Events & Deadlines
Frequently Asked Questions
What do I do if there are no Honors courses in my major or an area that interests me?
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- You can request to turn a regular course into an honors course. Review the online honors option agreement form for suggestions, talk with your instructor, and turn in the form by the third week of classes. Remember that not all instructors will have time to design honors-level work for the course. Don鈥檛 be offended if your instructor says no.
How can I change my Cohen Honors College track?
- You can add, remove, or change your honors track yourself in the Change of Major app in your MyWSU portal.
What do I do if I鈥檓 not able to take an honors course this year?
- To maintain good standing in Honors, we ask you to keep a minimum overall GPA of 3.25 and complete at least 3 honors credits per Academic Year (Fall, Spring, Summer) or complete a 12-credit track. If you can鈥檛 take a course every year, email honors@wichita.edu and explain your plan to stay on track to complete requirements.
Can I request an exception to an Honors requirement?
- Yes, we encourage you to design your honors education to challenge you and work with your major or professional goals. Complete the online petitions for exceptions form to request an exception to an Honors requirement.
Calling All Seniors! Apply for the Outstanding Cohen Honors Student Award
Apply to the 2023 Kansas Undergraduate Research Day at the Capitol
The Kansas Undergraduate Research Day at the Capitol event is an opportunity for students to present their research experiences virtually to state lawmakers, Board of Regents members, and the WSU community on March 1st, 2023.
Up to 40 students participate each year representing each of the state鈥檚 eight public
four-year institutions. Projects from a broad range of disciplines are encouraged,
especially those that relate to the state of Kansas and issues important to the State
Legislature (e.g. education, health, agriculture, aviation, biotechnology, energy,
transportation, manufacturing, environment, and social services).
Up to five projects will be selected from each institution, and students working on
the same research project are encouraged to apply as a group.
Click Here for more information and to apply. Applications due by January 31st.
Wednesday, February 1st at 6pm: Virginia Eubanks Presentation at Newman University
Honors Students are Encouraged to Participate in a Student Honors Thesis Research Survey
News & Information
Still looking for an Honors course for spring? Try philosophy!
These courses still have seats available.
PHIL 355 Minds and Machines - Honors
HYB 2:00pm-3:15pm Fiske Hall 209
Dr. Susan Sterrett susan.sterrett@wichita.edu
General education humanities course. People have constructed machines designed to imitate living creatures in some way long before there were electronic computers. When is a machine鈥檚 behavior appropriately called "intelligent?" Must it be capable of using a language? Must a machine be capable of learning in order to be regarded as intelligent? Must it be able to communicate with humans? What criteria are appropriate for judging that an animal's behavior is intelligent; should the same criteria be used for machine intelligence? What lessons about machine intelligence should be taken from debates over recent studies of intelligence in animals with nervous systems very different from humans (e.g., corvids, cephalopods)? Students consider these and other, related questions. Course takes a historical and interdisciplinary approach, drawing on works in philosophy, literature, science and history of science.
PHIL 315H Late Modern Philosophy - Honors (3)
TCI 9:30-10:45 TR Fiske Hall 209
Dr. Susan Castro susan.castro@wichita.edu
General education humanities course. Studies philosophical thought in the 18th century with selections from philosophers such as Berkeley, Hume, Reid, Adam Smith, Butler, Hutcheson, Wolff and Kant, and movements such as empiricism, rationalism, the Scottish common sense school, and idealism.
Honors Outcomes Pilot and Other Faculty Resources
A group of faculty met throughout academic year 2020-21 to develop an initial set of Honors outcomes and a rubric based on the student-written college charter, AAC&U VALUE rubrics, and feedback from students, faculty, and alumni. We鈥檇 like faculty to try to incorporate at least two outcomes total from two different pillars and let us know how they work for your course. At the end of the year, you鈥檒l be invited to give feedback on the outcomes and the extent to which they worked in your course.
For a faculty resource handbook visit the Resources for Faculty in Honors page on our website.
Honors Calender