The Sunday Guardian

Teachers FLaG cOncerns aBOuT du’s JOurnaLisM cOurse

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NEW DELHI: After the Delhi University announced its new five-year integrated course in journalism to initiate the process of setting up the Central university’s “School of Journalism”, the National Democratic Teachers Front (NDTF) has submitted a list of suggestion­s to Vice-Chancellor Prof Yogesh K. Tyagi, pointing to aspects allegedly overlooked while finalising the course. In a note to V-C Tyagi, NDTF’s president A.K. Bhagi, a member of the Executive Council, said, “Since 2011, the NDTF had been constantly raising in Academic Council (AC) meetings the need to start an independen­t Journalism Department. However, it is noted with concern that the university is planning to start this course under the Department of Adult, Continuing Education and Extension and not as an independen­t department.” There had been reports earlier that the new integrated course in journalism will be offered on “self-financing mode”, meaning that the students will have to bear the entire cost of academics that will make the course significan­tly expensive, rendering it unaffordab­le for students from lower income groups. The NDTF, in its letter to the V-C, said, “In agenda papers of the Standing Committee or the concept paper of the course, it is nowhere mentioned that it is run and approved for self financing mode. So we are of the assumption that it will be run on a normal fee structure.” Stating their opposition to the self-finance mode proposal, Bhagi said that NDTF will not support this module till the university gets UGC grants, as for other already existing courses. Among other suggestion­s, the letter states that this course should be designed and taught by people who have formal degrees in the field of journalism. A course in Hindi journalism has also been recommende­d, along with establishi­ng an independen­t department that could help start post-graduation, MPhil and PhD programmes in journalism. The integrated course will span five years and will provide students an opportunit­y to get dual degrees of Bachelors and Masters in journalism. —Areeba Falak Unqualifie­d medical practition­ers continue to operate in the national capital with impunity, as the local administra­tion turns a deaf ear to a 2013 Delhi High Court directive, tasking the Health Department of Delhi to check quackery.

An investigat­ion by The Sunday Guardian in the national capital’s less affluent areas such as Sangam Vihar and Chanakyapu­ri’s Sanjay Camp-1, found that quacks are openly practising medicine in make-shift clinics. Most researcher­s and doctors this reporter spoke to, attributed the free run of quacks to “police inaction” and “lack of political will”, with some claiming that 70% of doctors in the city are quacks. The patients who visit these quacks in large numbers consider these people as their first option because of the low consultati­on fees that the latter charge. They generally charge less than Rs 100 as consultati­on fee, which often includes medicines for two days. The extent of police inaction can be understood from the fact that

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