The Doon School Weekly (informally The Weekly) is a student newspaper produced by and for the students of The Doon School.[1] It was established in 1936, a year after the school's founding, by the first headmaster Arthur Foot. The Weekly is the oldest and flagship publication of the school.[2]
The paper, distributed every Saturday morning, carries a mix of reports on school activities, trips or expeditions, opinion pieces, critique of school policies, interviews of visiting speakers, student polls, puzzles, cartoons (known as 'Dosco Doodle'), and creative writing, including short stories, poetry, satire or personal essays. The alumni keep up to date with the developments at school through the newspaper, which is also published online on The Doon School's official website.[3]
Notable alumni in the fields of literature, journalism, politics and academia, including Vikram Seth, Amitav Ghosh, Ramachandra Guha, Karan Thapar, have been former editors of the publication.[4][5]The Weekly's sister publications at the school include TheInfinity, The Doon School Information Review, The Circle, and The Yearbook.[6]
The Weekly's editorial board is staffed by boys between year groups 9 and 12 at the school, with students in their final year leading the publication and taking key decisions. The selection process for the editorial board is competitive and consists of a written examination and personal interview with the board's leadership. The editor-in-chief, appointed by the school's administration, is the publication's chief executive and is responsible for content and day-to-day operations. He is assisted by the editors, the second-highest positions on the Editorial Board, who are also students in their final year of school. The length of a standard issue of the Weekly is 6-8 pages on legal-size ivory white paper. A special edition, released on the day of the school's annual Founder's Day, is printed in the form of a magazine. The Weekly is accessible in print on the school's premises, and is also available online.[13]
^Kimonen, Eija (2015). Education and Society in Comparative Context. Springer Publishing. p. 143. ISBN9789463003735. In addition to producing a conventional yearbook, the students also produced other periodicals, such as the school's special publications: The Doon School Information Review...and the scientific bi-annual The Echo and Cosmos.
^Martyn, Mady (1985). Martyn Sahib, the Story of John Martyn of the Doon School. Delhi. p. 120. The Doon School Weekly became an important feature of the school life and for many boys an education in itself. For the first three years the Weekly was cyclostyled. While this was not as neat as printing, it had the advantages that it was easy to reproduce drawings.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)