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Higher Education Administration
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
- Keyword
-
- Theodore (2)
- 1920–2015 (1)
- 1920–2015; practice theory (social sciences) (1)
- 1926–1984; niche evaluation; organizational ideology; learned institutions and societies; standardization (1)
- 1928–1995; higher education; certification (1)
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- 1930–2002; professionalism; occupational closure; Caplow (1)
- 1964-. (1)
- Academic debates & debating; teaching methods; argument-counterargument integration; citizenship & ethics; University of Alabama (AL)—Honors College (1)
- Administration of educational programs; higher education; educational accreditation; National Collegiate Honors Council (1)
- Bourdieu (1)
- College students—health behavior; mindfulness; wellbeing; Southeastern Oklahoma State University (OK)—Honors Program; Johnson County Community College (KS)—Honors Program (1)
- Compassionate teaching; honors pedagogy; holistic education; self that teaches; joy of teaching (1)
- Critical service learning; power dynamics; activist scholarship; International Rescue Committee; University of Montana (MT)—Davidson Honors College (1)
- Diversity in honors education; honors recruitment; scholar identity; institutional barriers; high-achieving students of color (1)
- Educational innovation; student leadership; peer mentorship; commu- nity belonging; Purdue University Honors College (1)
- Ernest L . (1)
- Foucault (1)
- Higher education—honors programs & colleges; intercultural education; California State Polytechnic University (1)
- Informetrics; scholarly periodicals; citation analysis; interdisciplinarity; learned institutions and societies (1)
- Karen (1)
- Learned institutions and societies; occupational groups; voluntary certi- fication; Theodore Caplow; National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC) (1)
- Michel (1)
- Pierre (1)
- Pomona (CA)—The Kellogg Honors College (1)
- Professionalism; ethics; organizational ideology; learned institutions and societies; Caplow (1)
- Professionalism; ethics; organizational ideology; learned institutions and societies; accreditation and certification (1)
- Professionalization; Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL); Boyer (1)
- Public speaking; heroes; courage; community & college; Seminole State College (FL)—The Grindle Honors Institute (1)
- Social belonging; authentic learning; teacher-student relationships; COVID-19 pandemic—teaching and learning; Youngstown State University (OH)— Honors College (1)
- Social justices—study & teaching; honors education; activism; law; Columbus State University (GA)—Honors College (1)
Articles 1 - 27 of 27
Full-Text Articles in Education
Honors In Practice (Theory): A Bourdieusian Perspective On The Professionalization Of Honors, K. Patrick Fazioli
Honors In Practice (Theory): A Bourdieusian Perspective On The Professionalization Of Honors, K. Patrick Fazioli
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Patricia J . Smith’s essay on the professionalization of honors advances several original and provocative arguments that deserve serious consideration. Although Smith makes a plausible case that honors has fulfilled at least three of Theodore Caplow’s four stages of professionalization, a closer reading of this text reveals that the developments identified by Smith fail to satisfy the basic functions that each stage serves on the path toward professionalism. This essay argues that honors has little incentive to become a distinct profession because much of its highly skilled workforce enjoys the protection of occupational closure as college faculty and administrators. The …
Swan Song, Joan Digby
Swan Song, Joan Digby
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Patricia J . Smith’s argument for professionalism based on Caplow’s outdated model is inappropriate for honors administration. The steps outlined are misleading, and the use of the perennially controversial Basic Characteristics as a prescription for professionalizing honors is historically inaccurate and has no place in framing the future of honors education, which needs to remain individual and idiosyncratic to institutions. Professionalization would move honors toward a business model that is antithetical to the spirit of honors.
A Different Kind Of Agitation, Jayda Coons
A Different Kind Of Agitation, Jayda Coons
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Responding to Patricia J . Smith’s essay on the appropriateness of professionalizing honors education, the author argues that discussions of specialization and standardization across honors programs should be suspended until academia has sufficiently dealt with the endemic problem of undercompensated contingent labor. The author further suggests that, rather than invite increased administrative procedures, faculty and staff exercise the characteristics most often ascribed to honors education—flexibility, creativity, community-based problem-solving, interdisciplinarity, and collaboration—to reimagine current professional practices in honors and advocate more forcefully for fair, dignified labor.
The Body Of Honors: Certification As An Expression Of Disciplinary Power, Richard Badenhausen
The Body Of Honors: Certification As An Expression Of Disciplinary Power, Richard Badenhausen
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Using Michel Foucault’s writing on discipline and training, the author suggests that processes like certification ultimately serve as covert normalizing activities that run counter to the spirit and practice of honors education. The author argues for an open, fluid, generative approach to honors program review.
Owning Honors: Outcomes For A Student Leadership Culture, Adam Watkins
Owning Honors: Outcomes For A Student Leadership Culture, Adam Watkins
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
The author provides an overview of a peer mentorship program within an honors curriculum and an assessment of its leadership culture. This culture is based on the values of servant leadership and an inclusive community of learners, and it is promoted through an orientation, training, and robust extracurricular component. The author explores the efficacy of leadership culture, considering its influence on peer mentors’ identification with the honors community and its influence on their learning outcomes.
The Professionalization Of Honors Education, Patricia Joanne Smith
The Professionalization Of Honors Education, Patricia Joanne Smith
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Honors education in America has undergone a process that sociologist Theodore Caplow describes as professionalization. Caplow identifies four stages whereby a developing profession transitions to a professional association: organizing membership, changing the name of occupation from its previous status, developing a code of ethics, and after a period of political agitation, beginning a process by which to enforce occupational barriers. Each of these defined stages present new challenges to honors educators. This paper examines honors education in the context of specialization, considering both the origins and growth of honors education in the last century and contemporary discourse relating to certification …
The Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council: A Bibliometric Study, Emily Walshe
The Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council: A Bibliometric Study, Emily Walshe
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
This paper analyzes summative content and citation patterns in the Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council (ISSN 1559-0151), a peer-reviewed, scholarly publication related to honors education, during its first 20 volumes of existence from 2000 to 2019. The bibliometric study consists of two parts: an analysis of articles and analysis of citations. Quantitative and qualitative measures are used to examine article types, authorship patterns, cited references, and coverage of core subjects. Results indicate 522 articles with an annual output average of 26 .1. Annual input averages 37 .4 authors, featuring 492 unique authors who represent 248 unique institutions and …
A Requiem For Certification, A Song Of Honors, Jeffrey Portnoy
A Requiem For Certification, A Song Of Honors, Jeffrey Portnoy
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
This essay rejects any notion of professionalization in honors programs and colleges as well as any plan for the National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC) that is connected to implementing a process of certification or accreditation. The author offers historical details about the machinations of a small group of powerful NCHC officers who tried to turn the organization into an accrediting or certifying body and how they were successfully blocked by grassroots opposition from the membership and by a large group of NCHC past presidents who recognized the ill will and divisiveness that would result. The author discusses the damage that …
Editor’S Introduction, Ada Long
Editor’S Introduction, Ada Long
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
The topic of this issue’s Forum, “The Professionalization of Honors,” has a history in the National Collegiate Honors Council that probably goes back to its origins and that has evoked turbulent controversy within the past three or four decades. In the mid-1990s, the proposal to establish a document titled “The Basic Characteristics of a Fully Developed Honors Program” arose from a perceived vagueness about the meaning of “honors education .” Proponents of the document claimed that they were simply trying to create clarity out of chaos in defining the profession of honors while opponents feared the prospect of standardization. Heated …
The Current Status, Perceptions, And Impact Of Honors Program Review, Rebecca Rook
The Current Status, Perceptions, And Impact Of Honors Program Review, Rebecca Rook
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
While the National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC) supports routine, systematic program review, research suggests that only about half of honors programs engage in some form of assessment. This study examines the current state of honors program evaluation by gauging honors administrators’ perceptions of program review and assessing the impact of the NCHC’s review process on those programs that have employed it. A census of all NCHC honors directors was taken using questionnaires. Fifteen percent (n = 121) completed the census, with results suggesting substantial increases (87–91%) in program assessment from 2011 and a majority of respondents (87%) describing the review …
Honors, Professionalism, And Teaching And Learning: A Response To Certification, John Zubizarreta
Honors, Professionalism, And Teaching And Learning: A Response To Certification, John Zubizarreta
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
This essay responds to an argument for certification based on a particular sociological theory of professionalization. The case for certification rests on the supposition that honors has evolved from a nascent educational movement focused on distinct teaching and learning approaches for high-ability students to one that is now ready to professionalize in ways that require more specialization, organizational oversight, systematic evaluation, and exclusive credentialing through certification. The author suggests that honors is already a full-fledged professional endeavor, recognizing that the core emphasis on teaching and learning in honors is a genuinely professional endeavor when performed authentically in the experimental, creative, …
Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council, Vol. 21, No. 1 (Spring/Summer 2020)
Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council, Vol. 21, No. 1 (Spring/Summer 2020)
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Contents
Call for Papers . v
Editorial Policy, Deadlines, and Submission Guidelines . vi
Dedication to Rae Rosenthal . vii
Editor’s Introduction ix — Ada Long
Forum essays on “The Professionalization of Honors”
The Professionalization of Honors Education 3 — Patricia J. Smith
Honors, Professionalism, and Teaching and Learning: A Response to Certification 19 — John Zubizarreta
The Body of Honors: Certification as an Expression of Disciplinary Power 25 — Richard Badenhausen
A Requiem for Certification, A Song of Honors 33 — Jeffrey A. Portnoy
Swan Song 45 — Joan Digby
A Different Kind of Agitation . …
The Danger Room, Laura Dickinson
The Danger Room, Laura Dickinson
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
is essay describes how an honors classroom introduces public speaking and active listening to encourage heroism and social justice among students. Asserting that people often look for a hero in times of crises, the author suggests that honors programs can become safe places where students learn the skills necessary to advocate for those in need and demonstrably help their communities. By cultivating essential skills in rhetoric and oral presentation, honors students identify with heroic, altruistic aspects of themselves and others.
Honoring The Whole Person: Indigenous Wisdom And University Honors Programs, Joseph Gazing Wolf
Honoring The Whole Person: Indigenous Wisdom And University Honors Programs, Joseph Gazing Wolf
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
As part of the National Collegiate Honors Council’s (2022) collection of essays about the value of honors to its graduates (1967–2019), the author reflects on the personal and professional impacts of the honors experience.
Growing up in “Garbage City” on the outskirts of Cairo left little hope for a better life. Members of indigenous communities of Upper Egypt had been forcibly relocated to this landfill by the Egyptian government decades before my birth. These tribal communities were known in Egyptian culture as “the black savages” and “the trashy ones.” My parents were compassionate people of little means, and although rummaging …
On The Value Of Being In The Moment In Honors Education, Lisa L. Coleman, Anne Dotter
On The Value Of Being In The Moment In Honors Education, Lisa L. Coleman, Anne Dotter
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Recent scholarship demonstrates a direct correlation between the body and brain in academic performance and general wellbeing. This essay considers mindfulness practice as an integrative discipline in honors education. While exercise offers many benefits to college students, the authors maintain that the mindfulness practices of yoga, qi gong, and meditation are uniquely suited to mediate stresses on mental health and improve focus, presence, and cognitive ability. Honors practitioners are encouraged to incorporate mindfulness practice into curricula and classrooms. A review of literature in mindful awareness and meditation practice is presented.
Teaching From The Heart, Suketu P. Bhavsar
Teaching From The Heart, Suketu P. Bhavsar
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
This essay is an invitation to consider a paradigm shift in the academy, one that allows and encourages us to bring our whole selves into our teaching and professional lives. I describe a set of values that permits and encourages the expression of a rigorously examined inner self in harmony with the traditional expression of our scholarly selves in our curricula and classrooms. Drawing from lessons that have defined my aspirations as a teacher, I challenge honors educators to lead the way in courageously examining our pedagogical approaches and to teach from our hearts.
Jnchc: Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council Vol. 21, No. 2 | Fall/Winter 2020
Jnchc: Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council Vol. 21, No. 2 | Fall/Winter 2020
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Contents
Call for Papers
Editorial Policy, Deadlines, and Submission Guidelines
Dedication to William “Rusty” Rushton
Editor’s Introduction • Ada Long
Forum essays on “big hearts, big minds”
Teaching from the Heart • Suketu P. Bhavsar
Teaching as a Whole • Mollie Hartup
On the Value of Being in the Moment in Honors Education • Lisa L. Coleman and Anne Dotter
Putting the “Human” into the Humanities • Annmarie Guzy
Infusing Critically Reflexive Service Learning into Honors • Lauren Collins and Michaela Niva
Into the Storm • Robert Gill
The Danger Room • Laura Dickinson
Research essays
Claiming Debate’s Value for …
Claiming Debate’S Value For Honors Student Learning, Megan Snider Bailey
Claiming Debate’S Value For Honors Student Learning, Megan Snider Bailey
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
One reason that honors faculty often engage students in seminar discussions is to keep debate’s features of competition, argument, and discord at bay. Intentionally structured academic debate represents a transdisciplinary pedagogy capable of cultivating ethical and empathetic citizenship through critical and creative thinking. The author uses such debate in a seminar curriculum to engage multiple sides of a single, complex sociopolitical issue with students of different disciplinary backgrounds, thereby fostering new understandings of beliefs: what is believed, why it is believed, and how one might live in accord with one’s beliefs as an ethical citizen. Through research, writing, and oral …
About The Authors; About The Nchc Monograph Series; Nchc Monographs & Journals; Nchc Publications Order Form
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
No abstract provided.
Into The Storm, Robert Gill
Into The Storm, Robert Gill
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Many colleges profess a deep commitment to teaching the values of social justice by simply following laws and then using compliance as evidence of building inclusive community. This essay considers practical outcomes for the authentic and compassionate teaching of social justice issues by presenting two (2018 and 2019) seven-week honors offerings that examine minimally stipulated laws and the ways they are enacted by encouraging students to engage in contemporary and historical discourses on the subject. Challenging honors educators to reexamine legal philosophies, historical precedence, and their role in the academy, the author argues for the moral obligation of honors to …
Dedication: A Love Song For W. Rusty Rushton
Dedication: A Love Song For W. Rusty Rushton
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
On the model of T.S. Eliot's "Prufrock"
Infusing Critically Reflexive Service Learning Into Honors, Lauren Collins, Michaela Niva
Infusing Critically Reflexive Service Learning Into Honors, Lauren Collins, Michaela Niva
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
This essay describes a service-learning course designed with heart-centered pedagogy. Authors examine the relationship between individual and society in service learning and discuss the rationale and processes involved in curricular design to suggest an alternative approach to community engagement. Understanding service learning as going beyond merely the attainment of hours requisite for course completion, students are asked to develop critical reflexivity by first considering the focus, identity, and needs of community partners. Authors suggest that this curriculum provides practical opportunities for engaging students intellectually and emotionally in order to strengthen self-concept and cultural awareness of a vulnerable population.
Using Possible Selves And Intersectionality Theory To Understand Why Students Of Color Opt Out Of Honors, Cindy S. Ticknor, Andrea Dawn Frazier, Johniqua Williams, Maryah Thompson
Using Possible Selves And Intersectionality Theory To Understand Why Students Of Color Opt Out Of Honors, Cindy S. Ticknor, Andrea Dawn Frazier, Johniqua Williams, Maryah Thompson
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Honors education values diversity, not simply to enrich our classrooms but for equity and social justice. At Columbus State University, students of color were underrepresented in honors education, and we sought to determine if institutional structures hindered them from being able to access educational programming that was commensurate with their ability. We used focus group interviews with students of color who were academically eligible to enroll in honors education yet never participated. We combined focus group interviews with an analysis of our recruiting practices. Using a theoretical framework based on intersectionality and possible selves theory, we found that our participants …
Editor’S Introduction, Ada Long
Editor’S Introduction, Ada Long
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
In 2019, plans were well underway for the 2020 NCHC conference with the theme “Big Hearts, Big Minds.” Then came January of 2020 and the Corona virus with its vocabulary of social distancing, remote learning, the dangers of personal contact, and the importance of isolation. In addition to upending and redirecting all the conference plans that had been so carefully developed under the leadership of Suketu P. Bhavsar, the new language of COVID-19 was an assault on the very intimacy, connectedness, and close personal relationships in honors that were the theme of the conference. The virus has been an obstruction …
Teaching As A Whole, Mollie Hartup
Teaching As A Whole, Mollie Hartup
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Deeply ingrained in honors culture and curricula is the value of connecting with and supporting students as whole persons. This essay offers personal experiences from the perspective of a compassionate educator who invests in the whole student, exploring how authentic teaching leads to rapport and belonging in the honors community and beyond. The author suggests that honors can serve the academy as an example of how investing in the complete person is mutually beneficial.
Putting The “Human” Into The Humanities, Annmarie Guzy
Putting The “Human” Into The Humanities, Annmarie Guzy
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
A recent (2020) report by the Modern Language Association addresses the ethical treatment of graduate students in the humanities, and the author considers this in the context of honors students and faculty. Lamenting missed opportunities for in-person group presentations, student-led Socratic circles, and final individual presentations during the coronavirus pandemic, the author reflects on ways of experiencing joy and practicing compassion in teaching. Students and faculty mutually benefit from exploring and honoring each other’s humanity.
Student Perception And Affinity: Establishment Of An Institutional Framework For The Examination Of Underrepresented Programs Such As Agriculture In Honors, Kayla L. Kutzke, Rosemarie A. Nold, Michael G. Gonda, Alecia M. Hansen, Rebecca C. Bott
Student Perception And Affinity: Establishment Of An Institutional Framework For The Examination Of Underrepresented Programs Such As Agriculture In Honors, Kayla L. Kutzke, Rosemarie A. Nold, Michael G. Gonda, Alecia M. Hansen, Rebecca C. Bott
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
This (2019) study assesses student perceptions of an honors college relative to other colleges in an institutional framework. Disproportionately low enrollments in honors from specific majors (particularly those in the College of Agriculture, Food, and Environmental Sciences) prompt researchers to investigate the culture of honors, perceived curricular demands, and the relationship of honors to other colleges and the students they serve. Researchers survey honors and non-honors students (n = 259) across disciplines (n = 59) representing all academic colleges across campus. Data suggest that while a majority of students affirm their abilities to complete the honors curriculum and perceive honors …