Each
semester the Honors Program at Charleston Southern University
will offer several courses open only to Honors Program
students. Specifically designed for the high-ability,
motivated students that comprise the program, Honors
Courses are one of the unique ways Honors students benefit
from their Honors Program experience while at Charleston
Southern University. Although Honors Program courses
are offered in diverse academic disciplines, they generally
share certain fundamental characteristics that distinguish
them from non-honors courses.
An
Honors Course does not exist simply to cover a greater
amount of material; an Honors Course will handle the
subject matter differently than a similar non-Honors
course. While Honors Courses may require some greater
time commitment of the students than similar non-honors
courses, the emphasis should be on increasing the depth
and thoroughness of understanding rather than the amount
of material covered. Honors students do not need to do
more work than non-honors students; they need to do work
that is more appropriate for high-ability, motivated
students. The focus of an Honors Course should be on
the student attaining a more sophisticated depth and/or
breadth of coverage than in a non-Honors course. To this
end, where appropriate, Honors courses should use primary-source
documents (e.g., journal articles, original texts), and
require students to design and conduct research models
appropriate for the discipline.
Honors
Courses should be designed to engage students actively
in the learning process. Generally, honors courses should
require students to participate in discussion, debate,
simulations, or case studies where the student is expected
to actively engage with the course material. They should
ask students to develop, discuss, and defend opinions,
attitudes, or values related to the course content; to
pose questions and develop oral and written responses
appropriate to the discipline; and/or to develop leadership
skills through presentations, service-learning internships,
or professional development activities.
Honors
Courses should encourage students to interact with faculty
and with one another, both inside and outside class,
as part of the learning process. For this reason, they
should be designed for fewer students than other classes
and be taught by regular faculty members.
Although
the grading methods in an Honors Course may be different
to reflect the complexity and sophistication of the material,
the grading standards at the end of the course, however,
should not be designed to force the Honors students to
compete among themselves for a limited number of “A” or “B” grades.
Instead, their grades should be assigned on the basis
of the quality of their work compared to the quality
of the work generally expected in such a course (in both
regular and honors sections). In other words, the honors
student should be graded in the context of all of the
students enrolled in similar courses at the same level,
not in the context of an honors section in isolation.
Students who meet the challenge of an Honors Course should
have this achievement reflected in their grades, but
there should be no hesitation to award low grades to
students in an Honors Course who do not meet course expectations.
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Please note that bold script indicates mandatory guidelines.