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Honors Curriculum

With Honors seminars, you’ll get the chance to push yourself beyond textbooks and lectures. You’ll engage in conversations led by specially selected professors. And you’ll be challenged to think differently, to not take anything at face value and to gain all-new perspectives that will help you succeed now and into the future.

Honors students can graduate with either the Honors Diploma or the Honors Focus. See below to learn which seminars are required to complete each set of curriculum.

Why Honors Seminars?

ºìÐÓ¶ÌÊÓƵ State’s Honors seminars feature:

  • Smaller class sizes: Most seminars are limited to 15-18 students, so you’ll receive more individualized attention and more opportunities to succeed.
  • More engagement: Instead of lectures, you’ll become engrossed in thought-provoking discussions and challenging project activities.
  • Honors faculty: We believe Honors students should be taught by the best professors. That’s why we choose faculty who have a special knack for teaching in the seminar environment.
  • Honors students only: While you’ll take classes with everyone else in your major, Honors seminars are designed exclusively for Honors students to facilitate a high level of intellectual discourse and critical thinking. 

“The Honors seminar environment promotes scholarly debate and discussion covering a wide range of topics. Participating in an organization that promotes this kind of intellectual diversity and allows students the freedom to really engage with the classroom material was a critical part of my undergraduate experience, and was extremely beneficial to my graduate coursework and career.â€

Lauren AllardAlumni, MPA, consultant with Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services

Degree Option 1: Honors Diploma

If you decide to pursue the Honors Diploma, you’re choosing the most prestigious undergraduate degree at ºìÐÓ¶ÌÊÓƵ State. To earn this degree, you’ll complete the Honors Sequence of seminars and requirements instead of the standard general education requirement. The Honors Sequence is made up of:

  • 8 Honors seminars
  • Courses in math and science
  • Education Abroad
  • Honors Thesis

The Honors Sequence has two tracks: one for B.A. students and one for B.S. students. The tracks are slightly different, depending on what your major requires. Honors B.A. students take foreign language courses, while B.S. students take more math and science courses. Honors Diploma recipients also receive the Honors medallion and are recognized at graduation.

Honors Diploma course sequence for B.A. students

Honors Diploma course sequence for B.S. students

Degree Option 2: Honors Focus

If you decide to go the Honors Focus route, you’ll need to complete about three-fourths of the Honors Sequence as part of the standard general education requirement. The Honors Focus is made up of:

  • Six Honors seminars (Three must be at the 200 level)
  • Two of the following:
    • Education Abroad
    • Honors Thesis
    • Foreign language (two semesters)

Honors Focus course sequence

Students in classroom

International Student Tracks

We offer international student tracks for both the Honors Diploma and the Honors Focus. What exactly does that mean? If you’re an international student, you can substitute structured travel in the U.S for Education Abroad. If you’re a student from a non-English speaking country, you can take upper-level courses in English literature, linguistics or writing as substitutes for the foreign language requirement.

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