Publication Date
In 2025 | 16 |
Since 2024 | 80 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 298 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 710 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 1178 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Practitioners | 82 |
Teachers | 51 |
Administrators | 23 |
Policymakers | 8 |
Parents | 5 |
Community | 4 |
Researchers | 4 |
Students | 3 |
Counselors | 2 |
Media Staff | 1 |
Location
United Kingdom | 38 |
Netherlands | 37 |
California | 36 |
Florida | 34 |
North Carolina | 30 |
South Africa | 30 |
Australia | 29 |
Indiana | 23 |
United Kingdom (England) | 23 |
Illinois | 20 |
Michigan | 19 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Meets WWC Standards without Reservations | 1 |
Meets WWC Standards with or without Reservations | 1 |
Portnoy, Jeffrey A. – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2021
Honors advocates and scholars should pursue transdisciplinary inquiry to overcome traditional notions of well-defined knowledge boundaries. This essay examines the publication record of the National Collegiate Honors Council beyond its immediate utilitarian value as a means for communication with its members. Citing usage and metrics, the author…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Academic Language, Educational Research, Scholarship
Collins, Linda; Benes, Kylla; Manley, Krista – Honors in Practice, 2021
Teaching interdisciplinary research methods to honors students across disciplines is complex. A pre-capstone seminar, The Art of Inquiry, centers ethical considerations within and beyond individual research interests, helping junior and senior students of all majors prepare for ethical, scholarly projects.
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Capstone Experiences, Interdisciplinary Approach, Ethics
Rager, Lexi; Hartup, Mollie – Honors in Practice, 2022
Authors describe how a summer respite introduces alternative ways and spaces in which to work, positing how collaborative discourse and dismantled hierarchies can affect positive change and productive outcomes for honors programs.
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Summer Programs, Nontraditional Education, Curriculum Development
Locklear, Amy Lee M. – Honors in Practice, 2022
By incorporating visual mapping into students' thinking and writing processes, a narrative assignment in geo-literacy creates a reflective and agency-based learning experience for student writers in a first-year honors seminar.
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, First Year Seminars, College Freshmen, Visual Literacy
Kool, Arie; Kamans, Elanor; Wolfensberger, Marca V. C. – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2022
This study considers the value of honors programs by investigating alumni perspectives of learning goals relative to personal and professional development. Using a longitudinal cross-sectional survey instrument, authors track participants (n = 79) for four consecutive years (2017-2021). Qualitative measures indicate the importance of freedom to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Honors Curriculum, Alumni, College Graduates
John Zubizarreta – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2022
In response to the issue of why and how the humanities--and more broadly the liberal arts and sciences--have historically dominated honors education and disregarded preprofessional fields, the author finds that the crux of the problem is not the nature or worth of the disciplines involved or why this or that subject area is de facto included or…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Educational Practices, Humanities, Liberal Arts
Owen, Gavin R.; Whalley, Natalie; Brenner, Elisabeth – Journal of Biological Education, 2023
Undergraduate science degrees in South Africa seldom offer explicit courses focussing on improving the disciplinary writing skills required for effectively communicating scientific research. Similarly, most students entering the 'Honours' degree in Molecular Medicine at a South African university have not commonly been afforded opportunities to…
Descriptors: Writing Workshops, Honors Curriculum, Student Attitudes, Reports
Riley, Holly; Spurling, Brenna – Honors in Practice, 2023
Peer review exercises are an essential part of many educational pedagogy models and have been shown to successfully provide undergraduate students with requisite active learning and critical reflection skills. Teaching the peer review process in an interdisciplinary honors research methods course, however, presents its own set of challenges. As…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Honors Curriculum, Peer Evaluation, Undergraduate Students
Nathan Patrick Burns; David Young; Andrea Sherriff; Peter Black; Al Blackshaw; Louise Kelly – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
Knowing the academic outcomes of students who received contextual offers to higher education is important in understanding whether or not Scotland's Widening Access efforts have been successful in delivering impact to those from socio-economically deprived backgrounds. This study showed that once controlling for academic cohort, sex, ethnicity and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outcomes of Education, Higher Education, Access to Education
EdChoice, 2024
This poll was conducted between June 5-7, 2024 among a sample of 2,251 Adults. The interviews were conducted online and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of Adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. Results based on the full survey have a measure of precision of plus or minus 2.44 percentage points.…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Parents, Parent Attitudes, Student Mobility
Betsy Greenleaf Yarrison; Bruce Thompson – Honors in Practice, 2024
Since the 1980s, the Maryland Collegiate Honors Council has offered an annual conference on a host campus in late February. In 2020, MCHC slipped in the conference just before the apocalyptic arrival of COVID-19 in March. Because this conference is hugely popular statewide, we decided to organize it virtually in 2021. Our topic--"In…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Conferences (Gatherings), Higher Education, Equal Education
Carlin, Laurence; Alberts, Heike – Honors in Practice, 2021
This study presents perceived advantages of thematic, team-taught interdisciplinary seminars for first-year honors students. Two student cohorts (n = 174) surveyed in two subsequent years (2018, 2019) weigh in on the challenges and benefits of different team-teaching models. Three first-semester offerings on the themes "Food,"…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Team Teaching, Honors Curriculum, First Year Seminars
Quirk, Katie – Honors in Practice, 2021
This study presents a scaffold approach to building critical academic writing skills among honors students. Faced with limited instructional time, a reading-intensive curriculum, and students in need of rigorous writing instruction, a scaffold model was developed to include a series of condensed writing assignments called "Close Reading…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Writing Instruction, Honors Curriculum, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
Vick, Nicholas – Honors in Practice, 2021
The video essay is an opportunity for students to record their words and combine other visual elements to complete the typical requirements of a standard written paper. Applicable across disciplines and pedagogically aligned with an honors ethos of self-directed learning, video essays allow for individual and collaborative forms of expression…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Essays, Independent Study, Honors Curriculum
John Reinert – Online Submission, 2025
The purpose of this auto-ethnographic research was to self-reflect on my teaching practices over the past five years, in order to determine if my teaching practices satisfied the requirements to demonstrate: 1) my ability to construct an academically resilient German program in an academic institution; 2) my ability to lead a resilient German and…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Resilience (Psychology), Autobiographies, Ethnography