Dec 08, 2024  
2023-2024 University Catalog 
    
2023-2024 University Catalog

Honors Program


Tia Kemp, Advisor
cdkemp@uarts.edu

C O N T E N T S

Description

The University Honors Program at the University of the Arts is intended to provide academically exceptional and creatively gifted students with a rigorous and enriching intellectual and artistic experience while pursuing their undergraduate degree. The University Honors Program will provide an opportunity for students to be a part of a community of Honors Scholars with a high level of commitment to investigating the role of the performing, visual and writing arts and design in contemporary life. Coursework leading to the fulfillment of the University Honors Program will challenge Honors Scholars to expand the limits of their intellect, artistry and imagination.

Program Objectives

Professional preparation
Honors Scholars at the University of the Arts are preparing first and foremost to become artists, designers, writers, and performers, engaged in a creative professional life. This means providing students with the tools that they will need to be successful as creative professionals including:

  • The ability to communicate their vision
  • The ability to understand the nuances of the global and economic factors of their profession
  • The ability to present themselves well to potential employers, funders, supporters, etc.

Provide field experiences that further Honors Scholars’ professional preparation
Honor Scholars should have the opportunity during the course of their studies to explore their field through practical professional experiences like internships, apprenticeships, and alumni shadowing.

Provide an intellectual breadth and the critical and analytical skills to effectively communicate their own vision as an artist, performer, writer, or designer and their role in society
We expect that Honors Scholars will have a high level of curiosity about their particular fields of study and how their work is situated in historical and global contexts. We also expect that they will possess the skills to think deeply and critically about their fields and their role in their society.

Provide opportunities for Honors Scholars for the development of effective research skills and the ability to synthesize or translate research into a tangible, concrete creative expression
We expect that Honors Scholars will engage in critical inquiry or investigation that makes or creates an original or creative contribution to the discipline. By developing effective research skills, scholars will enhance their learning and creativity.  

Provide an environment that fosters innovative, collaborative, and interdisciplinary work
Honors Scholars at the University of the Arts will be expected to explore the traditional boundaries of their disciplines and to work with peers from other disciplines to develop new and exciting means of creating and designing new work.

Integrative learning
It is critical that Honors Scholars understand that their degree program is not merely a set of requirements taken in a prescribed order and fashion. Rather, they must understand how each of their courses relates to and relies on other course work to help them achieve an education as an artist, performer, writer, or designer that is both broad and deep.

Encourage the development of a sense of commitment to and engagement with the community and an understanding of the roles of the artist, performer, writer, and designer in the community
Aligned with the University of the Arts mission statement, which begins, “The arts have the power to transform society,” Honor Scholars will engage in community service that communicates, especially to those outside the University, how art and performance form an essential facet of our culture and can improve people’s lives,. Honors Scholars will work with organizations with which the University has established collaborative relationships.

An understanding of how their own work is situated in a global context
Honors Scholars at the University of the Arts must have an understanding that their creative works exist in a global market and that culturally constructed boundaries are permeable.

An understanding of how their own work is situated in an historical context
All of the disciplines at the University of the Arts have rich historical traditions. Honors Scholars will have a deep understanding of how their work both fits into these historical traditions, as well as challenges the historical notions of these fields.

A sense of entrepreneurship
To be an entrepreneur is to be innovative and transformative. We expect that Honors Scholars will have drive and ambition to become the creative entrepreneurs of the next generation. We will help them to build the foundation that will allow them to challenge, question, create, and innovate in their fields.

Admission to the Program

Students are invited to enroll in an Honors section of WRIT 102H Writing 2: Honors  based on the results of the University’s writing placement test. Student are permitted to progress through the rest of the University Honors Program upon successful completion of WRIT 102H  with a cumulative grade point average of 3.65 or higher.

Students who have not been placed in WRIT 102H  but have a cumulative grade point average of 3.65 after completion of one semester of coursework at the University of the Arts, may also be invited to apply to participate in the University Honors Program.

Honors Scholars must maintain a 3.65 cumulative grade point average in order to continue in and complete the Honors Program. Students who fall below the 3.65 minimum cumulative average will be placed on Honors Probation and will be dismissed from the Program if their cumulative score remains under 3.65 for two consecutive semesters. Transfer students are eligible to apply to be Honors Scholars if their cumulative grade point average from their previous college or university is 3.65 or higher.

Program Requirements

Required Courses


Honors Scholars must complete enriched course work with the Honors Designation with following distribution. Scholars must also complete the two semesters of the Honors Thesis/Project I & II.