Indraprastha College for Women
Indraprastha College for Women, also known as Indraprastha College or IP College, is the oldest women's college in Delhi, India. Established in 1924, it is a constituent college of University of Delhi.
The institution offers graduate and post-graduate courses in Economics, Liberal Arts, Commerce, Literature, Computer Science, Multimedia Media and Mass Communication. In 2020, it was ranked 11th among arts colleges in India by India Today.
History
The origins of IP College lie in the Indraprastha Girls School. It was founded in 1904, at the call of noted freedom fighter, educationist and theosophist Annie Besant by a group of Delhi theosophists, led by Lala Jugal Kishore, in Chhipiwara, Old Delhi. Intermediate school was added in 1924 and the Indraprastha College for Women, came into being, with Leonora Gmeiner as its first principal.Soon the University of Delhi, which itself was founded in 1922, recognised it as a constituent college. Degree courses were introduced in 1930s and in 1938, the university listed I.P. College as a degree college. After its existence in Chhipiwara during its early years, the college moved to Chandrawali Bhawan, Civil Lines. It moved again to Alipur House at Alipur Road, the former office of the commander-in-chief in 1938, near Kashmiri Gate, where it is today. The building has become a heritage property.
In 1952, the Kalavati Gupta Hostel named after the second principal of the college was inaugurated.
On 3 July 1984, Diamond Jubilee celebrations of the college were held.
In 2009, a hostel to accommodate 200 students was added on the college premises.
Campus
Facilities
- Library
- Auditorium
- Information and communications technology centre
- Two computer labs
- Audio visual production centre
- Medical room
- Cafeteria
- Two hostels
Sports facility
- Gymnasium
- Basketball court
- Tennis court
- Badminton court
- Squash court
- Shooting range
- Table tennis
- Judo floor
- Swimming pool
Other amenities
- Wi-Fi campus
- Canara Bank branch
Organisation and administration
Centres
- Centre for Earth Studies
- Museum and Archives Learning Resource Centre
- Translation and Translation Studies Centre
- Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies
Academics
Academic programmes
Undergraduate courses
- Economics
- English
- Geography
- Hindi
- History
- Mathematics
- Music
- Philosophy
- Political Science
- Psychology
- Sanskrit
- Sociology
- B.A. Prog.
- Commerce
- Computer Science
- Multimedia and Mass Communication
Graduate courses
- Economics
- Geography
- History
- Operational Research
- Psychology
- Mathematics
- Philosophy
- Sanskrit
- English
- Hindi
- Music
- Political Science
Financial assistance
There is a book bank facility in the library from where needy students can borrow textbooks for the whole academic year.
Some special scholarships are also provided by the Delhi University for students belonging to SC/ST/BPL/PWD categories.
Student life
Indraprastha College is the only college of Delhi University to offer the Bachelor in Mass Media and Mass Communication degree.In 2005, the college added the cyber cafe wing with offices of National Service Scheme and National [Cadet Corps |National Cadet Corps].
In 2014, IP College became one of the first colleges in the University of Delhi to set up a formal Department of Environmental Studies, which is its youngest department.
Every spring, the college celebrates its annual festival, Shruti. Other popular events include the annual debating tournament Vivaad, organised by the English debating society and the annual theatre fest Kirdaar, organised by the Dramatics society.
Clubs and societies
- La Cadenza: Western music society
- Abhivyakti: Dramatics society
- Alaap: Indian music society
- Vidath: Hindi editorial society
- Croydon: Fine arts society
- Mridang: Indian dance society
- Oghma: English editorial society
- Ananta: Science society
- English debating society
- Hindi debating society
- Gandhi Study Circle
- Laashya: Contemporary dance society
- Northeast society
- Eco Club
- Enactus IPCW
- NSS & NCC
- Quiz Club
- Simulacra: Film and photography society
- Women's Development Cell
- Arthagya: Economics association
- Jeet: Career and guidance cell
- Baithak Society: Music archiving and listening room
- Afroza: Western dance society
- Erudite: quiz society
Past principals
- Leonara G. Miner, first principal, 1924
- Aruna Sitesh
Notable alumni
- Abhilasha Kumari, first woman Chief Justice of Manipur High Court
- Ajit Iqbal Singh, mathematician
- Ambika Soni, former Minister of Information and Broadcasting
- Aruna Roy, social activist and recipient of Ramon Magsaysay Award
- Arundhati Virmani, historian
- Asha Pande, first Indian woman to receive the Légion d'honneur
- Binalakshmi Nepram, activist from Manipur
- Chitra Narayanan, former IFS officer
- Deepika Singh, television actor
- Deepa Sahi, actress and producer
- Dipannita Sharma, model and Bollywood actress
- Jaspinder Narula, playback singer
- Kamala Laxman, cartoonist
- Kanchan Chaudhary Bhattacharya, first woman Director General of Police
- Kavita Kaushik, television actor
- Kunzang Choden, first Bhutanese woman to write a novel
- Kusha Kapila, fashion editor and Internet celebrity
- Madhumita Raut, Odissi dancer
- Meira Kumar, the first woman to become the Speaker of the Lok Sabha
- Neetu Chandra, film actress and model
- Pratima Puri, Doordarshan's first newsreader
- Qurratulain Hyder, Urdu writer
- Rajni Bakshi, freelance journalist
- Rama Vij, actress
- Salma Sultan, news anchor of Doordarshan
- Sharan Rani Backliwal, acclaimed Sarod player, recipient of Padma Shri and Padma Vibhushan
- Shyama Singh, former member of Parliament
- Sucheta Kriplani, former Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh
- Utsa Patnaik, professor of economics, Jawaharlal Nehru University
- Varsha Dixit, author
- Veena Das, Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of Anthropology, Johns Hopkins University
Notable faculty
- Ra'ana Liaquat Ali Khan, former First Lady of Pakistan
- Tanika Sarkar, professor of history at Jawaharlal Nehru University