Columbia College and General Studies
The
department offers an honors program for a limited number of seniors who are
interested in doing substantial research projects and in writing honors theses.
The honors thesis is expected to be approximately 60–75 pages in length and of
exceptional quality. Honors students perform research as part of a full-year
honors seminar (POLS
C3998 - C3999
, 8 points total) during their senior year, in place of the seminar requirement
for majors. Honors students may, however, take regular seminars as electives
toward the major. Theses are due in late March/early April. To be awarded departmental
honors, the student must satisfy all the requirements for the major, maintain a
3.6 GPA in the major (the calculation of which includes non-POLS courses required for economics-political science or political science-statistics majors); and complete a thesis of sufficiently high quality to
merit honors.
The honors
seminar is under the overall direction of the honors seminar director, who is
assisted by several preceptors. The honors seminar director supervises all
students; each student also works with a faculty member in his or her major
subfield (American politics, comparative politics, international relations, or
political theory) as well as with a preceptor with an appropriate
specialization. The honors seminar meets weekly for part of the year. These
meetings cover general issues involved in research and thesis writing, such as
how to develop research questions and projects; methodology; sources of
evidence; and outlining and drafting long papers. The sessions are also used
for group discussions of students’ research and student presentations of their
theses. In addition, each student is expected to meet periodically with the
professor and with the preceptor supervising the thesis.
Students
who wish to apply to the honors program must notify the department in writing by Friday, April 27, 2012.
Applications
must include
-
the student’s CUID number, e-mail address, and school (Columbia College or
General Studies);
-
the name of a faculty member whom you have consulted who could be interested in supervising your thesis;
-
a writing sample, preferably a paper written for a political science
course (no more than 20 pages);
-
a brief description (no more than one page) of a possible thesis topic. For guidelines for writing your proposal, please see here.
Honors thesis advisers should normally be full-time faculty in the
Columbia Political Science Department. For students in the honors
seminar, the instructor of the seminar approves or, when necessary,
assigns advisers. At the discretion of the instructor and the Director
of Undergraduate Studies (DUS), Barnard Political Science faculty,
faculty in other departments, or adjunct professors might be approved as
advisers or co-advisers. Normally faculty will advise only one honors
thesis because of the substantial work this requires.
These items should be sent to:
Department
of Political Science
Attn: Departmental Honors
420 West 118th Street
Mail Code 3320
New York, NY
10027
Students who are on campus should submit hard copies of these materials. Students studying abroad this semester may email their applications to [email protected] with the subject "2011-2012 Honors Seminar Application"
Students
will be notified by email of the decision taken on their applications before fall
registration (usually mid- to late-summer). Questions about the honors program should be directed to the
Undergraduate Coordinator, Nathalie
Neptune, or the Director of Undergraduate Studies, Professor Jack Snyder.
Students who are not accepted into the Honors Seminar, or students who decide
after the application deadline that they would like to write an honors thesis,
may take one or two semesters of Special Reading and Research (Columbia College
students) or Independent Study (General Studies students) with a faculty member
in order to write a thesis to submit for honors consideration. For students who are preparing theses outside the honors seminar, the
DUS and the instructor of the honors seminar should be informed of this
intention, and the DUS must approve the proposed adviser. The
department staff will coordinate submission deadlines and verify grade
eligibility for these students.
For more details about this process and for
registration information, please contact the Undergraduate Coordinator, Nathalie Neptune.Students may also submit a paper written for
a class.All theses must be submitted
along with a confidential assessment of the paper by the supervising instructor
in order to be considered for departmental honors.Students who choose this path must also
complete all the requirements for the major and maintain a minimum major GPA of
3.6. Again, the thesis would be due in
late March/early April, and decisions about departmental honors are announced in May.