The B.A. Programme broadly consists of discipline, language, foundation and application courses. Students have to study four subjects every year consisting of two discipline courses that have to be studied in the first, second and third year and usually comprise subjects such as Economics, History, Political Science, English and Hindi Literature, Advertising, Family Welfare, Mathematics, Sanskrit and Music. In the first year, these two discipline courses are accompanied by two language courses, English and Hindi, for instance. Language courses are divided into three streams, according to the level at which a student has studied the lan
...more
The B.A. Programme broadly consists of discipline, language, foundation and application courses. Students have to study four subjects every year consisting of two discipline courses that have to be studied in the first, second and third year and usually comprise subjects such as Economics, History, Political Science, English and Hindi Literature, Advertising, Family Welfare, Mathematics, Sanskrit and Music. In the first year, these two discipline courses are accompanied by two language courses, English and Hindi, for instance. Language courses are divided into three streams, according to the level at which a student has studied the language at school. In the second year also, the student studies four subjects. Along with the next level of the two chosen discipline courses, a student is expected to pick any one of the two languages studied in the first year. Instead of the second language, he/she is expected to choose one of the four foundation courses: Language Literature and Culture; Contemporary India, Economy, Politics, and Society; Human Rights, Gender and Environment; and Social Enquiry. In the final year, students continue with the final segment of the chosen discipline courses; one of the two languages (the one he/she did not study in the second year); and any one of the 25 application courses part of this programme. Hope this helps.
less