Our pathway to inquiry and innovation

required coursework


Faculty advisors and students with questions should reach out to the Program's directors: Rebecca Schindler - rschindler@depauw.edu or Amy Welch - awelch@depauw.edu

FIRST-YEAR SEMINAR:    HONR 101
Fall Semester First-Year Seminar - This course fulfills the FYS all DePauw students are required to take in their first semester.

READING COURSES:    HONR 200 
Honor Scholar Reading Course, 0.25 credits - A mini-course focused on a specific topic, usually a single book, that provides the basis for a critical exploration of emerging intellectual ideas in science, math, the humanities, or social sciences; global/local socio-economic challenges; historical issues; or trends in art and/or music. Honor Scholars take two HONR 200 courses.

Note 1: Offered both fall and spring; students may take them any time from spring of their first year through the end of sophomore year. Open to all DePauw students, although priority is given to 1st and 2nd year Honor Scholars. A Prindle course may be substituted in place of one HONR 200 course, with Director approval. Classes of '25, '26, and '27 are exempt from the Reading Course requirement, but are welcome to participate in the courses.
Note 2: Lateral Entry students are required to fulfill both reading courses via HONR 200 (not Prindle). Courses may be taken in the spring of the student's first-year or both in the sophomore year.
Note 3: HONR 200 is exempt from credit-overload and meets only for the first eight weeks of the semester.

AREA SEMINARS:  
        HONR 300A:   Arts & Humanities Seminar (AH)
        HONR 300B:   Science & Math Seminar (SM)
        HONR 300C:   Social Sciences Seminar (SS)

Students take one seminar in each area: Arts & Humanities, Science & Math, and Social Science. It is recommended that students complete the three area seminars before their senior year. However, on occasion, it is necessary for students to complete one seminar in the senior year.

Note 1: Each area seminar counts towards DPU's general education distribution requirements. HONR courses are exempt from the rule that students must use 6 different programs/departments to complete the distribution areas (despite the e-services warning).
Note 2: On occasion and with approval of the program directors, students may substitute a non-HONR course for ONE of the area seminars. This may be an approved course taken through an off-campus study program (for example, at The University of Glasgow) or another course taken at DePauw, such as an upper-level seminar in an interdisciplinary program. Required courses for departmental majors generally will not be considered.
Note 3: Some departments/programs may count HONR courses as electives for their majors/minors. Students should confer with their major/minor advisors.

SENIOR THESIS PROJECT
        HONR 401:    Honor Scholar Senior Tutorial 1
        HONR 402:    Honor Scholar Senior Tutorial 2

The capstone experience of the Honor Scholar Program is the opportunity to design, implement, and complete a two-semester independent thesis project. This may take the form of an analytical project or a creative project (see guidelines on Moodle) but all thesis projects must be interdisciplinary in some way.

Note 1: While most students complete the capstone project in the senior year, students may opt to do the thesis project from Spring of the junior year to Fall of the senior year (please see thesis guidelines (available on Moodle) for this option).
Note 2: Students who are off-campus in the fall semester of the senior year are exempt from registering for HONR 401. However, in order to be in good standing to register for HONR 402, students are expected to meet all expectations for completion of HONR 401.
Note 3: Regarding course credit for 401/402: students may enroll for HONR 401 as an overload course, that is, it does not count against the 4.5 maximum credits per semester. Students MUST register for HONR 402 for credit in order to complete the Honor Scholar Program.




for Inquiry, Integration, and innovation