Honors Curriculum and Requirements

Renée Crown University Honors Program Requirements

1. Required grade point average: 3.4, 3.2 for the School of Architecture

2. Orientation

  • Should be completed during your first semester

3. Courses

  • Honors Courses:  students must earn a B or higher in all Honors courses to count towards the required 12 credits
    • HNR prefix Courses (6 credits)
    • Honors Courses (6 Credits)

4. Additional Honors Criteria: Program Attributes

  • Courses fulfilling the required credit counts above have been labeled with the program attributes that they fulfill. These are not necessarily extra Honors courses; many courses fulfill multiple requirements. When choosing Honors classes, select courses based on a combination of academic interests and requirements. To determine which courses provide Honors attributes, visit honors.syr.edu/courses
  • Divisional Diversity Requirement: students must complete a course in at least 2 of the following 3 categories.
    • Humanities
    • Social Science
    • Natural Science
  • Interdisciplinary Requirement
    • Each discipline and profession has its own way of identifying problems, collecting and analyzing evidence and then making conclusions. Interdisciplinary courses bring these variant methodologies together. You will examine the world through multiple lenses, expanding your ability to relate with scholars and professionals in a range of fields. Breadth of knowledge will increase your capacity to address the problems of the world today.
    • Whitman majors vary; see Degree works
  • Collaborative Capacity
    • An approved course or extended project through a course that involves substantial teamwork; a group project with 3 or more people and is worth 30% of the final grade.
  • Public Presentation
    • Requires a solo public presentation of at least 15 minutes that is subject to critical faculty review.
  • Global Awareness (1 Course + 1 Experience)
    • Course
      • Global Course: Historically different in cultural, ethnic and linguistic heritages taught using resources, research, written, and shared by those of the same perspective or traditional background
      • Global Course (Non-Eurocentric): Historically different in cultural, ethnic and linguistic heritages taught using resources, research, written, and shared by those of the same perspective or traditional background, with a focus on non-Eurocentric people or governance (i.e., non-USA/European; the study of First-Nations/Native American peoples and cultures qualifies as non-Eurocentric).
    • Experience
      • Global Experience: Can be either Eurocentric or Non-Eurocentric
    • At least 1 of the 2 parts above must be non-Eurocentric

5. Civic Engagement

  • 50 hours of community service
  • These hours need to be entered on the Honors website and approved by the program supervisor who oversaw the hours for them to be counted by Honors
  • For more information, please visit https://honors.syr.edu/civic/

6. Honors Thesis

  • Honors does not dictate the thesis project. This is decided by the student and their full-time faculty member in their declared Major or Minor, who advises the project. You will select your thesis faculty advisor before your junior year so you can submit your thesis proposal in the first semester of your junior year. Your thesis presentation will be right before graduation: ~15-minute presentation and 5-minute Q and A
  • For more information, please visit https://honors.syr.edu/thesis/