Honors Program

The Honors Program at Hawkeye Community College is for students who want to enhance and enrich their education as part of a vibrant, supportive learning community. This program offers innovative, topics-based courses, exciting service projects, and opportunities to share your work with the Hawkeye community and beyond.

Key Program Features

  • Hawkeye faculty members will work closely with you to:

    • Introduce you to vital questions and issues in human life such as evil, beauty, historical change, food, cultural differences, creativity, religion, etc.
    • Practice with you the arts of conversation and inquiry
    • Build a strong academic community
    • Guide and prepare you for college and career
    • Help you realize your potential
  • Opportunities beyond the classroom include:

    • Day trips
    • Guest speakers
    • Conferences
    • Workshops
    • Retreats
    • Research
    • Study sessions
    • Awards celebrations

Program Elements

  1. Completion of 13 credit hours:
    1. Honors Seminars or Honors Project (Independent Study): 9 credit hours
    2. Service Projects: 3 credit hours
    3. Portfolio and presentation: 1 credit hour
  2. Member of Phi Theta Kappa (PTK) International
  3. A cumulative GPA of 3.5 or higher in your Honors Program coursework

A Faculty Mentor will guide you through the program and help you prepare your portfolio.

Students may take Honors Seminars, Honors Projects, or Service Projects for credit without officially being in the Honors Program. The honors courses and credits you complete will be noted as such on your transcript.

Completing the Honors Program

Upon successful completion of all the program elements, Honors Program will be noted on your Hawkeye transcript.

If you do not complete all program elements, your honors credits will still go on your transcript as such, but Honors Program will not be noted on your transcript.

Honors Seminar (xxx-926) and Honors Project (xxx-924)

Honors Seminar

The Honors Seminar is a three credit special topics course that is designed to challenge and inspire you. The course allows intensive study of a broad topic of interest selected by a faculty member as approved by the Honors Committee and provides greater depth, breadth, and opportunities for engagement. Topics change each semester.

Honors Seminars count towards your Liberal Arts Associate of Arts (AA) degree or Liberal Arts Associate of Science (AS) degree Core Coursework.

Honors Seminar Potential Topics
  • Varieties of Knowledge: This course explores the approaches, insights, and limitations of various academic disciplines. For each unit, students discuss a text, event, work of art, etc., from different disciplinary perspectives in order to compare and contrast their methods and insights. How does sociology help us to understand rap music, political events, or religious beliefs? How do its insights differ from the approaches of anthropology, psychology, philosophy, etc.? Guest speakers discuss and practice their disciplines with students. Instructor: Tim Adamson.

  • Foodology: This course explores the physical, biological, and chemical study of food and examines food science by presenting topics relevant to the modern day diet. Topics will include: food processing, food distribution, organic foods, genetically modified foods, macro and micronutrients, and the obesity epidemic. Instructor: Kassandra Einfelt.

  • Exploring Creative Expression in the Arts: Adopt, Adapt, Transform: Have you ever wondered what makes Van Gogh or Shakespeare so timeless? This interdisciplinary course will explore and examine the creative process, which is utilized in a variety of disciplines. Students will experiment with creative practices, explore sources of inspiration, and examine the concept of beauty, art, and literature through a variety of lenses. Instructors: Robin Sprague and Jennifer Bates.

  • Confronting Evil: This course explores many religious and philosophical approaches to the presence of evil in human life. Traditional religions seek to help their followers understand and deal with evil in its many forms. What is evil, and where does it come from? How can I deal with it when it enters my life? This course examines many different responses to evil as found in the great religions of the world and several philosophical traditions. Instructor: Tim Adamson.

  • The Humanities Through Tolkien: This Honors Seminar will serve as a forum in which students will be able, following instructor framing, to explore various humanities-based disciplinary methodologies through the lens of J.R.R. Tolkien’s legendarium. We will use his work, both fictional and non-fictional, as the gateway through which students explore and then apply these methodologies. Instructor: Robert Steed.

  • The 'F' Word: A Seminar on Feminist Art: This course provides an overview of the feminist art movement, its significant works and major figures. It will serve as a forum to discuss the historical position of women in art while examining societal underpinnings, artist motivations and movement goals. Field trips to galleries will allow students the opportunity to personally experience significant works of art relevant to this course. Further, students may choose to deepen their engagement by participating in creative works over the course of the semester. Instructors: Lisa Munoz and Lindsay Buehler.

  • Chinese Philosophy: Attaining Flow: This Honors Seminar will focus on examining Chinese philosophical and religious traditions as conversations about what it means to lead an effective life, most clearly manifested in attaining states of “flow.” We will look at a wide range of these traditions for both their ideas and their practices as manifested in Chinese and larger world cultures. Instructor: Robert Steed.

Honors Project

Honors Projects are independent study courses taken for 1–3 credits designed by you and an instructor, according to your special interests. These can be academic or service-based.

Honors Project courses do not count toward the required credits to complete the Honors Program or toward your Liberal Arts Associate of Arts (AA) degree or Liberal Arts Associate of Science (AS) degree Core Coursework, however, the student and instructor may submit an appeal to the Honors Committee and Dean prior to the class beginning for an exception.

Honors Project Appeal

The standard is very high for an Honors Project appeal to be approved since the course is unusual and does not typically satisfy the interactive and communal aspects of an Honors Seminar. Nonetheless, if the proposed Honors Project is rigorous and comprehensive, it may be accepted.

For the Honors Project credits to count towards completion of the Honors Program, the Honors Project must be taken for three credits and the student and faculty member must:

  1. Email a letter of appeal to the Honors Committee prior to creating the class: The instructor and student must email a letter explaining how the proposed Honors Project fulfills the Honors Seminar requirement. The letter must be sent to the Honors Committee prior to the class being registered.

  2. Await committee review: The Honors Committee will review the appeal and respond within 10 days.

  3. Create the course: Whether or not the appeal is approved or denied, the course may be registered. However, if the appeal is denied the credits will not be counted towards completion of the Honors Program.

Service Projects

Three credits of Service Projects are required to complete the Honors Program. These credits can be completed in one semester or over several semesters and can be started throughout the semester. Your needs and your schedule dictate what you can do!

Design your own service project or join a Phi Theta Kappa (PTK) service project. Phi Theta Kappa, the Honors Society of community colleges, has a strong tradition of service projects at Hawkeye.

Service Projects count as electives for your Liberal Arts Associate of Arts (AA) degree or Liberal Arts Associate of Science (AS) degree requirements.

Phi Theta Kappa (PTK)

Students accepted into the Honors Program must become members of Phi Theta Kappa International by the end of their first semester in the Honors Program.

Hawkeye is a local chapter of Phi Theta Kappa. Participating in Hawkeye's Phi Theta Kappa chapter is not required for the Honors Program, but is encouraged to maximize benefits.

Learn more about Hawkeye's local chapter of Phi Theta Kappa (PTK) Honor Society.

Benefits of Hawkeye's Honors Program

  • Completion of an honor's program looks impressive on your transcript and resume.

  • Honors Seminars courses are more likely to be accepted into your major when transferring.

  • Completing the Honors Program at Hawkeye gives you a greater chance for entry into an honors program at your transfer college/university.

Applying to Hawkeye's Honors Program

Students can apply for Hawkeye's Honors Program at any time. Some credits, including Service Projects, can be started in the middle of a semester.

To apply, simply complete the form below. The committee will reply within 10 days of receipt of your application.

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Contact Information

Honors Program Contacts

Timothy Adamson
Black Hawk Hall 104
319-296-2329 ext.1449

Jill Dobson
Black Hawk Hall 102
319-296-4043

Email the Honors Program

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