Honors Institute Courses
The Prentiss M. Brown Honors Institute has been developed for students with superior academic promise who wish to enhance their academic experience through participation in the program's small discussion-oriented classes, field trips, retreats, guest lecturers, independent research and individualized faculty mentoring. A more complete description of the Honors Institute appears in the Academic Programs section of this catalog.
The Prentiss M. Brown Honors Institute Core Requirement
In the Academic Programs section of this catalog, the College's core curriculum is described. Part II of this curriculum requires that all students take a course that will introduce them to each of the following five Modes of Inquiry:
A. Textual Analysis
B. Artistic Creation and Analysis
C. Scientific Analysis
D. Modeling and Analysis
E. Historical and Cultural Analysis
Since all Honors courses fulfill a Modes of Inquiry requirement of the College's core curriculum, Honors students can satisfy as many as four of this five-course requirement with Honors classes. Additionally, Honors students can satisfy part of the College's distribution requirement (one fine
arts course, two humanities courses, two science courses and two social science courses) by taking Honors seminars.
Students have two distribution options for their four Honors courses. They may: (a) take courses that count for four different Modes of Inquiry from at least three different divisions of the College or (b) take courses from all four divisions of the College that count for at least three different Modes of Inquiry.
All courses to meet the Honors core must be taken for a numerical grade.
To guide Honors students in their selection of Great Issues courses, the following numbering system is used:
| HSP 12xH--Natural Science & Mathematics | HSP 1x1H--Textual Analysis |
| HSP 13xH--Humanities | HSP 1x2H--Artistic Creation and Analysis |
| HSP 15xH--Social Sciences | HSP 1x3H--Scientific Analysis |
| HSP 17xH--Fine Arts | HSP 1x4H--Modeling and Analysis |
| HSP 1x5H--Historical and Cultural Analysis |
For example, HSP 154H would be a Great Issues in Social Science seminar that satisfies the Modeling and Analysis Mode.
Courses
HSP 12xH
Great Issues in Science
(1)
Fall, Spring
A seminar for Prentiss M. Brown Honors Institute students in which they read and discuss classic and modern works in the history, philosophy, methodology and ethics of science and technology. All seminars fulfill one of the Modes of Inquiry requirements of the College's core curriculum.
Staff.
HSP 13xH Great Issues in Humanities
(1)
Fall, Spring
A seminar for Prentiss M. Brown Honors Institute students in which they read and discuss classic and modern works of philosophers and humanists. All seminars fulfill one of the Modes of Inquiry requirements of the College's core curriculum.
Staff.
HSP 15xH Great Issues in Social Science
(1)
Fall, Spring
A seminar for Prentiss M. Brown Honors Institute students in which they read and discuss classic and modern works on methodology, philosophy and policy issues in the social sciences. All seminars fulfill one of the Modes of Inquiry requirements of the College's core curriculum.
Staff.
HSP 17xH Great Issues in Fine Arts
(1)
Fall, Spring
A seminar for Prentiss M. Brown Honors Institute students in which they explore, through representative readings, exhibits, concerts, performances and lectures, major issues in the development of the fine arts: the relationship between the artist and society, the evolution of critical theory in the arts and the nature of creativity. Individual courses may focus on the visual arts, music, theatre, film or dance. All seminars fulfill one of the Modes of Inquiry requirements of the College's core curriculum.
Staff.
HSP 289H Selected Topics (1) Fall, Spring
Prerequisite: Permission of the Prentiss M. Brown Honors Institute
director.
An examination of a special topic which is not included in the regular
curriculum. Staff.
HSP 397H
Thesis Development Colloquy
(1/4) Fall, Spring
A workshop open to Prentiss M. Brown Honors Institute juniors and second semester sophomores which guides them through the process of finding and developing a thesis topic and assembling a thesis committee. Students also develop their library research and other thesis-related skills. In the semester they enroll in the colloquy, Honors students may take up to 4
3/4
units without additional tuition charge. Offered on a
credit no credit basis. Staff.
HSP 422H Honors Thesis
(1/2-1)
Fall, Spring
Directed independent study leading to the submission of an Honors Thesis. Normally, students begin their thesis research in the second semester of their junior year by enrolling for
1/2
unit of Honors Thesis credit with their thesis adviser. This process
continues during the students' senior year when they normally take another one to two units of Honors Thesis credit in order to complete their research and write up their results. In the semesters they enroll for Honors Thesis credit, Honors students may take up to five units (where
1/2
unit is for thesis credit) without additional tuition charge.
Below is a list of the titles of recent Prentiss M. Brown Honors Institute theses:
"Investigation of the Holding Time Limits of Representative
Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds"
"A Case Study of Livonia, Michigan: Housing Segregation in the Metropolitan
Detroit Area"
"Automatic Hemispheric Activation for Affect from Presentation of Major and
Minor Chords: Evidence from an Affective Word Evaluation Task"
"Experimental Neurosis? A Runway-based Examination to Develop a Model in
the Rat"
"The Relationship between Religiosity, Religious Doubt, and the Need for Cognition
on Life Satisfaction"
"Do House Wrens (Troglodytes aedon) Sing the Same Songs in Consecutive
Years?"
"Beg, Borrow, and Steal: Allusion and Fusion in Twentieth-Century Concert
Music"
"The Problem of Social Desirability: Continuous Response Measures of Social
Judgments"
"Preparation and Thermodynamic Characterization of the Anabaena Group I
Intron"
"American Dreams: The Intersection of Race, Class and Gender in Albion's African
American Community"
" 'The Pineapple Story': Exploring the Use of Narrative in New Tribes
Mission"
"Theoretical and Experimental Analysis of the Critical Strain Energy Release Rate
for Mode II Fracture in FRP-Wood Bonds"
"Fanfare for Hitler: Gray Music in the Holocaust"
"Triage: A Three-Act Play"
"In Search of Legitimacy: The Case of Buddhist Nuns in Burma"
"The Homeric Question, Unanswered"


