2003 - 2004 Honors Program (HON)
Program Description | Admission
Criteria | Benefits | Participation
in Honors Courses by Non-Honors Program Students | Criteria
for Remaining in the Honors Program | LE Certificate
| Honors Degree Option | Course
Descriptions
Director: Richard Badenhausen
Program Description
The Honors Program provides students who are academically and intellectually
prepared with the opportunity to satisfy their college-wide LE Skills
and LE Distribution course requirements in an alternative and unique manner.
By completing a 7-course sequence of interdisciplinary, team-taught Honors
courses, students earn an Honors certificate while satisfying their Liberal
Education Distribution requirements. Moreover, by understanding their
historical, scientific, and intellectual heritage, honors students are
prepared to be articulate and responsible members of society and defenders
of their own ideas.
Admission Criteria
Students expressing a desire to enroll in the Honors Program will be
ranked according to the following criteria: ACT scores, high school GPA,
and the quality of a written statement which explains why the student
wishes to participate and why he or she feels qualified for participation
in the program. The top thirty-five students will be invited to enroll
in Honors courses. If accepted students decline the offer, the invitation
process will continue until a class of thirty-five students is formed.
Although a typical incoming Honors student has had a 3.80 GPA and a 28
Composite ACT score, the range of scores is quite broad. Students who
fall near or above these standards and who sincerely wish to be in the
program are encouraged to secure an application from the Honors Program
or Westminster's START Center. Questions concerning the application process
should be directed to the director of the Honors Program.
Benefits of Participating in the Honors Program
- Academic distinction: the Honors designation on a transcript shows
graduate schools and employers that you have achieved academic success
in rigorous classes and worked with some of the college's finest teachers
and students.
- Small class size: restricted enrollment ensures classes have an intimate,
seminar-style feel and allows for close student-professor interactions
and mentoring-an important benefit when students require personal and
informed letters of recommendation for jobs and graduate school.
- Excellent faculty: professors teach Honors classes by choice and are
some of the college's most committed and energetic professors.
- Interdisciplinary approaches: the interdisciplinary nature of Honors
seminars brings students and teachers from different departments together,
ensuring an exciting class atmosphere and preparing students for the
interdisciplinary approach of most top graduate programs.
- Research opportunities: the seminar-style approach to learning, the
emphasis on writing and research in classes, and the program support
of outside research allow students to investigate their academic interests
more fully and create opportunities for the presentation or publishing
of their work.
- Sense of community: Honors students take core classes together and
interact with Honors faculty and students in other academic and social
events, which helps establish a sense of belonging to the college community.
- Access to supplementary resources: For example, the Honors Program
listserv; the "Pizza with Profs" lecture series; the Honors Program
resource library; the Honors Program newsletter; special enriched learning
experiences such as attendance at cultural events and other field study;
funding to attend and give papers at academic conferences; leadership
training opportunities like the student Honors Council; special recognition
opportunities like the Honors seminar book awards; and opportunities
to participate in special meetings with distinguished visiting scholars
and lecturers.
Participation in Honors Courses by Non-Honors
Program Students
Since a number of high-achieving, upper-class Westminster College students
may not have applied to the Honors Program as incoming freshmen but may
still wish to participate in some of its classes, any undergraduate in
good standing with a 3.5 GPA or higher is eligible to enroll in 300 and
400 level Honors seminars. The Honors Program is an active part of the
larger college community and welcomes the energy, intellect, and diversity
that students from different disciplines across the campus bring to Honors.
Non-Honors Program students enrolling in Honors seminars should check
with their program chairs, since these classes will sometimes fulfill
certain requirements in a student's own major.
Criteria for Remaining in the Honors Program
- 3.25 GPA overall, and a 3.0 GPA overall in Honors courses.
- If an Honors student falls below these GPA minimums, a probationary
semester will be used to allow the student to return to the minimum
GPA standards for continued participation.
Honors Liberal Education Certificate Requirements
Students who complete seven courses in the Honors LE sequence will be
awarded a special certificate recognizing this achievement (contingent
on Westminster graduation).
A complete description of the equivalencies between LE Honors courses
and the standard LE courses is listed below.
Liberal Education Skills Requirements
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Honors Course Equivalents
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Computer Literacy:
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CMPT 098 Computer Literacy or higher course, or passing score on
Computer Competency Exam
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No Honors Course
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English:
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ENGL 110 Composition and Research
ENGL 111 & 112 (required for Int'l students)
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HON 201-202 Humanities I and II
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Public Speaking:
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SPCH 111 Public Presentations
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HON 201, 202, 211, 212, 231 (4 of 5 required for SPCH credit)
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Mathematical Sciences:
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MATH 120 Quantitative Reasoning
MATH 141 College Algebra
MATH 150 Elementary Statistics
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No Honors Course
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Foreign Language:
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Determined by major
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No Honors Course
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Liberal Education
Distribution Requirements
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Honors Course Equivalents
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Group 1: Life Sciences
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BIOL 102 The Natural World
BIOL 210 Environmental Biology
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HON 222 Science, Power, and Diversity
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Group 2: Physical Sciences
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CHEM 103 Introduc. to Chemistry
ESS 110 Introduction to Geology
PHYS 102 The Physical Universe
PHYS 104 Explorations in Science
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HON 221 History and Philosophy of Science
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Group 3: Social Science I
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ECON 105 Intro. to Economics
ECON 253 Elem. Macroeconomics
PLSC 101 Intr. to Political Science
PLSC 121 American Nat'l Gov't.
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HON 211 Perspectives in Social Sciences I
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Group 4: Social Science II
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ANTH 160 Intro. to Anthropology
PSYC 105 Intro. to Psychology
SOC 105 Introduction to Sociology
SOC 253 Sociology of the Family
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HON 231 Perspectives in Social Sciences II
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Group 5: History
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HIST 112 Western Civilization I
HIST 113 Western Civilization II
HIST 212 World History to 1500
HIST 220 United States History
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HON 201-202 Humanities I and II
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Group 6: Literature
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ENGL 220 Introduction to Literature
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HON 201-202 Humanities I and II
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Group 7: Arts Survey
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ART 110 Survey of Art
MUSC 110 Survey of Music
THTR 124 Survey of the Theatre
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HON 212 Seminar in the Arts
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Group 8: Arts/Physical Activity
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ART 101 Beginning Drawing
ART 103 Beginning Painting
ART 148 Fundamentals of Pottery
MUSC 105 Ensembles
MUSC 305 Ensembles
PE Any physical education class
THTR 127 Stagecraft
THTR 180 Acting I
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HON 212 Seminar in the Arts
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Group 9: Philosophy/Religion
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PHIL 100 Intro. to Philosophy
PHIL 102 Critical Thinking
PHIL 206 Introduction to Ethics
REL 101 Religions of the World
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HON 201-202 Humanities I and II
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Honors Degree Option
The following requirements must be satisfied in order to be awarded the
Honors Degree (in the major) at graduation:
- Maintain a minimum GPA of 3.00 in all Honors course work, including
those courses listed below for the Honors degree, and a minimum GPA
of 3.25.
- Completion of the 7-course Honors LE sequence, with no more than one
of these courses taken CR/NC.
- Completion of 4 semesters of college-level instruction in a single
foreign language, or the equivalent.
- Completion of 6 hours of course work in Honors 300 or 400 seminars.
- Completion of a senior project in the student's major for a minimum
of 3 credit hours.
The nature of this project will be determined in conjunction with the
Director of Honors and the student's major advisor.
Please contact the Director of the Honors Program for more detailed information
concerning the requirements for the Honors Degree option.
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