Honors Forum Council
Friday December 3, 1999
Present: Michael Arnush, Amelia Rauser, Phil Boshoff, Ruth Copans,
Jon Ramsey, Sue Bender, Kim Helms, Katie Cella, Tabitha Orthwein
Guests: Denise Evert and Holley Hodgins
The HFC extended an invitation to Skidmore faculty interested in developing
Honors Forum curricula in their discipline; representatives from Psychology
(Denise Evert & Holly Hodgins) joined the Council for lunch and discussion
The Psychology Department has offered generic approval of developing
HF curriculum, but has voiced many concerns:
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How comprehensive does Department involvement have to be in designing a
curriculum compared to individual espousal of the Forum? The Council noted
that contribution of a single course is an individual decision but commitment
to an all-College program is a departmental responsibility.
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A different level of performance and commitment is expected, even required
in HF courses as opposed to regular courses. Will this make regular course
offering seem less rigorous? Will it dilute the population of non-HF courses
such that all the "smart kids" will be in a class of their own? The Council
noted that it anticipates the overall impact of adding HF courses to departmental
curricula to be one of raising the general level of standards rather than
creating a gulf between HF and non-HF courses. The evidence from three
semesters of HF courses overwhelmingly suggests that HF courses attract
not necessarily the "smart kids" away from other sections or courses, but
they do attract those most highly motivated to undergo a more nuanced and
deeper intellectual experience. HF courses inspire students to achieve
their best work; they don't diminish the academic experience for others.
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Adding an HF course could over-extend a department that has been on the
increase for a long time, since HF courses tend to have lowered enrollment
caps. How will HF enrollments affect the enrollment numbers in non-HF courses
and the demands placed on faculty having to deal with the changing enrollments?
The Council reiterated that this issue requires a departmental commitment
to Honors; witness the approach of the Anthropology faculty, where the
Honors section has a limited enrollment of 20 students while the non-Honors
section has over 100 students.
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How do students not in the Honors Forum perceive the students and classes
that are part of the Honors Forum? The Council noted that the campus seems
to have accepted the Forum as part of the fabric of our intellectual enterprise
and the feelings of discomfort with the program felt in its first year
no longer manifest themselves in any substantive way.
Council members emphatically defended the "low barrier" design of HF, that
is, that anyone is welcome to participate in the courses & events,
and that the requirements for membership in the Forum are modest. The Council
reemphasized the HF as a vehicle for raising standards and expectations
across the board and invited the Psychology Department representatives
to join it in the enterprise.
Other business
SCOPE: The next issue will feature HF- photo ops might include the English
105H reception on Dec. 14th and the Executive Committee meeting
on Dec. 8th. We will discuss the Summer Workshop at the Dec.
12th Council meeting
Michael met with Matthew Hockenos and got a commitment from IA for developing
one or two courses for the HFcurriculum.
Tabitha reviewed existing admissions procedures for screening selection
of HF candidates. After some discussion the HFC decided it will not make
any changes to this procedure: Admissions will continue reading the files
and will determine the HF candidates.
An overview of the HF Student meeting held November 22nd
will be provided by Anita via email.
Respectfully submitted,
Rebecca Burnham
Secretary, Honors Forum
attached:
A. Steigerwald email; A. Rauser email on Academic
Festival