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Articles 1 - 30 of 66
Full-Text Articles in Education
Sola Scarab Workers Symposium 2005, Andrew Smith
Sola Scarab Workers Symposium 2005, Andrew Smith
University of Nebraska State Museum: Programs Information
Entomological Society of America Annual Meeting
Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Sunday, 6 November 2005
Speakers: Andrew Smith, Canadian Museum of Nature; Maxi Polihronakis, University of Connecticut; Matt Paulsen, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Ainsley Seago, University of California, Berkeley; Sasha Spector, American Museum of Natural History; Dana Price, Rutgers University; Kevina Vulinec, Delaware State University; David Hawks, University of California - Riverside; Frank Hovore, California State University, Northridge
Comparison Of The Academic Achievement Of First-Year Female Honors Program And Non-Honors Program Engineering Students, Gayle Hartleroad
Comparison Of The Academic Achievement Of First-Year Female Honors Program And Non-Honors Program Engineering Students, Gayle Hartleroad
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
The purpose of this study was to compare the academic achievement of first-year female engineering students based on participation, or lack thereof, in the honors program. A single research question was developed for this study: “Is there a significant difference in academic achievement of first-year female engineering Honors Program students and non-honors program students?” The problem for this study was that many students in the Freshman Engineering program at Purdue University believed that participation in an honors program damaged students’ grade point averages with its challenging curriculum. This was especially true for beginning female students entering a traditionally male-dominated career …
“What Is An Honors Student?”, Jay Freyman
“What Is An Honors Student?”, Jay Freyman
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
It is first necessary to recognize the distinction between the questions “What is an honors student?” or better “What are the characteristics of an honors student?” and “How do you recognize a student with those characteristics?” The first of these two questions is easier to approach since it is more a matter of prescription than of description, a presentation of an ideal rather than a recognition of an actual state. We can all list characteristics which we would like or expect those special students to have who are worthy in our estimation of the designation “honors.” These expectations, I submit, …
Editorial Matter For Volume 6, Number 2, Ada Long, Dail Mullins
Editorial Matter For Volume 6, Number 2, Ada Long, Dail Mullins
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Editorial Policy
Contents
Call for Papers
Submission Guidelines
Dedication to Jocelyn E. Whitehead Jackson
Editor's Introduction, Ada Long
About the Authors
Honors: When Value-Added Is Really Added Value, Jacqueline Kelleher
Honors: When Value-Added Is Really Added Value, Jacqueline Kelleher
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Sometimes I look at the responsibilities and demands placed on me in my current position and cannot believe I haven’t cracked up yet. In this era of accountability and “show me the data,” institutional assessment directors like me are constantly bombarded with challenges that require quick, critical, divergent thinking, analytical reasoning, effective speaking, and, to some extent, creative writing. As both a professor and administrator at a state university, I live and breathe producing evidence that we as an institution are having an impact on student learning. When I was growing up, I never imagined I would end up being …
What Honors Students Want (And Expect): The Views Of Top Michigan High School And College Students, James P. Hill
What Honors Students Want (And Expect): The Views Of Top Michigan High School And College Students, James P. Hill
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Often missing in an overall assessment of honors is a broad, comparative analysis of what top academic students want and expect from college and more particularly from an honors experience. Limited case studies or theoretical research articles analyzing how honors students think or perform may overlook or undervalue this important voice in the honors discourse. This article, although in some respects also just a larger-scale case study, has a broader perspective than many similar studies of honors students. The purpose of this paper is to highlight the expectations of prospective and current college honors students. This study also compares the …
Redemptive Memory: The Christianization Of The Holocaust In America, Laura Bender Herron
Redemptive Memory: The Christianization Of The Holocaust In America, Laura Bender Herron
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
There has been a considerable debate among historians concerning the role of the Holocaust in the American collective memory. Since the watershed year 1993, when the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum opened its doors on the Mall in Washington, DC, and the film Schindler’s List debuted, the level of awareness of the Holocaust in the public mind has been at an all-time high in the United States. The question at the heart of this academic discussion is how Americans have come to identify so strongly with an experience that occurred over sixty years ago, on foreign shores, to a group …
Honors As An Adjective: Response To Jay Freyman, Len Zane
Honors As An Adjective: Response To Jay Freyman, Len Zane
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
As an ex-honors program/college CEO, the question raised by this Forum— ”What is an Honors (fill in the blank)?”—got me reminiscing about the old days. In some sense the best answers are the obviously circular answers. An honors student is a student participating in an honors program. An honors curriculum is the curriculum required to graduate with honors and is made up, obviously, of honors courses. The people teaching those courses are by necessity honors faculty. But how can an honors course be identified? Well, it is one populated by honors students that meets some curricular requirement of an honors …
Characteristics Of The Contemporary Honors College* A Descriptive Analysis Of A Survey Of Nchc Member Colleges, Peter Sederberg
Characteristics Of The Contemporary Honors College* A Descriptive Analysis Of A Survey Of Nchc Member Colleges, Peter Sederberg
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Every year the number of honors colleges across the country increases. Most of these new colleges emerge out of pre-existing honors programs, an origin that suggests that the change reflects an interest in raising the public profile of honors education at a particular institution. Sometimes this transformation entails only a cosmetic name change; other times, institutions take the opportunity to review what they are providing in honors education and how they might enhance it.
The Executive Committee of the National Collegiate Honors Council recognized that the NCHC ought to take a strong interest in this phenomenon. If an institution is …
Book Review How To Write A Ba Thesis: A Practical Guide From Your First Ideas To Your Finished Paper (Chicago Guides To Writing, Editing, And Publishing) By Charles Lipson, Hallie Savage
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
A hallmark of honors education is high-quality undergraduate research. For honors faculty and administrators, curricular planning that results in excellent thesis research can be a special challenge because honors students represent a wide range of disciplines and vary in competency and preparation for research. How to Write a BA Thesis meets this challenge. It is a well-developed, practical guidebook for accomplishment of honors and/or undergraduate research. The contents are built on a developmental continuum or time table beginning with the conceptual basis for a thesis. As such, it is applicable to one-semester projects as well as theses or other indepth …
In Praise Of Silence, Bebe Nickolai
In Praise Of Silence, Bebe Nickolai
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
I thought I was ready for her, a sophomore in my honors rhetoric class. I have been teaching the honors rhetoric class for almost twenty years. Yet every semester I revise my syllabus for the class as I realize that honors students can handle even bigger challenges—more difficult readings, more demanding writing assignments.
A Student Like Me, Bonnie D. Irwin
A Student Like Me, Bonnie D. Irwin
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Jay Freyman suggests that we often define “honors” (and, I suspect, many other things) based on our own experiences and observations as undergraduates. He then provides us with a valuable means of uncovering those diamonds in the rough and shading our eyes from those sparkling cubic zirconia who may have the resumés but lack the drive to take full advantage of the honors experience. This selection process has become even more complicated by the intrusion of parents who act as brokers for their students and who, despite our best efforts to thwart them, sometimes overshadow the stellar qualifications of their …
What Is Honors?, Dail W. Mullins Jr.
What Is Honors?, Dail W. Mullins Jr.
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
For several years I have edited a small, in-house journal for the School of Education’s Technology Advisory Committee at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB), a journal which is distributed to the faculty and posted on the School of Education’s website. Until last issue. The last issue I submitted—while dutifully made available to the faculty and staff—never made it onto the website. No one offered an explanation, and I never inquired about the matter—after all, I was still able to add the activity to my already portly and now largely useless post-retirement vita—but I remained mildly curious about it …
A Way Of Life, Sriram Khe
A Way Of Life, Sriram Khe
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
The question “What is Honors?” could not have been posed at a better time for me: earlier this summer, I took up a new responsibility of directing the Western Oregon University (WOU) Honors Program while only in my fourth year at the university. Work has commenced at WOU to prepare for the accreditation process, which is also a wonderful opportunity to think about questions such as “What is Honors?”
Teaching Honors, Sam Schuman
Teaching Honors, Sam Schuman
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Jay Freyman’s discussion of “What is an Honors Student?” sent me off on the somewhat quirky tangent of asking, “So What is an Honors Teacher?” Even quirkier, my musings led me to the conclusion that the best answer was provided by John Lennon and the Beatles: “all you need is love.”
Is, Ought, And Honors, Daniel Pinti
Is, Ought, And Honors, Daniel Pinti
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Somewhat uncomfortably, I confess that the question “What is Honors?” rings a bit too Platonic to these ears. I hardly feel qualified to describe “Honors” in terms of its timeless, disembodied, ideal Form, although I suppose the shadows on the wall of my own humble cave are recognizable enough. Honors at Niagara University has as its primary purpose to enrich the academic experience of NU’s most talented students, and we try to do so by weaving coursework and individual research opportunities into each student’s curriculum in order to enhance both the general education and the major programs. We put on …
Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council -- Volume 6, No. 2 -- Complete Issue
Journal Of The National Collegiate Honors Council -- Volume 6, No. 2 -- Complete Issue
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
CONTENTS
Call for Papers
Submission Guidelines
Dedication to Jocelyn E. Whitehead Jackson
Editor’s Introduction -- Ada Long
FORUM ON “WHAT IS HONORS?”
What is Honors? -- Dail W. Mullins, Jr.
What is an Honors Student? -- Jay Freyman
Teaching Honors -- Sam Schuman
Honors as an Adjective: Response to Jay Freyman -- Len Zane
What Honors Can Do -- Vince Brewton
Is, Ought, and Honors -- Daniel Pinti
A Way of Life -- Sriram Khé
In Praise of Silence -- Bebe Nickolai
A Student like Me -- Bonnie D. Irwin
Honors: When Value-Added is Really Added Value -- Jacqueline P. …
Nefdc Exchange, Volume 16, Number 2, Fall 2005, New England Faculty Development Consortium
Nefdc Exchange, Volume 16, Number 2, Fall 2005, New England Faculty Development Consortium
NEFDC Exchange
Contents
Message from the President - Judith Kamber, Northern Essex Community College
From the editors - Tom Thibodeau, New England Institue of Technology, and Steve Berrien, Bristol Community College
Praising the Profession - Thomas S. Edwards, Thomas College
Faculty Development for Community College Leadership - Charles Kaminski, Berkshire Community College
Literacy Identity and Diversity - Melissa M. Juchniewicz, Northern Essex Community College
Connecting with Others
Dwell in Possibility - Bill Searle, Asnuntuck Community College
Meet Our New Board Members
NEFDC Fall Conference, Friday, November 4, 2005, Westford, Massachusetts; theme: Beyond Tolerance: Diversity and the Challenge of Pedagogy in American Higher …
The Role Of The College Campus Environment And The Racial Identity Development Of Biracial College Students, Natasha H. Chapman
The Role Of The College Campus Environment And The Racial Identity Development Of Biracial College Students, Natasha H. Chapman
Department of Educational Administration: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
The purpose o f this study was to explore how biracial students described the role of the college campus environment on the development of their racial identity. The research questions were: 1) What is the biracial student’s self-assigned racial identity? 2) What life experiences have aided in the formation of the biracial individual’s racial identity? 3) How has the college experience contributed to the development o f the biracial individual’s racial identity? 4) What key factors in the campus environment were most salient to biracial college students in the development of their racial identity? 5) How do biracial college students …
Policy For Responding To Allegations Of Research Misconduct -- Withdrawn
Policy For Responding To Allegations Of Research Misconduct -- Withdrawn
Research Compliance Services: Policies
***SUPERCEDED***
Please refer to current policies at http://research.unl.edu/researchcompliance/research-misconduct-policies-and-procedures/
What Honors Can Do, Vince Brewton
What Honors Can Do, Vince Brewton
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Since becoming honors director at a small regional institution in March, I have had more than a few opportunities to reflect on what honors might be and what it is not, or should not, be. When Dail W. Mullins, Jr. writes of “balancing tensions” between meritocratic and egalitarian tendencies, it is a reminder that honors education is not a single linear pursuit as outsiders often conceive it, “working with the best and the brightest” (what could be easier or more straightforward!), but involves a reconciliation of opposites that is fundamental to paradox. Most of us arrive in our profession with …
Athena, Telemachus, And The Honors Student Odyssey: The Academic Librarian As An Agent In Mentored Learning, Emily Walshe
Athena, Telemachus, And The Honors Student Odyssey: The Academic Librarian As An Agent In Mentored Learning, Emily Walshe
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
This study considers how librarians can develop mentoring schemes that enhance intellectual discourse among honors students. The author defines mentored learning; identifies the need for integrated information support in honors curricula; outlines a project that has employed a mentored learning model; and examines how a mentored learning program may assist in promoting high achievement and low attrition in honors programs. This paper was presented at the 39th annual NCHC conference in November 2004.
Intimations Of Imitation: Honors Students And Their Alps, Jeffrey Portnoy
Intimations Of Imitation: Honors Students And Their Alps, Jeffrey Portnoy
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Joan Digby’s “The Age of Imitation” reads like Joan herself: shrewd, provocative, and astute in her observations. I found her remarks compelling on both the personal and professional level as I think about the current generation of students and the society in which we move.
The Hopes And Fears Of Post-9/11 Years, Mel Piehl
The Hopes And Fears Of Post-9/11 Years, Mel Piehl
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
In 1998 Arthur Levine and Jeannette Cureton wrote in When Hope and Fear Collide: A Portrait of Today’s College Student that the current college generation they had studied was “wearied by the enormous pressure they face economically, politically, socially, and psychologically. At the same time, they are energized by a desire to enjoy the good life and make their corner of the world a better place. This is a generation in which hope and fear are colliding” (17).
What Honors Students Are Like Now, Rosalie Otero
What Honors Students Are Like Now, Rosalie Otero
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
I recently received a letter from one of our Honors alumnae. Zoë wrote: “I’m doing it again! I’ve decided to run another marathon in support of the Leukemia Society of America in Anchorage, Alaska. Five years ago, I undertook a great challenge when I successfully completed the marathon in San Diego, running 26.2 miles in just over 4 1/2 hours. Although training in Alaska has proved challenging–getting up in the dark to confront freezing temperatures, snow and ice, while trying to avoid running into moose (which, believe it or not, happens often), the challenges that I’m encountering are nothing compared …
Seeing Nature: Ansel Adams In The Human And Natural Environments Of Yosemite, Megan Mcwenie
Seeing Nature: Ansel Adams In The Human And Natural Environments Of Yosemite, Megan Mcwenie
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Wallace Stegner once hailed the legacy of Ansel Adams as bringing photography to the world of art as a unique “way of seeing.” What Adams saw through the lens of his camera, and what audiences see when looking at one of his photographs, does indeed constitute a particular way of seeing the world, a vision that is almost always connected to the natural environment. An Ansel Adams photograph evokes more than an aesthetic response to his work—it also stirs reflections about his involvement in the natural world that was so often his subject. Audiences experiencing his work participate in a …
Imitation, Economic Insecurity, And Risk Aversion, Jay Mandt
Imitation, Economic Insecurity, And Risk Aversion, Jay Mandt
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
There is an ingrained notion in American culture that individuals are responsible for their circumstances. In the Great Depression, people blamed themselves for unemployment, as if somehow their personal character flaws, rather than a breakdown of the national economy, had caused them to be laid off. At a visceral level, Americans reject the idea that they are in the grip of vast forces beyond their control.
Originality Is A Risk, Annmarie Guzy
Originality Is A Risk, Annmarie Guzy
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
I am a teacher of composition and technical communication by vocation, but one avocation of mine is horror, and I occasionally teach a class on horror literature and film. If one is taking films to task for endless, derivative sequels and remakes, as Joan does, then horror is certainly no exception. Many people view the genre with another kind of distaste, decrying its graphic representations of violence and sexuality. Horror is messy and dangerous, and it sends the message that risky behavior is punished with death or worse.
Editorial Matter For Volume 6, Number 1, Ada Long, Dail Mullins
Editorial Matter For Volume 6, Number 1, Ada Long, Dail Mullins
Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive
Editorial Policy
Contents
Call for Papers
Submission Guidelines
Dedication to Faith Gabelnick
Editor's Introduction, Ada Long
About the Authors