Honors Courses

Honors Courses are designed with Honors students in mind!

The Honors Program collaborates with departments across campus to offer Honors Courses. Our current selection of courses is based on professor and student interest, and we're always working to update existing courses and facilitate more opportunities for Honors students! 

Because professors are experts in their fields, we ask them to use their experience and expertise to best determine what particular tasks and coursework work with their discipline, the Program's goals, and Honors students' needs. 

Individual Honors courses have a lot of variety, but they typically have some key shared features, including:

  • Smaller Class Sizes: We aim to have Honors courses about half the size of their regular counterparts!
  • Discussion Based Instruction: Collaborative discussions with the professor and other students instead of lecture-heavy classes and memorization
  • Applied Learning: Focus on using skills learned through coursework to address real-world problems
  • Attention to Exploration: Thinking critically about the topics introduced in class and generating new ideas
  • Community Engagement: Interrogating how the course material affects others and implementing ideas with integrity and flexibility  

Professors use our Student Learning Outcomes as a benchmark for the direction of their Honors instruction. 

Check out our Student Learning Outcomes »

Honors Courses fall into three categories:

These are the Honors versions of courses that have preexisting regular counterparts. Enrollment is restricted to Honors students and these courses will replace the regular version of the course in students' degree requirements. Students will learn the same core skills, but have the opportunity to engage with more (or more complex) material and complete more involved projects. Instruction will be discussion based and we try to limit enrollment in these courses to approximately half of the size of their regular counterparts. 

  • For example: English 115 has covers the same core subjects as English 102, but only Honors students can enroll in it. 

Fall 2025 Honors Equivalent Courses

  • ENGL 215-003: British Literature with Em Knightley
  • ENGL 216-001 and 002: American Literature with Michael Shea
  • HIST 224-001: US History since 1877 with Carl Richard
  • PHIL 151-001: Intro to Philosophy with Jesse Saloom
  • PSYC 115-001: General Psychology with Madison Gamble

Honors Program Courses are unique, interdisciplinary courses that could only happen in Honors! They are not required by any current degree plan and would be electives for the students. These courses give professors and students the opportunity to dive deep into niche specialty interests or bring together different topics in an interesting and compelling way. 

  • These courses begin with the prefix HONR
  • For example: the Director of Honors, Dr. Sandoz, uses her background as a distinguished professor of Psychology to team up with the ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ's Provost, Dr. Hebert (who has a PhD in Statistics) to teach HONR 400: The Human Context to a small group of Honors students every Spring semester.
  • Honors Baccalaureate Thesis preparation courses are Honors Program Courses as well

Fall 2025 Honors Program Course Offerings

  • HONR 400: Human Context with Emily Sandoz, Jaimie Hebert, and Chad Parker
  • HONR 435: Entrepreneurship and Side Hustles with Jonathon Shirley
  • HONR 497: Honors Thesis Preparation with Mary Ellen Stegall
  • HONR 498: Honors Thesis with Emily Sandoz
  • HONR 499: Honors Thesis with Emily Sandoz 

Honors students sign up for the Honors version of the course, and they attend class alongside a group of students signed up for the regular version of the same course. 

The professor will assign the Honors students additional coursework to help them meet our Student Learning Outcomes as well as completing the work assigned to the entire class. 

Students have the option to sign up for two different versions of the same class during registration, but both versions attend the same course. The Honors version can have the HONR prefix or a different departmental prefix in the course catalog. The Honors Program publishes course offerings every semester, so be sure to double-check your courses to make sure you get the Honors Credit you need!

Fall 2025 Cross-Listed Honors Courses

  • CHEM 106-001: Honors General Chemistry II with Salah Massoud
    • Cross-listed course: CHEM 108-001: General Chemistry II
  • ENVS 115-001: Honors Environmental Science with Katherine Eddings
    • Cross-listed course: ENVS 100-001: Intro to Environmental Science
  • INFX 107-001: Honors Informatic Fundamentals with Tommie Gisclaire
    • Cross-listed course: INFX 101-001: Informatic Fundamentals
  • INFX 247-001: Honors IT Infrastructure with Mahsid Benchari
    • Cross-listed course: INFX 240-001: Informatic Fundamentals
  • MATH 309-003: Honors Calculus II
    • Cross-listed course: MATH 301-003: Calculus II
  • MATH 310-002: Honors Calculus III
    • Cross-listed course: MATH 302-001: Calculus III
  • PHYS 204-001: Honors General Physics II with Gabriela Petculescu
    • Cross-listed course: PHYS 202-002: General Physics II
  • POLS 111-001: Honors US Government
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 110-001: US Government
  • POLS 111-002: Honors US Government
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 110-002: US Government
  • POLS 111-003: Honors US Government with Ted Brown
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 110-003&4: US Government
  • POLS 111-004: Honors US Government with Ted Brown
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 110-004: US Government
  • POLS 221-002: Honors World Politics with Bryan Frost
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 220-002: World Politics
  • POLS 221-003: Honors World Politics with Azamat Sakiev
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 220-003: World Politics
  • POLS 318-001: Honors State & Local Government
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 317-001: State & Local Government
  • POLS 318-002: Honors State & Local Government with Ted Brown
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 317-002: State & Local Government
  • POLS 341-001: Honors Public Administration with Beth Rauhaus
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 340-001: Public Administration
  • POLS 361-001 Honors International Relations with Jason Maloy
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 360-001 International Relations
  • POLS 371-001: Honors Political Thinkers with Bryan Frost
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 370-001: Political Philosophy: Thinkers
  • POLS 389-001: Honors Judicial Politics with David Hughes
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 381-001 Judicial Politics
  • POLS 420-001: Honors The Presidency
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 419-001: The Presidency
  • POLS 471-001: Honors Political Philosophy: Ancient War with Brian Frost
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 470-001: Political Philosophy: Ancient War
  • POLS 486-001: Honors Advanced Moot Court with Blacin Godfrey
    • Cross-listed course: POLS 485-001: Advanced Moot Court