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Academic Bulletin Honors - 2012-13

Currently viewing 2012-13 bulletin

Honors

The faculty has provided for the award of Final Honors to accompany the Bachelor of Arts degree, according to the following requirements (in the graduated four-point grading system):

A.B. Cum Laude: Awarded to students who have attained a cumulative average of 3.40 to 3.59 or a cumulative average of 3.17 to 3.32 and a Distinction rating (for double majors, two ratings of Distinction or one rating of Distinction and one of High Pass; for triple majors a minimum rating of two Distinctions and one of Pass or one of Distinction and two of High Pass) in Comprehensive Examinations.

A.B. Magna Cum Laude: Awarded to students who have attained a cumulative average of at least 3.60 or a cumulative average of 3.33 to 3.59 and Distinction rating (for a double major two ratings of Distinction or one rating of Distinction and one of High Pass: for triple majors a minimum rating of two Distinctions and one of Pass or one of Distinction and two of High Pass) in Comprehensive Examinations.

A.B. Summa Cum Laude: Awarded to students who have attained a cumulative average of at least 3.60 and a Distinction rating (for a double major two ratings of Distinction or one rating of Distinction and one of High Pass; for triple majors a minimum rating of two Distinctions and one of Pass or one of Distinction and two of High Pass) in Comprehensive Examinations.

A student's final grade point average is used as the basis for conferring Final Honors.

Dean's List
To honor students for outstanding academic achievement, the Dean of the College names to the Dean's List those students who attain a semester grade point average of at least 3.50. In addition, the students must have completed a minimum of three course credits which count toward the semester grade point average. Courses declared by the instructor as Incomplete are treated, for the purposes of the Dean's List average only, as if they had the grade of C.

Requirements for Phi Beta Kappa at Wabash College
Our chapter at Wabash College was chartered in 1898, the 42nd chapter of the society and the 2nd in the state of Indiana. Over the past century, some 1,300 men have been inducted to Phi Beta Kappa at Wabash. As an early founding chapter, we have the honor of electing up to 1/8 of the graduating seniors. The requirements for election to Phi Beta Kappa at Wabash College are determined by the by-laws of the Wabash Chapter, which consists of Phi Beta Kappa members of the College faculty and staff. It is the normal practice of the Chapter (but not a requirement) to elect the 1/8 whose grade point averages are the highest.

In evaluating grade point averages of candidates, the college’s graduated four point scale shall be used. Comprehensive Examinations are treated as equivalent to one and one-half course credits, and rankings are assigned these values: Distinction, A (i.e., one and one-half course credits at 4 points); High Pass, B (3 points); Pass, C (2 points). In the case of multiple comprehensive examination results, the grades shall be averaged.
 
To be eligible for election, candidates from the senior class must have at least 20 course credits of graded work at Wabash. Juniors must have 16 graded course credits at Wabash. The by-laws permit the election of no more than three juniors. Those elected as juniors are counted in the quota of their graduating class.
 
To be eligible for Phi Beta Kappa membership, students should have incompletes removed from their records by mid-semester of the spring semester of their election year.
 
The Constitution of the Chapter states: “In addition to scholarship, good moral character will be a qualification of membership.” We have usually interpreted issues of moral character to concern specific accusations of plagiarism or other impropriety. 
 
Stipulations Concerning Eligibility for Membership (Applicable starting with the Class of 2016)
 
Eligibility for election to membership shall be contingent upon fulfillment of the following minimum requirements. These stipulations concerning eligibility for membership were adopted by vote of the United Chapters and certified by the Executive Committee on behalf of the Senate of Phi Beta Kappa on June 1, 2011. [The Wabash Chapter will apply these stipulations starting with the class of 2016.]
 
Stipulation 1. Eligible students shall be candidates for a bachelor’s degree in the liberal arts. The liberal arts encompass the traditional disciplines of the natural sciences, mathematics, social sciences, and humanities. Select courses in other programs of study may be included only if they unambiguously embody the liberal arts. Because Phi Beta Kappa honors excellence in the liberal arts, applied or pre-professional coursework shall not be considered in determining eligibility. This stipulation excludes professionally focused courses and courses devoted to the acquisition of practical skills. [Accounting courses will not be considered in determining eligibility.]
 
Stipulation 2.   Weight shall be given to the breadth and depth of study in liberal arts, taking into account the number, variety, and level of courses taken outside the requirements of the major, and the proportion of the candidate's overall program those courses constitute. Consideration shall also be given to the number of elective courses taken above the introductory or general education, level.
 
Stipulation 3.   Candidates shall have demonstrated, by successful work in high school or college, or in the two together, a knowledge of a second or non-native language at least minimally appropriate for a liberal education. In no case shall this mean less than the completion of the intermediate college level in a second, or non-native, language, or its equivalent. [Completion of Chinese 202, French 202, German 202, Greek 201, Latin 201 or Spanish 202 satisfies this stipulation.]
 
Stipulation 4. The candidate's undergraduate record shall include at least one course in college-level mathematics, logic, or statistics, with content appropriate to a liberal arts curriculum. The course should introduce the student to mathematical ideas, abstract thinking, proofs, or the axiomatic method. Completion of the Quantitative Skills requirement satisfies this stipulation.
 
Stipulation 5. In keeping with the Founders’ interest in fostering not only academic excellence but also friendship and morality, invitation to Phi Beta Kappa should be extended only to persons of good moral character.

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