  Fix: Update the NBA-relevant sections of your website every semester. Assign a dedicated website compliance owner.

BGC’s Website Structuring for Accreditation Services ensure your institutional website meets all NBA and NAAC disclosure norms.

For research on institutional quality benchmarks, refer to Mantech Publications’ Education Research Library — a useful reference for understanding accreditation quality standards in India.

Institutions also pursuing NAAC accreditation alongside NBA can explore BGC’s NAAC Accreditation Consultancy Services for integrated support.

Conclusion: NBA Accreditation Is Won in the Details

NBA accreditation is not failed by poor teaching. It is failed by poor preparation.

The mistakes listed here are systemic. They repeat across institutions year after year.

The good news: every single one is fixable. With the right framework, the right timeline, and the right support.

Start with a readiness audit. Identify your gaps before the assessor does.

Fix your OBE framework. Correct your CO-PO mapping. Build your SAR as a living document.

Train every faculty member. Not just the coordinator.

BGC Global specialises in exactly this work. From NBA Readiness Assessment to OBE Implementation, CO-PO Mapping, and complete NBA Documentation Framework — we handle it all.

Engineering colleges working on NBA accreditation can also publish their faculty research in indexed journals through Mantech Publications — directly strengthening your NBA Criterion on Faculty Research Output.

Don’t wait for the assessor to find your gaps. BGC’s NBA consultants will find them first and fix them. Book a Free NBA Consultation with BGC Global — and begin your accreditation journey the right way.

FAQs:

1. What is the most common NBA accreditation mistake made by engineering colleges?

Writing Course Outcomes as topics instead of measurable learning outcomes. Most institutions also make CO-PO mapping errors by assigning uniform Level 3 to all mappings without justification.

2. What are OBE mistakes that NBA assessors flag most often?

The top OBE mistakes are: COs without Bloom’s verbs, POs copied from NBA templates without customisation, missing PSOs, and CO attainment targets set unrealistically at 100%.

3. What are SAR errors that reduce NBA scores significantly?

Key SAR errors include: last-minute preparation, incomplete CAY data, quantitative claims without supporting documents, and inconsistent figures across criteria.

4. How should CO-PO mapping be done correctly?

Map only relevant POs per course. Use levels 1-3 based on contribution strength. Vary the mapping. Add justification for each significant mapping. Never map all COs to all POs at Level 3.

5. How early should an institution start NBA preparation?

Minimum 12-18 months before the submission deadline. SAR data collection must run throughout the academic year. OBE framework implementation needs at least two full semesters of data before submission.

External Resources:

Published by Bhavya Gyan Consultants (BGC) | NBA & NAAC Accreditation Experts | Engineering course guides: BhavyaGyan | Research publishing support: Mantech Publications

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