The Honors Experience at Grossmont College
Purpose
The purpose of developing an Honors/Scholars Experience at
Grossmont College is to provide highly motivated students who
have demonstrated outstanding academic achievements the
opportunity to:
- Pursue their individual scholarly interests
- Participate in an intellectual community of students
with a shared purpose of advancing scholarship
- Enhance their ability to transfer to their preferred
college/university and/or their participation in an honors
program in their transfer institution.
Student Requirements for Participation
- College students should have a 3.2 cumulative GPA or
higher after completion of 12 college degree applicable
units.
- Entering freshman must have a 3.2 high school GPA or
higher.
- All students must be eligible for ENG 120. Successful
completion of the pre-requisite courses or passing the
assessment tests demonstrates eligibility.
- All students must be eligible for Math 103. Successful
completion of the pre-requisite courses or passing the
assessment tests demonstrates eligibility.
- All students who intend to complete the Honors
Experience must submit a completed Honors Experience
Application Form to the office of the Honors Coordinator.
- Students who meet the requirements for participation but
do not want to complete the program are welcome to register
in honors classes.
- Students who are interested in the honor experience but
do not meet all the requirements may petition the Honors
Coordinator for a waiver of the requirements. Students
petitioning for a waiver must request a recommendation from
an instructor teaching an honors course.
- Both full-time and part-time students are encouraged to
participate.
Student Requirements for Honors Experience Active Continuing
Status
- Maintain a minimum 3.2 cumulative GPA.
- Complete a minimum of one Honors Course each academic
year.
- Review and update an educational plan with an academic
counselor each semester.
Honors Experience Completion Requirements
- Submission of all application materials.
- Maintenance of a cumulative GPA of 3.2 or higher.
- Completion of 18 semester units in letter graded honors
classes.
- Completion of a form of college/community service.
- Completion of associated degree or fulfillment of
admissions/transfer requirements for a four-year
institution.
Types of Honors Courses
- Honors sections of existing courses: Regular
courses with additional or substitute appropriate learning
activities to make them honors level. (Each department
decides the offering of honors sections of existing
courses.)
- Linked Honors Courses: Two or more courses linked
forming a learning community. Linked courses have the same
students and the instructors coordinate the course syllabus
and learning activities. (The offering of linked courses
needs to be coordinated through Project Success.)
- Honors Seminar: A course devoted to intensive
investigation of a single topic or problem. To a greater
degree than in regular courses, students are responsible for
contributing to seminar dialogues, completing a reading
list, and producing written work and/or special project of
superior quality. Topics and instructors change every
semester. (This type of course needs both department and
curriculum committee approval.)
- Honors contract in regular courses: Any section
of an existing course can be converted into an honors
section for a particular student if an honors student and
the instructor develop an honors contract for the class. The
student, the instructor, the department chair, the
appropriate dean and the honors coordinator must approve and
sign the honors contract. (This honors course option will
not be offered during the 2003-04 academic year.
Administrative procedures need be determined.)
Honors Transfer Council of California
Article 3: Membership
The Honors Transfer Council of California recognizes that a
college's honors or scholars program is an expression of its
educational values and culture, and that honors/scholars
programs at different colleges therefore reflect a wide
diversity in philosophies, standards and practices.
Nevertheless, the Council also recognizes that within this
diversity, well-defined and meaningful honors/scholars programs
share crucial elements in common, and the Council therefore
embraces a membership standard with those common elements in
mind. Membership in the Honors Transfer Council of California is
open only to community colleges with an active honors or
scholars program that meets the following criteria:
- The program offers honors/scholars courses and/or
contracts designed to offer an enriched educational
experience as defined by the instructional faculty of the
college;
- The program is designed to assist students in developing
their critical thinking skills and writing ability;
- The program is a campus wide endeavor in that it offers
courses from various disciplines and is assisted by a
broad-based advisory council;
- The program establishes and adheres to completion
requirements that include a minimum GPA and a minimum number
of letter-graded honors/scholars
- The program does not set its GPA minimum below 3.0 and
does not set its completion requirement below 5 courses,
equivalent to 15 semester units;
- The program is headed by members of the instructional
faculty;
- The head of the program is supported by reassigned time
and/or stipends commensurate with the size of the program
and the number of students served;
- The program is supported by clerical assistance
commensurate with the size of the program and the number of
students served;
- The program makes counseling available to
honors/scholars students to support them in their
educational endeavors and plans, including transfer;
- The program pays annual dues to the Council.
Guest observer status in the Honors Transfer Council of
California is open to all community college faculty, counselors
and administrators who are considering programs, actively
planning programs, or who maintain programs that do not meet the
above criteria. Individuals may be guest observers on the
Council for as long as they wish. Guest observers are not
required to pay dues, and may not vote.