The
Honors Curriculum
(General note: what
follows is a careful description of the curriculum, as well
as its underlying principles and purposes. While detailed,
it is not inappropriate for both applicants to the honors
college, and for students fully admitted.)
Statement
of Philosophy and General Rationale for
Requirements
Students who are fully admitted members of the honors
college should always keep in mind the most important basis
for their participation in the University Honors
Program—that they intend going on to graduate or
professional school—and that intention should control,
insofar as is possible, their choices in developing their
individual undergraduate programs. The fully admitted
student of the honors college is released from meeting
general University requirements for the degree—an
extraordinary privilege—and instead shapes a rigorous and
individualized baccalaureate program in consultation with
both departmental and honors college faculty advisers.
You will complete the requirements of a departmental major;
if your major academic department is one of those within
the University that offers a “departmental honors track”
(this information will be readily available from your major
adviser), you are obligated to meet the expectations of
that track. We also urge you to take all opportunities
available to you for the most rigorous work in your
departmental major, and to investigate all possibilities
for research experience in the major on the undergraduate
level.
The honors college faculty have designed, and will work
with you in, a core general education curriculum which has
two main purposes: first, to expose you to and explore with
you the key critical influences at play in the contemporary
intellectual scene, and secondly to train you in useful
tools and methods of analysis and argument which will later
serve you in your graduate and professional preparation.
This curriculum does not simply reproduce work done in
another part of the University, but is rather a carefully
shaped series of courses that focus on your preparation as
a knowledge professional.
You will undertake roughly 45 credit hours’ work in the
honors college (unless a specific waiver was made upon your
admission to the Program), and those 45 credit hours will
include at least:
1) the completion of the core course, which occupies the
first and second years (27 credits);
2) 2 courses designated as colloquia, the upper-division
seminars offered by faculty of the honors college, with the
expectation that each be taken from a different faculty
member unless extraordinary reasons to do otherwise are
agreed upon in advance with your honors college adviser (8
credits);
3) the successful completion of a baccalaureate thesis in
your major area of study (usually 8 credits overall [2 cr.
hrs. prospectus; 6 cr. hrs. thesis], although in certain
rare cases more credit may be granted.
A quick survey of these stated formal requirements will
make apparent that they do not necessarily add up to the
required minimum 45 credit hours’ work in the Honors
Program. We encourage students to discuss with their
Program advisers ways to meet that 45 credit hour
expectation by availing themselves of the other curricular
resources of the Program, for instance HON 401 (Directed
Research), HON 404 (Practicum/Internship), and HON 405
(Reading and Conference). Such coursework will require a
short formal application and the approval of the Director.
Before we turn to the more specific detail of
particular course
components in the honors
college curriculum, let us ask you to please keep in
mind that the privilege of participation in this
special, limited-enrollment program is based on your
continuing demonstration of aptitude, and that you will
be regularly reviewed (and, if necessary, either placed
on leave from the honors college until the faculty are
satisfied that performance once again merits inclusion
in this project, or returned to the general University
for completion of the baccalaureate.) You will be
expected to maintain a (minimum) 3.0 GPA overall, and a
3.0 GPA for all coursework in the honors college
itself.
