Sociology Department

Departmental
Honors in Sociology and
The
Senior Honors Thesis
Departmental Honors in Sociology
can be earned by replacing the regular Senior Thesis with a Senior Honors
Thesis that is acceptable to the departmental faculty for honors designation.
If a student enrolls for the
honors thesis option (SOCI 499), s/he will participate with the rest
of the seniors in the class meetings for the Senior Thesis, and will
fulfill all the requirements for the Senior Thesis, but will have additional
stipulations for the process of preparation of the thesis, for the end
result of the process, and for the scholarly level of the final product.
These stipulations include:
- The Senior Honors Thesis must involved significant first-hand empirical
research beyond library research. Examples include carrying
out a survey, an ethnographic or participant observation project,
a program evaluation project, or the quantitative analysis of large
data sets (e.g., the General Social Survey, the Luxembourg Income
Study, or World Bank Data). Normally, the honors thesis would
receive a credit allocation of four semester hours, that is, equivalent
to the number of credits accorded for the regular senior thesis.
Hence, there would be no net increase in the number of credit hours
in the major that must be taken for departmental honors in sociology.
In consultation with the faculty advisor, the "Senior Advisor"
(who coordinates all senior theses in the department), and the department
chairperson, the student seeking departmental honors may wish to take
additional credit hours for the honors research project. These
hours are added voluntarily - that is, no student is required to take
additional credit hours on the honors thesis - but if added, the project
must show an increase in effort and result proportional to the number
of credits added. (The added requirements must be described
in a learning contract.)
- The formal academic criteria for enrolling for the Senior Honors
Thesis rather than the Senior Thesis are prior attainment of an overall
GPA of 3.5 and a GPA in all Sociology courses of at least 3.2.
Aspirants to Honors in Sociology must have completed at least 17 semester
hours in the department before the beginning of the senior year, including
SOCI 360, Sociological Theory, for four hours, and SOCI 307, Research
Methods (or its predecessor, both SOCI 305 plus 306) for five hours.
(Exceptions to these rules may be made subsequent to a petition
to the department chairperson.)
- The student wishing to take the Senior Honors Thesis in Sociology
must submit a proposal for the thesis research project to the department
chairperson by the end of spring semester of the junior year.
As part of the proposal, the student must demonstrate the attainment
of a high level of research skills and analytical capabilities in
his/her academic or employment/volunteering record. In the
project proposal, the student must demonstrate that prior coursework
relates to the thesis proposal, and s/he must state the primary learning
goals and stages of research involved in the project. These
plans serve as the stipulations of a learning contract between the
student and the department. The project description must satisfy
minimal expectations of work for credit to be earned. If more
than the usual four semester hours is sought for the project, the
additional credit hours must be justified explicitly as to additional
work and outcomes to be required.
The proposal must be approved
by the departmental faculty as showing a developed professional orientation
and likelihood of highly professional results. The proposal would
have to be developed in consultation with a potential faculty advisor
for the thesis, and it must be endorsed by that advisor, who would serve
as the principal "Second Reader" if s/he is not the "Senior Advisor"
for the year. At least three members of the department, including
the Senior Advisor and the Second Reader, would serve together as an
honors thesis committee, providing advice and support during the writing
of the thesis. The chairperson would formally appoint the members
of the honors thesis committee in consultation with the principal advisor
and the student making the honors proposal. In some cases, it
may be appropriate to invite an additional member for the committee
from faculty outside the department to reflect significant inter-disciplinary
content, or from the community to reflect professional components not
represented fully on the Wittenberg faculty. For example, a student
writing about sociological themes in literature might want to add a
committee member from the English Department. A student wanting
to pursue research on aging might add a committee member who is a nursing
home administrator or a health professional working in the area of geriatrics.
Though not required, the department will encourage the participation,
at least in the planning stage and in the final completion stage, of
professional beyond the Department of Sociology. This will be
done to encourage recognition and inclusion of broader perspectives
and orientations to the issues of the honors thesis, and to emphasize
the broader professional expectations of the student doing the honors
thesis.
- The completed Senior Honors thesis must show a level of sophistication
of approach and analysis well above the norm. In order for
the student to receive departmental honors in Sociology, the thesis
project must be evaluated at a minimum of A-. (In other words,
students electing the honors options may not achieve the designation
of departmental honors if they do not excel I their work. On
the other hand, they would receive the grade and credit for the Senior
Honors Thesis course that is consistent with their performance.)
The final grade would be assigned by the honors thesis committee,
but the department must accept the grade by consensus following the
formal presentation of the results.
- The student writing a Senior Honors Thesis will be expected to present
the thesis publicly along with the other senior thesis presentations
in the department, but also will be required to present the paper
at an appropriate off-campus setting, such as the Miami Valley Student
Research Symposium, the National Student Research Conference, the
North Central Sociological Association annual meeting or the meetings
of the American Sociological Association or the American Anthropological
Association. The primary criterion for appropriateness would
be adequate professional organization of the forum and, if possible,
presentation with others who have also pursued student research beyond
the normal requirements.
- The Senior Honors Thesis in Sociology will be evaluated on the criteria
of professional approach, satisfactory level of empirical research,
adequate use of social theory, high quality of writing, originality
of insight, and appropriate professional form of final paper and presentations.
The senior honors thesis committee will propose a final grade
to the departmental faculty, who must consent to the committee's decision.
- Since it is expected that all participants in the senior honors
thesis program in Sociology will complete a significant research paper,
the department will encourage all those it believes have achieved
a satisfactory level of professionalism to consider submission of
the paper for publication in a journal or edited collection.
Depending on the level of independence of the student's work, this
may or may not involve further work with a faculty member to make
the final product publishable. If adequate input is given by
the faculty member, it would be appropriate to publish the work under
joint authorship, though there may be theses that are complete enough
in themselves to be directly publishable. In no case will the
faculty member take credit for the student's independent work.
- Finally, all participants - the honors student, other majors, the
departmental faculty and any honors thesis committee members from
outside the department - will be asked to provide evaluations of the
process to aid in ongoing development of the Senior Honors Thesis
program in Sociology.