Honors Program

The Honors Program interdisciplinary minor creates, encourages, and challenges a community of engaged student scholars who are interested in addressing complex issues facing our world.

Advantages of the Honors Program

  • Be immediately part of the Honors community by attending Honors events each semester.
  • Receive early registration for courses.
  • Enjoy use of the Honors Lounge (5 Lourdes Hall).
  • Take Academic and College Success 101 class, with fellow Honors students.
  • Take Honors sections of courses — including the Core Milestone Experience.
  • Be part of a vibrant Living-Learning Community with other first-year Honors scholars (fall 2024)

What's Required

  • Complete Honors foundation courses.
  • Complete one of three engagement tracks of intensive study and create a signature capstone project.
  • Share your capstone project through the Nazareth Creative Activity and Research Showcase (CARS).

Honors Foundation Courses

  • ACS 101 Academic and College Success (Honors Section): 1 credit
  • ENGW 250 Written & Visual Rhetoric (Honors Section): 3 credits
  • HON 200 Scholarship Expanded: 1 credit
  • HON 484 Honors Capstone Proposal (substitutes for Core Milestone Experience): 1 credit
  • HON 485 Honors Capstone: 3 credits
  • HON 499 Honors Defense: 0 credits

Engagement Track Options

  • Research Scholar: Develop expertise in research and writing, culminating in an original interdisciplinary thesis capstone project or creative research capstone project. Includes research methods and interdisciplinary courses, as well as service on the Honors Advisory Board or as a Peer or Research Mentor.
  • Engagement Scholar: Make significant impacts on the community by designing and planning a community-focused capstone project. Includes upper-level service learning/community-focused courses or clinical/practicum, sustained community engagement, and a service trip.
  • Global Scholar: Engage deeply with global communities, research, and create a globally-focused capstone. Includes a study abroad program, intermediate-level foreign language courses, and upper-level globally-focused courses.

Eligibility

  • Eligible incoming first-year students receive a letter of invitation to join the Honors Program interdisciplinary minor. Invitees are students who have achieved the highest level of academic performance in their high school environment and have demonstrated leadership outside of the classroom.
  • Transfer students and other matriculating students recommended to the program by faculty may add the minor upon consultation with program leadership.
  • A 3.5 GPA is required each semester to remain in the Honors Program.

Program Requirements and Course Descriptions

Honors program (minor)

Questions?

Email honorsprogram@naz.edu

Aubrey Baldauf with professor Leanne Charlesworth

Honors Program Research

For her honors program thesis, social work major Aubrey Baldauf (left) researched how income, housing, food, and structural and interpersonal racism contribute to racial health disparities — and what can be done. Her in-depth honors project "was a reason to push myself, to learn more, to become more confident in the field I want to go into. It was a self-driven learning project, that I'd never done before. I had to set my own due dates. It also helped me understand how to do research. I have a feeling it's going to help me a lot in the future — both the practical information and the skills I learned." Read more about Aubrey's experience >

Recent Thesis Examples

  • "Understanding the Underground: An Ethical, Existential, and Psychological Analysis of Dostoevsky's Underground Man" by Laura Beeley, psychology and philosophy double major, minors in art studio and communication/media
  • "A Music Therapy Perspective: Correlations in Alzheimer's Disease and Alcoholism," by Audra Nealon, music therapy — voice major
  • "An Ethical Analysis of Health Care Delivery Systems," by Meghan Grant, physical therapy major, minor in psychology
  • "Towards a New Interdisciplinary Approach to Forensic Anthropology: A Case Study of the Guatemalan Civil War of Twentieth Century," Candice Gage, anthropology major, minors in biology and multicultural studies
  • "Media, Memory, and Meaning: A Look at Four Presidents Through Film," Meghan Plate, American studies major, minor in history
  • "My Role in White Privilege: My Journey Guided by the Narratives of African-American Women and Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye," Maria Allocco, social work and English double major, minor in community youth development
  • "Esports vs. Traditional Sports: Imposter or New Age?" by Ryley Amond, business management and economics double major
GPA Requirement and Probation Policy
Honors Handbook