A candidate for honors must have a GPA of 3.5 or better in economics courses beyond Principles at the end of his or her junior year. An economics major who expects to meet the grade requirements noted above and who wishes to do research leading to department honors should consult the member of the department in whose field the project would be. Ideally, preliminary discussion should take place the semester before undertaking the work. If the faculty member approves the project topic, the student registers for Economics 4050.
Independent Study and Honors
Independent Study
An independent study either builds on previous course work or explores a topic not in the curriculum. It is, therefore, expected that students taking independent study will have already taken any existing courses in their area of interest if such a course exists.
The first step to working on an independent study project is proposing a topic to a faculty member and asking them to be your advisor. An independent study may substitute for a 3000-level course as a major requirement, but not substitute for a 3000-level seminar. The substitution for a 3000-level non-seminar is not automatic. (For example, there may be cases in which an independent study is pursued at the level of 2000-level elective.) Once you and your advisor work out the structure, you may petition the department for 3000-level credit.
- First draft: three weeks before reading period.
- Second draft: one week before reading period.
Honors
Goals
An honors project provides students the opportunity to engage in research with close supervision of a faculty member, and moves the student beyond classroom learning.
Requirements
Under present College procedures, the economics department can recommend to the faculty that a degree with honors, high honors, or highest honors in economics be awarded to a student who has a distinguished record and completed an honors project. Based upon a student's grades in economics courses and the quality of the honors project, the department may award "honors," "high honors," or "highest honors." The criteria for awarding honors are as follows:
- Honors — A GPA of 3.5 or higher in economics courses beyond Principles and the honors committee awards the project honors.
- High honors — A GPA of 3.7 or higher in economics courses beyond Principles and the honors committee awards the project honors.
- Highest honors — Awarded to students who meet the criteria for high honors and also have a truly exceptional honors project.
Please note that the norm is that students will receive honors in economics for a well executed project. The designation of high honors and especially highest honors is quite rare.
The Honors Project
The honors project consists of a written report based on research in some area of economics. The report should discuss the relevance of the topic, relate it to recent scholarly work in the field, use methods of analysis appropriate for an advanced student in economics, and include some novel contribution to the question addressed. The contribution may consist of testing of a new hypothesis, using new data, offering a new model, or the an evaluation of existing analyses in a new context. The honors project should provide new insights into questions of interest to economists, other social scientists, or policy makers.