Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in an honors college at a state school. Perks:
-Full ride + stipend. Tuition, room&bord, books, all paid for. My extra (previously earned) scholarship money went into my pocket for any additional living expenses.
-Priority registration for classes and dorms. This meant I lived in the brand new dorm in one of only 8 rooms campus wide that had a private bathroom, and I got first pick of classes.
-Honors only classes. These were required and intended to create community with the other honors college students and to challenge us.
-Senior presentation required for graduation. We had full latitude when selecting/creating our subjects/projects. Have us a chance to be in the academic spotlight.
I’d do it again if given the chance - I’m still in touch with most of the people in my honors college, it was a fantastic program. Truely enriched my college experience.
All honors kids received that?
In my school, yes. They wanted to keep the high achieving kids in state.
How many kids in the program? That's an unusual set-up that all honors kids received a full ride.
Around 20 kids per class? I’d have to look at our orientation photo to be sure.
Honors PP here - looked it up out of curiosity. They now get $2-6k per year, plus an award based on their ACT score (up to $10k). Much less generous. I guess a lot has changed in 15 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in an honors college at a state school. Perks:
-Full ride + stipend. Tuition, room&bord, books, all paid for. My extra (previously earned) scholarship money went into my pocket for any additional living expenses.
-Priority registration for classes and dorms. This meant I lived in the brand new dorm in one of only 8 rooms campus wide that had a private bathroom, and I got first pick of classes.
-Honors only classes. These were required and intended to create community with the other honors college students and to challenge us.
-Senior presentation required for graduation. We had full latitude when selecting/creating our subjects/projects. Have us a chance to be in the academic spotlight.
I’d do it again if given the chance - I’m still in touch with most of the people in my honors college, it was a fantastic program. Truely enriched my college experience.
All honors kids received that?
In my school, yes. They wanted to keep the high achieving kids in state.
How many kids in the program? That's an unusual set-up that all honors kids received a full ride.
Around 20 kids per class? I’d have to look at our orientation photo to be sure.
Anonymous wrote:Do employers really look to see if students were in these programs? What about graduate schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in an honors college at a state school. Perks:
-Full ride + stipend. Tuition, room&bord, books, all paid for. My extra (previously earned) scholarship money went into my pocket for any additional living expenses.
-Priority registration for classes and dorms. This meant I lived in the brand new dorm in one of only 8 rooms campus wide that had a private bathroom, and I got first pick of classes.
-Honors only classes. These were required and intended to create community with the other honors college students and to challenge us.
-Senior presentation required for graduation. We had full latitude when selecting/creating our subjects/projects. Have us a chance to be in the academic spotlight.
I’d do it again if given the chance - I’m still in touch with most of the people in my honors college, it was a fantastic program. Truely enriched my college experience.
All honors kids received that?
In my school, yes. They wanted to keep the high achieving kids in state.
How many kids in the program? That's an unusual set-up that all honors kids received a full ride.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in an honors college at a state school. Perks:
-Full ride + stipend. Tuition, room&bord, books, all paid for. My extra (previously earned) scholarship money went into my pocket for any additional living expenses.
-Priority registration for classes and dorms. This meant I lived in the brand new dorm in one of only 8 rooms campus wide that had a private bathroom, and I got first pick of classes.
-Honors only classes. These were required and intended to create community with the other honors college students and to challenge us.
-Senior presentation required for graduation. We had full latitude when selecting/creating our subjects/projects. Have us a chance to be in the academic spotlight.
I’d do it again if given the chance - I’m still in touch with most of the people in my honors college, it was a fantastic program. Truely enriched my college experience.
All honors kids received that?
In my school, yes. They wanted to keep the high achieving kids in state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in an honors college at a state school. Perks:
-Full ride + stipend. Tuition, room&bord, books, all paid for. My extra (previously earned) scholarship money went into my pocket for any additional living expenses.
-Priority registration for classes and dorms. This meant I lived in the brand new dorm in one of only 8 rooms campus wide that had a private bathroom, and I got first pick of classes.
-Honors only classes. These were required and intended to create community with the other honors college students and to challenge us.
-Senior presentation required for graduation. We had full latitude when selecting/creating our subjects/projects. Have us a chance to be in the academic spotlight.
I’d do it again if given the chance - I’m still in touch with most of the people in my honors college, it was a fantastic program. Truely enriched my college experience.
All honors kids received that?
Anonymous wrote:I was in an honors college at a state school. Perks:
-Full ride + stipend. Tuition, room&bord, books, all paid for. My extra (previously earned) scholarship money went into my pocket for any additional living expenses.
-Priority registration for classes and dorms. This meant I lived in the brand new dorm in one of only 8 rooms campus wide that had a private bathroom, and I got first pick of classes.
-Honors only classes. These were required and intended to create community with the other honors college students and to challenge us.
-Senior presentation required for graduation. We had full latitude when selecting/creating our subjects/projects. Have us a chance to be in the academic spotlight.
I’d do it again if given the chance - I’m still in touch with most of the people in my honors college, it was a fantastic program. Truely enriched my college experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a lot to like about Honors programs.
In my view, it allows big state colleges to compete with the offering of private colleges (smaller classes, easier registration, specialized classes, advising, mentorship with professors) while still offering the advantages of a large research university (research opportunities).
This is what schools want you to believe. In large research Unis, however, this is really hard to implement due to lack of funding (in most cases). Schools may offer honors seminars and such but most of the courses you need for your degree are outside of "honors" program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a lot to like about Honors programs.
In my view, it allows big state colleges to compete with the offering of private colleges (smaller classes, easier registration, specialized classes, advising, mentorship with professors) while still offering the advantages of a large research university (research opportunities).
This is what schools want you to believe. In large research Unis, however, this is really hard to implement due to lack of funding (in most cases). Schools may offer honors seminars and such but most of the courses you need for your degree are outside of "honors" program.
Anonymous wrote:The honors program was one of my favorites parts of my experience at the University of Maryland
Anonymous wrote:There's a lot to like about Honors programs.
In my view, it allows big state colleges to compete with the offering of private colleges (smaller classes, easier registration, specialized classes, advising, mentorship with professors) while still offering the advantages of a large research university (research opportunities).