The Arts and Sciences Honors Program, one of the oldest in the country, provides a select group of undergraduates with a grounding in the classics of Western thought through a rigorous curriculum. It is marked by small classes, discussion seminars and close interpersonal contact between students and instructors who also act as academic advisors.
Approximately 125 students enter the Program annually. They generally have combined SAT's in the range of 1450 and are usually in the top five percent of their high-school classes, though we try hard to hunt out the off-beat students who may not score as well but who have several years of Greek or, founded literary journals, worked at interesting jobs, earned unusual recommendations from their high-school teachers. The total number of A&S students in all four years of the Honors Program is approximately 500. About 100 seniors complete the requirements and graduate with Honors standing each year.听To continue in good standing in the Program, a student must maintain a minimum grade point average of 3.40.
There are also honors programs in the Carroll School of Management, Connell School of Nursing, and Lynch School of Education. Their requirements differ from those of the A&S Honors Program.
Learning Outcomes (as reported to the University Core Development Committee, March 28, 2015) for the sequence of courses in the Arts and Sciences Honors Program. Publishing this explanation of defined learning outcomes is in compliance with New England Association of Colleges and Universities guidelines.
as these are presented in classic works of literature, art, philosophy, and theology.
The Honors Program has a standing committee of faculty engaged in the yearly assessment of this curriculum by means of a process of reading randomly selected and anonymous student work in the second year of the program. This student work has already been submitted for grading purposes as a separate matter. The goal of assessment is to give the faculty information needed to strengthen the pedagogy of all courses offered by all professors. Anonymity and random selection guarantee that the faculty will assess the program as a whole. This assures that individual students are offered a continuously improving and self-critical curriculum and seminar pedagogy.
The standing committee on assessment presents its findings at an annual faculty meeting in May to develop an action plan for the next year. A report on this process and the actions envisioned does to the UCDC which oversees all required university Core courses. The UCDC itself has a commitment to continuous core development.
Qualified high school senior applicants are invited to participate. Criteria include: high-school achievement, test scores, teacher recommendations, and the content and quality of application essays. Some students are offered admission as sophomores, on the recommendation of instructors and on the basis of strong academic performance.
Contact: Susan Migliorisi
617-552-3285
All Boston College undergraduates are required to do an extensive core curriculum in the humanities and the natural and social sciences. The Honors Program provides students with the opportunity to complete most of this core in a four-year sequence of courses and academic challenges that provides an integrated liberal arts education of a kind one can find in few colleges or universities. On this solid foundation a student can then build a major concentration in one or more specialized disciplines, or add one of the interdisciplinary minors available to all students in the College.
The program offers small classes (no larger than 15 students), the give and take of seminar discussion, the close personal attention of instructors who are also your academic advisers, and the companionship of bright and eager classmates on your journey through the history of ideas. It also offers you a set of challenges matched to each level of your development: in first and second years an overview of the whole Western cultural tradition, in third year a course focused on the 20th century's reinterpretation of the tradition, and in your final year the chance to bring together what you have learned in a thesis or creative project or in an integrative seminar.
In your first two years you will take a course called The Western Cultural Tradition. This is a four-semester, six-credit course, equal to two of the five courses 情色空间 students take each semester. It is taught in seminar fashion. The course content reflects the fact that the course fulfills the 情色空间 core requirements in literature and writing, philosophy, theology, and social science. Though individual instructors vary their reading lists, there is broad agreement about the central texts. The first year deals with the classical tradition. It begins with Greek literature and philosophy, Latin literature, the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, and continues through representative texts of the late Roman Empire and early Christianity, Thomas Aquinas, Dante, and medieval epic and romantic poetry and drama. The second year begins with Renaissance authors, continues with the religious and political theorists of the 17th century, the principal Enlightenment figures, the English and continental Romantics, major 19th-century writers such as Hegel and Kierkegaard and Dostoevsky and Nietzsche, and ends with the seminal cultural theories of Darwin and Marx and Freud.
This course is not a survey of the history of ideas taught out of anthologies. It is rigorously text-centered, and the function of class discussion and the frequent writing assignments is to teach you to understand and dissect arguments and presuppositions and to relate disparate evidence into coherent hypotheses about the works that have been central in the development of our contemporary intellectual tradition. Each instructor has developed her own distinctive syllabus and approach
Freshman
Year-long, double-credit seminar "Western Cultural Tradition I-IV" (ancients and medievals)
Sophomore
Year-long, double-credit seminar "Western Cultural Tradition V-VIII" (1500-1900)
In junior year you will take an advanced seminar called The 20th Century and the Tradition. This two-semester course (three credits each semester) draws on literature, visual art, science, philosophy, religion, political theory, historical events such as the Holocaust, and developments such as the globalization of the economy and of information technology, in order to examine how the 20th century has absorbed, criticized or reinterpreted the cultural tradition it inherited. You will be challenged to understand the interplay between the tradition and some of the significant critical currents in the intellectual culture of our century, for example, Marxism, psychoanalysis, comparative anthropology, structuralism and post-structuralism, feminism, and the third-world critique of Eurocentric culture. The aim of the course is to complete the work begun in freshman and sophomore years, to equip you with a critical understanding of contemporary culture that will enable you to live thoughtfully and responsibly. If you study abroad in your junior year you will normally take this course in senior year.
In your final year you may choose either of two ways of finishing your work in the Program. You may write a senior thesis, which is ordinarily a six-credit enterprise, spread over two semesters. This may be a research or analytic monograph, or it may be a creative project involving performance in some medium. Students have written on topics as diverse as key words in the Russian text of Dostoevsky, the political organization of the European Community, a Massachusetts state senate campaign, the sons of alcoholic fathers, superconductivity, and the experience of open heart surgery. They have participated in original cancer research, and produced novels, dramas, operas, and electronic performance pieces. Most students do a thesis in the area of their major, under the direction of an adviser from their major department, but many like the challenge of working outside their own particular disciplines.
You may choose, instead, to take part in an integrative seminar where you will re-read certain key texts that you may have studied years earlier (Plato's Republic, for example) as a way of coming to understand your own experience of college education. The aim is to encourage you as a senior to rise above the specialized viewpoint of your major in order to grasp the interconnections among contemporary ways of thinking and the principles of value and behavior that have been guiding your development implicitly during your college years.
You will receive Honors Program designation in the Commencement program and on your permanent transcript if you have completed the freshman, sophomore and junior courses, and either a senior thesis and/or one of the senior integrative seminars, and have maintained a minimum 3.40 GPA.
In most cases seniors will do a two-semester senior thesis, generally in the major.听Senior Thesis/Project Proposal Form听is submitted by the last day of classes in the Junior Year.
See Boston College University Libraries:听How to prepare your Honors Thesis for electronic submission.
Alternatively, seniors may satisfy the requirements of the Honors Program by taking two HP classes. Exactly what those classes are will depend partly on whether you spent all or part of your junior year abroad. The general principle is that in the last two years you owe the HP three credits of work for every semester you are on campus. The following are the options:
Students meeting these requirements and maintaining a cumulative GPA of 3.4 will graduate as members of the A&S Honors Program.
These requirements are also published in the听Honors Program Handbook.
Please note:听听To view Adobe Acrobat庐 (PDF) formatted files听.
fall semester - honr3301.01 - 20th century and the tradition i
fall semester - honr1101.08 and honr1102.08 - western cultural tradition i-ii
fall semester - honr4931.01 - democracy and art, advanced seminar
winter/spring semester - honr4932.01 - americans, ugly and beautiful, advanced seminar
fall semester - honr1201.10-1202.10 western cultural tradition v-vi
fall semester - honr3301.06 - 20th century and the tradition i
winter/spring semester - honr1203.10-1204.10 western cultural tradition vii-viii
fall semester - honr110103/110203 - western cultural tradition i-ii
fall semester - honr120110-120210 western cultural tradition v-vi
winter/spring semester - honr120310-120410 western cultural tradition vii-viii
fall semester - honr3301.09 - 20th century and the tradition
fall semester - honr1101/1102.08 - western cultural tradition i-ii
fall semester - honr3301.02 - 20th century and the tradition i
winter/spring semester - honr3302.02 - 20th century and the tradition ii
winter/spring semester - honr1103/1104.08 - western cultural tradition iii-iv
fall semester - honr1201.03-1202.03 and 13 - western cultural tradition v-vi
winter/spring semester - honr1203.03-1204.03 and 13 - western cultural tradition vii-viii
fall semester - honr1101-1102.11 and honr1101-1102.15 - western cultural tradition i-ii
winter/spring semester - honr1103-1104.11 and honr1104.15 - western cultural tradition iii-iv
fall semester - hon493701 - reading听Moby Dick
fall semester - honr1101/1102 - western cultural tradition i-ii
fall semester - honr4933.01 - autobiographical novel/memoir, advanced seminar
fall semester - honr1201.01-1202.01 western cultural tradition v-vi
winter/spring semester - honr4934.01 - dante: reflecting on our journey
winter/spring semester - honr1203.01-1204.01 western cultural tradition vii-viii
fall semester - honr3301.05 - 20th century and the tradition i
winter/spring semester - honr3302 - 20th century and the tradition ii
fall semester - honr1201.08-1202.08 and 14 - western cultural tradition v-vi
winter/spring semester - honr1203.08-1204.08 and 14 - western cultural tradition vii-viii
winter/spring - honr4945.01 - a romantic reprise, advanced seminar
fall semester - honr120110-120210 western cultural tradition v-vi
winter/spring semester - honr120310-120410 western cultural tradition vii-viii
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