Cultivating Empathy: Lessons From An Interdisciplinary Service-Learning Course, 2018 University of New Mexico
Cultivating Empathy: Lessons From An Interdisciplinary Service-Learning Course, Megan Jacobs, Marygold Walsh-Dilley
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
In “Thinking Critically, Acting Justly,” Naomi Yavneh Klos suggests that the key questions for honors education and social justice are first “how to engage our highest-ability and most motivated students in questions of justice” and second “how honors can be a place of access, equity, and excellence in higher education.” These goals are both important and complementary; achieving the latter helps achieve the former. Honors education creates a fruitful space for inclusion where the knowledge and experience of diverse students develop skills oriented toward justice for the whole community. Making honors a place of access and equity prompts deeper engagement …
Social Justice Education In Honors: Political But Non-Partisan, 2018 University of New Mexico
Social Justice Education In Honors: Political But Non-Partisan, Sarita Cargas
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
In Why Are Professors Liberal and Why Do Conservatives Care?, Neil Gross introduces research that suggests fifty to sixty percent of college professors are leftist or liberal, a much higher proportion than the seventeen percent of Americans in general (7). He posits the conservative fear that “bias” in higher education is a “very serious” problem (Gross 5). April Kelly-Woessner and Matthew Woessner examine studies that also show that college students are more ideologically diverse than the professoriate (498) and, further, that students tend to discredit information presented by biased professors and consider them untrustworthy sources (499). If the majority …
Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council, Vol. 19, No. 1 (Spring/Summer 2018): Forum On Honors And Social Justice, 2018 University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council, Vol. 19, No. 1 (Spring/Summer 2018): Forum On Honors And Social Justice, National Collegiate Honors Council
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Call for Papers
Editorial Policy, Deadlines, and Submission Guidelines
Dedication to Jack W. Rhodes
Editor’s Introduction — Ada Long
Forum on “Honors And Social Justice”
Thinking Critically, Acting Justly . — Naomi Yavneh Klos
Making Honors Success Scripts Available to Students from Diverse Backgrounds — Richard Badenhausen
Cultivating Empathy: Lessons from an Interdisciplinary Service-Learning Course — Megan Jacobs and Marygold Walsh-Dilley
Socioeconomic Equity in Honors Education: Increasing Numbers of First-Generation and Low-Income Students — Angela D. Mead
Social Justice Education in Honors: Political but Non-Partisan — Sarita Cargas
Research Essays
What Makes a Curriculum Significant? Tracing the Taxonomy …
Making Honors Success Scripts Available To Students From Diverse Backgrounds, 2018 Westminster College
Making Honors Success Scripts Available To Students From Diverse Backgrounds, Richard Badenhausen
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
In her lead forum essay, Naomi Yavneh Klos thoughtfully encourages us to reexamine our admissions practices in honors. She argues,
"We need a more nuanced reevaluation of standards that recognizes the role of systemic bias in traditional metrics of academic excellence and that holistically evaluates each student’s strengths and challenges in the context of individual and cultural experience. Such practices strengthen honors by identifying a diverse spectrum of students who both benefit from and enrich our honors community. (8)"
I would like to take that call for reevaluation one step further by asking members of the honors community to interrogate …
Editor's Introduction (Vol. 9, No. 1), 2018 University of Alabama - Birmingham
Editor's Introduction (Vol. 9, No. 1), Ada Long
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Even in these perplexing times, most citizens of the United States would agree that social injustices in this country need to be addressed and alleviated. Most would acknowledge the high rates of poverty, hunger, illiteracy, incarceration, economic inequality, racial discrimination, and bias in college admissions, for instance, that undermine the ideals essential to a thriving democracy. The challenge, though, is getting beneath these abstractions to a level of empathy that can bring about change. While the National Collegiate Honors Council has taken on this challenge in years past, the energy and commitment required to meet the challenge has generally waned …
Editorial Matter: Jnchc 19:1 (Spring/Summer 2018), 2018 University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Editorial Matter: Jnchc 19:1 (Spring/Summer 2018)
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Cover
Masthead
Indexing Statement
Production Editors
Editorial Board
Contents
Call for Papers
Editorial Policy
Deadlines
Submission Guidelines
Dedication -- Jack W. Rhodes, The Citadel
Forum on Honors and Social Justice
About the Authors
About the NCHC Monograph Series
NCHC Monographs & Journals
NCHC Publications Order Form
Back cover
ISBN 978-0-9911351-9-6
Socioeconomic Equity In Honors Education: Increasing Numbers Of First-Generation And Low-Income Students, 2018 Appalachian State University
Socioeconomic Equity In Honors Education: Increasing Numbers Of First-Generation And Low-Income Students, Angela D. Mead
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Many honors administrators can cite the numbers and percentages of students of color and statistics on the male to female ratio. Public institutions might cite in-state to out-of-state comparisons. For most, however, socioeconomic status is low on their list, if there at all, even though it is an important measure of diversity. First-generation college students, neither of whose parents has a baccalaureate degree, make up 58% of college enrollments (Redford & Hoyer). Students with a Pell Grant, which qualifies them as having a low-income background, compose 33% of the American higher education population (Baum et al.). Approximately 24% of college …
From Campus To Corporation: Using Developmental Assessment Centers To Facilitate Students’ Next Career Steps, 2018 Pennsylvania State University
From Campus To Corporation: Using Developmental Assessment Centers To Facilitate Students’ Next Career Steps, Rick R. Jacobs, Kaytlynn R. Griswold, Kristen L. Swigart, Greg E. Loviscky, Rachel L. Heinen
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
introduction
For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing them. —Aristotle, The Nicomachean Ethics
Honors graduates have much to learn when transitioning into their first position after college. For instance, workplaces have an entirely different culture and set of expectations from undergraduate honors classrooms (Wendlandt & Rochlen). Furthermore, the skills they need to become successful employees or graduate students are different from those required of successful honors college students, with a greater emphasis on communication skills (Stevens) as one example.
Honors students are bright, curious, and hard-working (Achterberg), and honors programs give …
General Strain Theory And Prescription Drug Misuse Among Honors Students, 2018 Loyola University New Orleans
General Strain Theory And Prescription Drug Misuse Among Honors Students, Jordan Pedalono, Kelly Frailing
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Drug overdoses are the leading cause of death for Americans under fifty years of age, having surpassed deaths from guns, HIV, and even car crashes. Clearly driving this trend is prescription drug misuse, especially of opioids. Of the over 62,000 drug overdose deaths in 2016 alone, a full third resulted from the misuse of prescription opioids such as Oxycodone, Hydrocodone, Vicodin, and Morphine (Katz; NIDA; see also DHS). Evidence indicates that college students are among those losing their lives each year to prescription drug misuse (Spencer), but many facets of prescription drug misuse, including types, prevalence, and especially explanations, are …
Creating A National Readership For Harper’S Weekly In A Time Of Sectional Crisis, 2018 University of Denver
Creating A National Readership For Harper’S Weekly In A Time Of Sectional Crisis, Ashlyn Stewart
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
PORTZ-PRIZE-WINNING ESSAY, 2017
Throughout the 1840s and ’50s, localized and specialized periodicals serving specific regions, religions, pastimes, and vocations inundated the American magazine market (Lupfer 249). The vast majority of these publications were short-lived; Heather A. Haveman, a sociologist who in 2015 conducted a quantitative analysis of historical American magazines, estimates that the average lifespan of a magazine between 1840 and 1860 was a mere 1.9 years (29). As book historian Eric Lupfer says, “most were risky ventures— undercapitalized, poorly advertised, haphazardly managed, and with limited circulation” (249). However, magazines with the stability and capital of a sponsoring publishing house, …
Linking Academic Excellence And Social Justice Through Community-Based Participatory Research, 2018 Loyola University New Orleans
Linking Academic Excellence And Social Justice Through Community-Based Participatory Research, Lydia Voigt
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Naomi Yavneh Klos poses two questions for the NCHC community in her essay, “Thinking Critically, Acting Justly,” which appears in this issue of JNCHC: (1) how honors pedagogy/curriculum can engage the highestability and most motivated students in questions of social justice; and (2) how the honors curriculum can serve as a place of access, equity, and excellence in higher education. The University Honors Program (UHP) at Loyola University New Orleans has recently implemented several honors social justice seminars that have been experimenting with various approaches to these pedagogical, curricular, and programmatic questions. Violence and Democracy, an honors sociology/criminology seminar, not …
What Makes A Curriculum Significant? Tracing The Taxonomy Of Significant Learning In Jesuit Honors Programs, 2018 Saint Louis University
What Makes A Curriculum Significant? Tracing The Taxonomy Of Significant Learning In Jesuit Honors Programs, Robert J. Pampel
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Over the last few years, I have sat in the opening sessions of the National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC) conference and felt equal parts concern and conviction. In 2015 and 2016, opening speakers enumerated the challenges and opportunities that confront honors educators in a rapidly changing higher education landscape. I sympathized with their concerns in an institutional and cultural context marked by what Schwehn called the “Weberian ethos” of education—an instrumental, and less charitable, attitude toward academic inquiry. Yet, even as I acknowledged the veracity of their arguments, I was buoyed by belief in the Jesuit mission that animates my …
Adapted Art Curriculum: A Guide For Teachers Of Students With Disabilities, 2018 Messiah College
Adapted Art Curriculum: A Guide For Teachers Of Students With Disabilities, Genevieve Yoder
Graduate Education Student Scholarship
Due to the changes in the educational system since the 1997 Individuals with Disabilities Act, few resources have been created to assist art teachers in adapting curriculum and art tools for students with disabilities. This research project explores studies in art and disabilities, as well as curriculum adaptations. The literature review offers an extensive view at current literature on four major themes: a need for curriculum, general education curriculum adaptations, adapted arts curriculum, and the impact of arts education in the lives of people with disabilities. Based on this research, a project was developed to incorporate aspects of these themes …
Charter School Teacher Satisfaction And The Factors That Contribute To And Predict Satisfaction, 2018 Southeastern University - Lakeland
Charter School Teacher Satisfaction And The Factors That Contribute To And Predict Satisfaction, Dylan Barnes
Doctor of Education (Ed.D)
The purpose of this study was to identify the overall job satisfaction level and the most robust predictors of overall satisfaction of K-12 charter school teachers. Understanding the overall satisfaction level of charter school teachers and what makes up their overall satisfaction may assist charter school leaders in being more informed to address teacher attrition, mobility, and retention in charter schools. This quantitative study utilized a survey research method to address five research questions. Teachers in K-12 charter schools located in the state of Florida were invited to complete a survey on teacher satisfaction which included the 20 items of …
An Evaluation Of The Efficacy Of Preschool Participation Upon Kindergarten Readiness, 2018 Southeastern University - Lakeland
An Evaluation Of The Efficacy Of Preschool Participation Upon Kindergarten Readiness, Simone Sellers
Doctor of Education (Ed.D)
The purpose of this quantitative study was to explore whether children who attended a full day of preschool were better prepared for kindergarten than those who attended a part-time program or no program at all. Two levels of the independent variable, preschool participation, were utilized: (a) full-time participation and (b) part-time or no participation. Readiness rates among children who attended a public preschool in a large school district in Florida were examined using standardized academic achievement scores as dependent variables. When looking at kindergarten readiness, males who attended preschool scored higher academic levels than males who attended no preschool. However, …
Anthropology 101: Introduction To Anthropology Indirect Assessment Spring 2018, 2018 Parkland College
Anthropology 101: Introduction To Anthropology Indirect Assessment Spring 2018, Isabel Scarborough Ph.D.
Anthropology Courses
This post course survey for Anthropology 101 collects data on students' familiarity with other cultures before and after taking the course.
Anthropology 103 Introduction To Cultural Anthropology Syllabus Spring 2018, 2018 Parkland College
Anthropology 103 Introduction To Cultural Anthropology Syllabus Spring 2018, Lauren Anaya
Anthropology Courses
No abstract provided.
Anthropology 101: Introduction To Anthropology Syllabus Spring 2018, 2018 Parkland College
Anthropology 101: Introduction To Anthropology Syllabus Spring 2018, Isabel Scarborough Ph.D.
Anthropology Courses
No abstract provided.
Anthropology 101: Introduction To Anthropology Class Activity On Global Inequalities Spring 2018, 2018 Parkland College
Anthropology 101: Introduction To Anthropology Class Activity On Global Inequalities Spring 2018, Isabel Scarborough Ph.D.
Anthropology Courses
This group discussion class activity for Anthropology 101 focuses on the topics of nation building, ethnocentrism, naturalizing discourses, and cultural relativism. In addition to the course text, the activity uses: Howard, Kevin, ‘National Identity, Moral Panic and East European Folk Devils’, in Globalization, Migration and Social Transformation: Ireland in Europe and the World, ed. by Bryan Fanning and Ronald Munck (Farnham, UK and Burlington, USA: Ashgate, 2011), pp.169-181. The film clip mentioned in the assignment is from Russia on Four Wheels, Part 2 (2014), BBC, available for Films on Demand subscribers.
Anthropology 103 Cultural Anthropology Article Analysis And Discussion Activity Spring 2018, 2018 Parkland College
Anthropology 103 Cultural Anthropology Article Analysis And Discussion Activity Spring 2018, Lauren Anaya
Anthropology Courses
This analysis and discussion activity uses the article, "Who Has Time for Cejf? Post-Socialist Migration and Slow Coffee in Neoliberal Chicago" by Ana Croegaert (American Anthropologist. 2011;113(3):463-77).