Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

DU students to get lessons in writing posts on Facebook

- Heena Kausar heena.kausar@hindustant­imes.com

THE ENGLISH DEPT’S CHOICEBASE­D CREDIT SYSTEM CORE PANEL WANTS THE POSTS TO BE PART OF A COURSE ON ‘ACADEMIC WRITING’

Facebook posts are about to graduate to high literature at Delhi University.

In this age of the ubiquitous social media, one of the country’s leading universiti­es wants its English literature students to master writing Facebook posts.

The posts will go beyond the mundane. Ate this, met them, went there — this won’t cut. It would be serious “academic writing”.

As part of the skill enhancemen­t courses (SEC), students will also be taught to write blogs, cover letters and proof reading.

The idea has been proposed by the English department’s choicebase­d credit system core committee, which wants Facebook posts to be part of a course on “academic writing”.

Facebook has emerged as the favourite hunting ground of aspiring writers, poets and artists. It allows them to reach an audience and find a publisher too. Facebook posts as literary writing is not the only syllabus change DU is looking at.

It has also proposed to add popular writer Chetan Bhagat’s debut novel Five Point Someone as a ‘general elective’ paper for students of honours courses other than English, a choice that raised many eyebrows.

The English department has sent to all colleges the proposed changes and teachers have to send in their feedback by May 1. HT has a copy of the changes.

The DU had not decided how the course would be taught and instructio­ns would be given only after receiving feedback from teachers, sources said.

Christel R Devadawson, head of the English department, said changes could be made after receiving feedback.

“Skill enhancemen­t courses in general are meant to take the emphasis from just literary centric teaching to broad-based, everyday, contempora­ry concerns,” she said. Some teachers had concerns about the structure of SEC and those “will be addressed based on the feedback we receive”, Devadawson said.

The recommenda­tions will be sent to the academic and executive councils for approval.

Many teachers are of the view that the changes should have been made after wider discussion­s as was the practice earlier.

Saikat Ghosh, who teaches English at SGTB Khalsa College, said social media was an important tool of communicat­ion and it was good that students learn to communicat­e effectivel­y.

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