Important Dates
Early Decision Application Deadline - November 1*
Early Decision Preview and Interview Day - December 6
Decisions released - Late December
Regular Application Deadline - December 15
Preview and Interview Days - Early February
Decisions released - March
*Students who submit their application by November 1 AND attend the December 6 Preview and Interview day will receive priority consideration for admission to the Calvin Honors Program.
What You'll Learn
Ask difficult questions with humility, explore with wonder, and pursue advanced academic opportunities with courage.
Are you a deeply curious student that desires to engage big questions within a community of equally curious students and faculty scholars? Does the exploration of the spaces where the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences meet animate you? Are you intrigued by the thought of using a city as a textbook? Do you desire to develop your skills as a scholar while conducting research or generating a creative project alongside a faculty mentor? Welcome to Honors Scholars.
Learn more about Cohorts at Calvin
What Makes This Program Great
- Community – current students have identified the vibrant community that develops among Honors Scholars and faculty as a valuable benefit of the program
- Innovative Interdisciplinary Coursework – complete half of your Core (general education) requirements in courses that explore intersections between disciplines, employ innovative teaching techniques, and are characterized by stimulating and thoughtful class discussions
- Faculty Mentorship – be mentored by a faculty member in your area of study during your junior and senior years, developing the skills of a scholar in your discipline, while completing an Honors thesis or project
- Honors Advising – learn about study abroad opportunities, prepare applications for competitive scholarships and fellowships and explore summer research opportunities with Honors advisors
- Research – apply for research stipends and travel funds through the Calvin Student Research Fellows program
- National scholarship prep – Receive advice and support during the preparation of competitive national scholarship applications (e.g. Fulbright, Goldwater)
- Honors and Collegiate Scholars Events – participate in Honors and Collegiate Scholars events, seminars, and trips
- Graduate “with Honors” – receive a “with Honors” designation on your diploma and transcript, a valuable talking point for job and graduate school interviews
Honors Scholars is compatible with all majors offered at Calvin. We are eager to build a learning community made up of students with diverse academic interests. The Honors Scholars community includes students majoring in engineering, history, computer science, education, Spanish, economics, art, biology, business, and more!
Completing a double major, participating in varsity athletics, and studying abroad are all possible for Honors Scholars. However, this will require careful planning. Depending upon the size of your major(s), you may need to take summer courses and/or an additional semester of coursework. We currently have several double-majors, athletes, and students planning to study abroad in our program.
We have optional housing options available for Honors Scholars
- Honors Floor – a vibrant living-learning community for 40 first-year and sophomore Honors Scholars
- Honors and Collegiate Scholars Cluster – a mini-community composed of Honors Scholars and Collegiate Scholars located within a larger dorm community
- Living-learning communities – Other residence hall Living-Learning Communities center around sustainability and recreation or racial justice and equity.
Are you planning a visit to Calvin? Ask your admissions counselor to schedule a meeting with an Honors and Collegiate Scholars Program representative during your visit.
Curriculum and Requirements
In your first two years in the Honors Scholars program, you will explore connections between subject areas in interdisciplinary team-taught courses and honors-designated courses that fulfill nearly half of Calvin's core (general education) requirements. In these classes you and your classmates may be asked to think about:
- How the study of Literature or Art might enhance our understanding of Calvin's commitments to global regions and cultures, diversity and difference, and sustainability.
- How the study of Rhetoric and the Social Sciences might help us consider challenging issues from a variety of perspectives and communicate effectively across difference.
- How the study of Theology might prompt us to interrogate what it means to be human and what it means to be loved and called by God.
- How the study of the Natural Sciences and Philosophy might lead us to think more carefully about evidence, ethics, and our role in promoting the flourishing of God's world.
Year 1 curriculum:
- Learning to Look, Learning in Place (interdisciplinary, 4 credits)
- Foundations in Biblical Literature and Theology (4 credits)
Year 2 curriculum:
- Intermediate Studies in Biblical Literature and Theology (2 credits)
- Honors CORE + CORE (interdisciplinary, fulfills 2 credits in each of 2 core categories)
In your third and fourth years, you will take theme-based upper-level Honors Colloquium (elective) courses and develop the skills of a scholar in your specific discipline while completing an Honors thesis or creative project alongside a faculty mentor.
Year 3 curriculum:
- Preparation for the Honors Thesis (1 credit)
- Honors CORE + CORE (interdisciplinary, fulfills 2 credits in each of 2 core categories)
- Honors Colloquium (2 credits)
Upon completion of Year 3, most students in the program will have satisfied about half of their Core requirements with Honors credits.
Year 4 curriculum:
- Prompte: Honors Capstone (1 credit)
- Honors Thesis or Project (2+ credits)
- Honors Colloquium (2 credits)
In order to be eligible for graduation “with Honors,” Honors Scholars must fulfill the following requirements:
- Final cumulative GPA: 3.5 or higher
- Completion of Honors Scholars Curriculum (see above)
Honors Administrative Team
Amy Wilstermann
Craig Hanson
Faculty Resources
Teach an Honors Colloquium (HNRS 380)
We are currently seeking proposals for HNRS 380 courses to be taught:
- on the main campus
- on the Handlon campus
HNRS 380 courses provide opportunities for advanced exploration of a topic, practice, or theme that is interdisciplinary in nature. Students from various disciplines engage ideas employing knowledge, methodologies, and insights from diverse areas of study. This course fulfills an upper-level interdisciplinary course requirement for Honors and Collegiate Scholars (and may fulfill major or minor requirements). Students that are not participating in the honors program may register for the course with instructor permission.
Examples of HNRS 380 course topics include:
- Ruins: The Aesthetics of Decay
- Rare Diseases: Communicating Science and Stories
- Environmental Literature
- Water Policy in the American West
- Gerontology: Aging in Prison
HNRS 380 course proposals can be found in the box at the right.
Apply to Teach in the Scholars Program
Scholars Program Team Member Application
Propose an Honors Colloquium Course
HNRS 380 Proposal Form