|
Back
to Minutes
ANNUAL REPORT
HONORS FORUM
1998-1999
http://hudson2.skidmore.edu/hf
The Honors Forum completed its first year of operation this past academic
year, offering courses, running a co-curricular program and taking
steps
to integrate the program into the College’s larger academic profile.
In short, the Honors Forum had a successful first-year: the numbers
of course
offerings, and enrollments in courses from HF and non-HF students have
met or exceeded expectations; the co-curricular program included broad
segments of the Skidmore community; the Council shaped policies in
coordination
with various offices and departments in anticipation of the continuing
growth of the program. Concurrently, the Honors Forum Council addressed
wider curricular matters now facing Skidmore, specifically assessment
and reconfiguration, and has sought to implement the former and prepare
for the latter.
CURRICULUM
The HFC offered nine courses in F98, and over the academic year sent
24 courses to the Curriculum Committee for consideration, resulting
in seven
HF courses in S99, and 19 courses for Fall 1999. Academic departments
represented over these three semesters include American Studies, Anthropology,
Art, Art History, Chemistry, Classics, Economics, Education, English
(including
the development of Expository Writing-Honors), Foreign Languages, Geology,
History, Liberal Studies, Mathematics, Philosophy, Physics and Sociology.
Two workshops (May 1998 and May 1999) included over 40 faculty total
working
on curricular development, and the HFC hopes to offer new courses in
Art History, Dance, International Affairs, Liberal Studies, Music and
Religion
by 2000/2001. Two courses endorsed by the HFC did not receive CC approval:
FS203 and BI190. Both are currently 4-credit courses and were proposed
as 5-credit courses (4+1 Honors cr.). The CC and the Dean’s office
have counselled that the faculty proposers reconsider these courses
in light
of reconfiguration and opt instead for offering one section as Honors;
the HFC supports this approach and is working with the departments
in
question to restructure the proposals.
In anticipation of the academic interests and needs of members of the
HF class of 2001, the HFC
- received approval from the CC for a 200-level independent study sequence
in Honors (HF271/2)
- developed a protocol for overseas study in Honors
- worked with the Skidmore Paris, Madrid, India, Italy (SACI) and London
(Shakespeare) programs to develop Honors academic experiences
- has drafted a proposal for a 300-level independent study in Honors to
be submitted to CC during F99.
CO-CURRICULAR PROGRAM
Members of the Skidmore community attended a wide variety of HF-sponsored
events throughout the year. Some highlights:
- Induction dinner (September, speaker David Porter; February, speakers
Amelia Rauser [Art History] & Mary Crone [Physics])
- Pre-lecture discussion with Iris Chang, "The Rape of Nanking"
- Gallery talk and roundtable discussion, Felice Frankel (Distinguished
Visting Faculty in Arts & Sciences) and Mary Crone (Lubin Family Professor
for Women in Science)
- Pre-Steloff reading discussion with Robert Boyers (Tisch Professor
of Arts & Letters)
- "Oceans of Ashes, Islands of Order" roundtable discussion of Tom Stoppard’s
Arcadia with Lary Opitz (Theater), Dan Hurwitz (Mathematics), Jay Rogoff
(Liberal Studies), Felice Frankel
- AH101 student project exhibition, "Architectural Reflections: Five ‘Authentic’
Monuments" (Amelia Rauser)
- Collaborative Research presentation, Joanna Zangrando (Douglas Family
Professor of American Culture) and Krista Senator ’99, on "The Search
for Helen Campbell"
- Dinner and Presentation by Tom Lewis (Quadracci Professor of Social
Responsibility) and Larry Hott on "Divided Highways: The Interstates
and the Transformation of American Life"
- Dinner and Lecture by Charles Segal (Walter Klein Professor of Classics,
Harvard), on "Journey, Death, and Knowledge in the Classical Epic Tradition:
From Gilgamesh to Ovid"
- Biology Greenhouse
- Dinner, Lecture and Dedication, Mark Miller (SUNY-Albany), "Mysteries
of Amazonian Herbal Medicine" Dinner, lecture by Carolyn Anderson (Theater)
and attendance at "Skin of Our Teeth" for Accepted Honors Candidates,
in conjunction with Admissions
- Art History Honors Symposium, "The Object in Context" (Amelia Rauser)
The HF students also instituted an informal biweekly discussion series
for members of the Forum:
- Presentations by Kerim Odekon, ’01 and Andrew Cencini, ’01, on their
respective independent work in American Studies and Computer Science
- Overseas Study for Honors Students, Jon Ramsey (Dean of Studies)
- NATO Intervention in Kosovo, Mary Ellen Fischer (Palamountain Chair
in Government) and Matthew Hockenos (History)
- Skidmore Curricular Reform and Reconfiguration, Mary Lynn (American
Studies)
Through a series of HF committees with faculty/administrative guidance,
HF members also published the first issue of the Honors Forum Newsletter,
instituted plans for an HF webpage, worked with Alumni Affairs to develop
alumni events for AY 1999/2000, planned and organized the spring induction
dinner and lectures, staffed tables at prospective and accepted candidates
days, participated in the Adams and Hathorn Honors House co-curricular
events, and held a variety of HF social events that helped build a sense
of community within the Forum.
The HFC and numerous HF students contributed to the planning, management
and implementation of the College’s first Academic Festival, in conjunction
with the Periclean Honor Society.
POLICY
Throughout the course of the year the HFC consulted with the following
committees and administrative departments: Academic Staff, Admissions,
Alumni Affairs, Budget, CEPP Subcommittee on Standards and Expectations,
College Relations, Dean of the Faculty, Dean of First-Year Students, Dean
of Studies, Expository Writing Board, Registrar, Residential Life, Special
Programs. Policies resulted on overseas study, curricular and co-curricular
programming and planning, the Honors Forum lounge, and admissions (attraction
and retention). Some specifics:
- All students interested in Honors work overseas will submit proposals
in advance to the HFC, prepare portfolios during the course of the semester
and present the results after returning to campus (http://hudson2.skidmore.edu/hf/overseas.html).
The Skidmore programs are developing specific courses, or independent
study opportunities, for students in Madrid, Paris, London and India.
- EN105-Honors will replace the former EN107 during the 1999/2000 academic
year; the HFC will field three sections of EN105H in the fall and monitor
the enrollments to arrive at the optimal number of sections needed
- HF admission was offered to 15 ED applicants and to 274 regular applicants
to the College in spring 1999, yielding 34 members of the class of 2003.
This will complement the class of 2001 (28 enrolled, 1 transfer, 2 voluntarily
withdrew from the HF) and the class of 2003 (68 enrolled, 3 transfers),
bringing the total number of HF students in September 1999 to 130, approximately
half the target of 250. The HFC hosted one sample HF course for prospective
candidates, and a dinner/lecture for accepted candidates; next year, the
HFC will offer two sample HF courses for prospective candidates in October
and November, and host a luncheon for accepted candidates in April.
- In conjunction with Residential Life, the HFC is planning to kick-off
a residence hall lecture series in S00.
- The HFC is currently reviewing the disqualification policy (an HF
member is disqualified if he or she has not made Dean’s List – GPA 3.40 – any
two semesters), since the inaugural class of 2001 will be the first
to
come under consideration.
As the class of 2001 moves into the junior year, the HFC will need to
consider the Honors experience in the major (hence the proposal for an
HF371/2) and the creation of portfolios by HF members. The HFC will also
consider increasing opportunities for HF members to present the results
of their research, not only in the Academic Festival but in HF venues
as well.
ASSESSMENT
The HFC has begun to collect data on attraction, retention and enrollment
of students in the program, and quantitative and qualitative data on the
specific HF courses. With the assistance of Fran Hoffmann, the HFC developed
student evaluation mechanisms of the courses, self-reporting activity
records and self-assessment forms. Some preliminary results:
- HF courses are more challenging, faster paced, more conducive to community-building,
more intensive and intellectually exciting than non-HF courses
- HF courses are sufficiently challenging, particularly in in-class discussions,
the amount of material covered, the level and pace of the courses and
the quality of written assignments
- Enrollments in HF courses vary considerably, from five to 28 students,
with an overall average of 15 (1-cr. add-ons averaged 8 students); HF
students represented 60% of the total enrolled in HF courses.
- Retention rate among HF students stands at 96% (98/102)
- Yield on regular applicants for the class of 2003 with Academic Quotient
Ratings (AQR’s) of "10’s" stands at 6.6%, as opposed to 5.6-6.0% over
the last three years prior to the creation of the HF.
RECONFIGURATION
Reconfiguration has two potential impacts on the HF:
- as faculty shift courses from 3- to 4-credits, will they supplement
or supplant current and potential 3+1 HF courses?
- as departments reduce the overall number of course offerings, will they
provide a sufficient number of HF courses?
The HFC needs to work with the faculty, vis à vis Academic Staff, HF workshops,
perhaps a pedagogy session, to distinguish between four credit courses
and Honors courses (regardless of the number of credits). Single sections
of 3-4 credits, 1-cr. add-ons and 1-cr. stand-alones, and sections of
multiple-section courses will all remain available to faculty to develop
as Honors. For the faculty and the HFC, the primary issue of concern will
be to articulate what precisely constitutes an Honors course – work,
and engagement, at a more sophisticated level, rather than more work
in or
outside of the classroom. With this guideline in mind, the HFC will
seek to coordinate with the faculty HF course development and conversion
during
the coming academic year.
The more complicated issue logistically will be to arrive at the appropriate
number of courses needed to field a robust and successful program.
The
initial target was approximately six courses/semester; we have clearly
expanded well beyond that target, largely due to the enthusiasm of
the
faculty and students. Have we diluted the program by offering 19 courses
for 130 students? If all were to enroll in an HF course this fall,
then
HF students would comprise approximately 40% of the enrollment per
course, which would more than meet our goal of a "critical mass." Selecting
the right mix of courses at the introductory and intermediate levels,
across
the spectrum of disciplines, as the program continues to expand from
the current 130 to the anticipated 250 students by the spring of 2001,
has
proven to be a challenge for the HFC, and we will monitor closely enrollment
trends and student needs and interests during the coming academic year.
Roughly speaking, with the exception of some cross-disciplinary (Expository
Writing) or interdisciplinary (Liberal Studies) program HF courses,
each
academic department or program should anticipate offering at least
one 100- or 200-level HF course annually. Liberal Studies and those
programs
with large numbers of majors should probably expect to offer two courses/year;
we will need between four and six EN105H courses annually. The HFC
and
the Dean of the Faculty will need to provide the necessary leadership
and guidance to ensure the continuing success of the Honors Forum along
these lines.
All Council minutes are accessible via the HFC webpage at http://hudson2.skidmore.edu/hf/council.html
Respectfully submitted,
Michael
Arnush
Director, Honors Forum
June 30, 1999
Members of the Honors Forum Council, 1998/9:
Michael Arnush, Classics (chair)
Susan Bender, Associate Dean of the Faculty (fall)/Fran Hoffmann (spring)
Phil Boshoff, English
Steve Hofmann, Government (fall)/Rory McVeigh, Sociology (spring)
Allison Kupfer, ’00 (fall)/Catherine Cella, ’01 (spring)
Emily Levy, ’99
Chris McGrath, ’99, Vice-President, Periclean Honor Society
Jon Ramsey, Dean of Studies
Amelia Rauser, Art History
Anita Steigerwald, Dean of First-Year Students
Amelia Clarke, Secretary
Members of the Honors Forum Council, 1999/2000:
Michael Arnush, Classics (chair)
Alta Boover, ’00, President, Periclean Honor Society
Susan Bender, Associate Dean of the Faculty
Phil Boshoff, English
Catherine Cella, ’01
Ruth Copans, Acting Director, Scribner Library
Susan Kur, ’01
Jon Ramsey, Dean of Studies
Amelia Rauser, Art History
Anita Steigerwald, Dean of First-Year Students
Rebecca Burnham, Secretary Back to
Minutes |