Honors College Program Requirements
Richard Badenhausen, Dean
José Hernández Zamudio, Assistant Dean
Alicia Cunningham-Bryant, Director of Fellowship Advising
The Honors College provides intellectually curious students who wish to challenge themselves in a unique learning community an opportunity to satisfy all of their university-wide general education requirements through a specially designed, alternative pathway. By completing 6-8 seminars from a menu of interdisciplinary, team-taught Honors seminars focused on primary texts and seminar discussion, students earn either an Honors certificate or Honors degree. Because of the focus on sharpening communication skills, engaging materials from diverse perspectives, and confronting challenging ideas across periods and cultures, Honors students are prepared to be articulate and responsible members of society and defenders of their own ideas. Students who join the Honors College via the lateral entry option may also earn an Honors certificate upon completion of 4 seminars. The Honors College is a longtime member of the National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC) and the Western Regional Honors Council (WRHC).
Referred to by one higher education leader as “one of the best in the United States,” the Honors College at Westminster offers one of the most comprehensive stand-alone, interdisciplinary, team-taught Honors curriculums in the country. The Honors College houses Westminster’s Fellowship Advising Office, which serves the entire campus. Approximately thirty professors from a wide range of disciplines regularly teach in the Honors College, and eight of them have won the Gore Excellence in Teaching Award, Westminster’s most prestigious award for faculty. Honors students are known for their service on and off campus, regularly serving as captains of athletic teams, student government leaders, and editors of Westminster publications like The Forum and Ellipsis, as well as volunteering at many local non-profits.
Faculty
Richard Badenhausen, Professor (Honors)
Russ Costa, Professor (Honors/Neuroscience)
Alicia Cunningham-Bryant, Associate Professor (Honors)
Connie Etter, Associate Professor (Honors/Justice Studies)
Nicholas Pollock, Assistant Professor (Honors/Geology)
Julie Stewart, Professor (Honors)
Affiliate Faculty
Kelly Asao (Psychology), Kara Barnette (Philosophy), Bill Bynum (Mathematics), Greg Gagne (Computer Science), Kellie Gerbers (Outdoor Education & Leadership), Julia Kamenetzky (Physics), Han Kim (Public Health), Matt Kruback (Art), Christopher LeCluyse (English), Nick More (Philosophy), Alysse Morton (Management), Jeff Nichols (History), Kristjane Nordmeyer (Sociology), Brent Olson (Environmental Studies), Michael Popich (Philosophy), Spencer Potter (Theatre), Sean Raleigh (Mathematics), Christy Seifert (Communication), Meghan Wall (Dance), John Watkins (Economics)
Program Goals
The mission of the honors university is to invite students into a challenging journey of developing their voices, sharing those voices, and learning to hear the voices of others. The following program-wide learning outcomes are housed under honors university core values:
Collective
- Compassion and empathy
- Engage with a variety of sources, viewpoints, and individuals on topics related to diversity, equity, inclusion, and social justice, including sources that share the identity or identities being discussed.
- Recognize how power, privilege, and bias impact relationships on interpersonal, intergroup, and institutional levels, historically and today.
- Analyze the influence of power in U.S. and global contexts.
- Discuss how culture shapes social justice.
- Community-centered conversation
- Explain the context that informs the questions they ask.
- Explain the implications of the questions they ask.
- Engage in genuine conversation.
- Support and mentorship
- Demonstrate self-awareness that facilitates collaboration with others.
- Connections across difference
- Propose or participate in collective action against bias and injustice within and beyond the campus community.
- Evaluate which collective strategies are most effective in challenging bias and injustice within and beyond the campus community.
- Use language that recognizes, respects, and celebrates differences among group members.
Individual
- Academic and personal growth
- Develop claims that emerge from analyzing relevant texts, evidence, data, and artifacts.
- Utilize evidence in making written and oral arguments.
- Reflect on learning and their role in that process.
- Express themselves creatively beyond written and spoken media (i.e., visual, musical, etc.)
- Student empowerment
- Examine the intersectionality of their identities in relation to structures of power (such “-isms” and “-obias” as racism and Islamophobia, for example).
- Analyze the impact of bias and injustice in the world, historically and today.
- Identify the contributions of figures, groups, events, strategies, philosophies, etc. to social justice and inclusion by structurally marginalized groups.
- Interdisciplinary inquiry
- Integrate multiple disciplinary perspectives in their discourse.
- Analyze complex texts and ideas.
- Design an appropriate research model to answer complex questions.
- Curiosity and dedication
- Demonstrate quantitative skills to ask and answer questions through data analysis.
- Analyze data and evaluate sources independently.
- Explore intellectual curiosity by taking a risk.
Admission to the Honors College
Students applying to the Honors College will be evaluated according to the following criteria: high school GPA and rigor of coursework, interest in the unique approach to learning in Honors, and the quality of a written statement. Current Westminster students who wish to transfer into the Honors College via the lateral entry pathway will have previous university work taken into consideration during the admissions process. Questions concerning the application process should be directed to the Dean of the Honors College.
Benefits of Participating in the Honors College
- Academic distinction: the Honors designation on the student’s transcript shows graduate schools and employers that they have achieved academic success in rigorous classes. The challenging, comprehensive curriculum also helps students grow as thinkers, writers, and speakers.
- Small class size: Honors classes have an intimate, seminar-style feel and allow for close student-professor interactions and mentoring.
- Excellent faculty: eight Honors professors have won the university’s Gore Excellence in Teaching award, Westminster’s top recognition for faculty.
- Enhanced support, advising, and mentoring: first-year Honors students attend supplemental orientation activities to help ease the transition to university life, receive specialized advising from trained advisors, and meet weekly as a cohort during the fall term. Finally, incoming Honors students are grouped with peer mentors—upper-class Honors students with extensive experience at Westminster—who can help guide them during their first year at university.
- Wellness programming: Honors students learn mindfulness strategies from trained practitioners that equip them with tools to manage stress.
- Interdisciplinary approaches: the interdisciplinary nature of Honors seminars brings students and two faculty from different departments together to ensure an exciting class atmosphere that prepares students for the interdisciplinary approach of most top graduate programs and professional fields. It also helps students engage in a higher order of thinking because conversations across difference are especially challenging.
- Alternative Gen Ed experience: the Honors curriculum offers a unique learning experience that goes beyond the standard university general education classes in a series of specially designed seminars. Honors also offers students an efficient, flexible pathway through gen ed requirements that frees up time to fit in double majors, multiple minors, electives, extracurricular activities, intensive research projects, leadership opportunities, and other enhanced academic experiences.
- Research opportunities: the seminar-style approach to learning, the emphasis on writing and research in classes, and the program’s support of outside research allow students to investigate their academic interests more fully and create opportunities for the presentation or publication of their work. The program awards independent summer research grants and provides funding to attend academic conferences.
- Sense of community: Honors students take core classes together and interact with Honors faculty and students through other academic and social events. This interaction helps establish a sense of belonging to the university community. The Honors College is housed in Nunemaker Place. Built in 1977, this architecturally striking building provides Honors students and faculty with a variety of distinctive spaces, including staff offices, meeting areas, and reading and study spaces. Located next to beautiful Emigration Creek, Nunemaker opens out onto a tree-lined patio where students and faculty can eat lunch, read, and relax.
- Special study abroad opportunity: Westminster’s Honors College is a member of the Principia Consortium, which gives students access to a unique Honors educational experience at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. Honors students also have access to scholarship support for international MTSE classes.
- Access to supplementary resources: these resources include the Honors College listserv, Student Honors Council meetings, the Honors College newsletter, and special enriched learning experiences such as attendance at cultural events. Funding to attend and give papers at academic conferences, leadership training opportunities like the Student Honors Council, special recognition opportunities like the Nelson Creative Arts and Writing Awards, and opportunities to participate in special meetings with distinguished visiting scholars and lecturers are also included.
- Fellowship Advising Office: Westminster's Fellowship Advising Office, which serves the entire student body, is housed in the Honors College, ensuring that Honors students are introduced to a wide range of post-graduate fellowship opportunities like the Fulbright, Marshall, Gilman, and Truman scholarships among many others.
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Commitment to diversity and inclusion: the Honors College is guided by a robust diversity strategic plan. The Honors College was the first academic unit on campus to conduct a diversity climate survey and is a leader on campus in inclusive admissions strategies.
Participation in Honors College Courses by Non-Honors College Students
Any Westminster undergraduate in good standing with a 3.5 GPA or higher is eligible to enroll in 300- and 400-level Honors seminars. The Honors College is an active part of the larger university community and welcomes the energy, intellect, and diversity that students from different disciplines across the campus bring to Honors classes. Non-Honors College 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. Participation in 200-level Honors seminars is restricted to students in the Honors College.
Continuation Policy: Criterion for Remaining in the Honors College
If an Honors College student falls below a 3.0 Westminster cumulative GPA, a period of two semesters will be used to allow the student to return to the minimum GPA for continued participation. Students who do not reach the 3.0 threshold after one year may petition the Honors Council to continue taking Honors classes.
Honors Degree Requirements
Students may complete the requirements below and be awarded a certificate recognizing this achievement contingent on Westminster graduation. Only one of the courses in Section III may be taken as credit/no credit (does not apply to HON 201 or 202). Upon completion of the Honors degree, major and/or minor, and graduation requirements, students will receive either an Honors Bachelor of Fine Arts, Honors Bachelor of Arts, or Honors Bachelor of Science depending on their major program of study.
Requirement Description | Credit Hours | Prerequisites | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I. World Language Requirement | 12 or equivalent proficiency | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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II. Lower Division Gateway Courses | 8 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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III. Lower Division Courses | 20 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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IV. Additional Coursework | 4 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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V. Senior Project/Thesis | 2 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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VI. Honors Capstone | 0-2 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Total Hours for the Honors Degree | 46-48 |
Honors Certificate Requirements – For Lateral Entry Students Only
Students who join the Honors College via the lateral entry option may complete four seminars in the Honors core sequence and be awarded a certificate recognizing this achievement contingent on Westminster graduation. None of these courses may be taken as credit/no credit.
Requirement Description | Credit Hours | Prerequisites | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I. Lower Division Gateway Courses | 10-12 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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II. Lower Division Courses | 16 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Total Hours for the Honors Certificate | 22-24 |
Honors Certificate Requirements – For Traditional Entry Students Only
Students may complete six seminars in the Honors sequence and be awarded a certificate recognizing this achievement (contingent on Westminster graduation). Only one of the courses in Section II may be taken as credit/no credit (does not apply to HON 201 or 202).
Requirement Description | Credit Hours | Prerequisites | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I. Lower Division Gateway Courses | 8 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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II. Lower Division Courses | 16 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Total Hours for the Honors Certificate | 24 |
Honors College Seminars Across Departments/Programs
Honors College seminars do not satisfy major/minor requirements or prerequisites except when completed by an Honors College student in the following cases:
- HON 201 and 202 Foundational Conversations I & II may be substituted for the WCFAH and Writing Emphasis prerequisites required for LMW 222 and 223 in the Literature, Media, and Writing program.
- HON 201 and 202 Foundational Conversations I & II may be substituted for any two 200 Level PHIL courses (excepting PHIL 201-202), or PHIL 102 and one 200 Level course. HON 203 Foundational Conversations III may be substituted for any 200 level PHIL course (excepting PHIL 201-202) or PHIL 102.
- HON 211 Global Welfare and Justice may be substituted in place of PLSC 106 Explorations in Politics as a lower-division requirement for the Political Science program.
- HON 212 Arts and Performance may be substituted for THTR 101 Devised Theatre as a lower-division requirement for the Theatre program.
- HON 213 Environment and the Space of Arts may count as an elective for the Environmental Studies program.
- HON 222 Science, Power, and Diversity may be substituted for PHIL 216 Ethical Issues in Health and Healthcare as a required prerequisite for the Public Health major.
- HON 222 Science, Power, and Diversity or HON 231 Human Culture and Behavior may be substituted for a WCSBS course option and prerequisite required for the Public Health and Nursing majors, respectively.
- HON 232 Data/Society/Decision-Making may be substituted for DATA 110 Explorations in Data Science required for the Data Science program or DATA 150 Data and Society required for the undergraduate business core. Please note that this substitution may not apply well to Economics or Marketing as the programs strongly recommend DATA 220 in their undergraduate business core.
- HON 201 or 202 Foundational Conversations I or II, respectively, may be substituted for the WCore Writing Emphasis and/or prerequisite required for nursing majors.