Tuesday, August 27, 1968 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page SIx FHE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, August 27, 1968 Individual iniative forms core of honors program FIRST BIRTHDAY: RC scores victories despite obstacles The literary college's honors program is designed to offer the qualified student spe- cial opportunities and challenges. It is geared toward the upper. 10-15 per cent of the student body and features small classes with a higher percentage 9f professors rather than teaching fellows conducting the courses. "Discourse is the prime method of in- struction in seminars of 1o-20 students," explains Prof. Otto G. Graf, honors pro- gram director. "Honors courses stress theory and incorporate a greater degree of critical analysis and more writing of a critical na- ture to enable the qualified student to en- gage in independent study and research." The honors program began as an experi- ment nine years ago, in its initial stage consisting of only 21 courses. It is now the largest and most comprehensive program of its kind in the nation, with over 200 courses and sections in all 'departmfentsof the literary college, in addition to 22 inter-, departmental courses. Over 1,500 students will be enrolled in the program this fall, including over 400 entering freshmen. Flexibility and lack of structuring are features of most honors courses, with a definite stress on individual initiative. Inde- pendent Study (colloge honors 290) is an elected course in which a student plans with a professor a course of study that will be worthwhile to the student and acceptable for academic credit. The student does not attend classes, but confers regularly with the professor to dicuss important problems and aspects of his studies. Individual, initiative is also' an integral part of the honors colloquium (college honors 190). The colloquium is an open course number allowing a group of stu- tents interested in a particular specialized field of study not covered in regular Uni- versity courses to set up such a course with an interested professor. Honors students also have the opportun- ity to take many of their courses as sum- mer reading programs. Students may, ar- range with a professor to read the texts normally used in one' of their courses on their own over the summer. Dean Robertson meets students informally SfL ATER'S Try us for that "Hard to Find" Book By JILL CRABTREE The Residential College, fav- orite child of educators and students seeking a reedy for mass-production learning at the big U, is having a birthday. After a year of painstaking. self-discovery, coupled with fi- nancial, disappointment, the col- lege, situated precariously amid brick dust and wet' paint in a corner. of remodeled East Quad, is awaiting its second crop of freshnen. Decisions made and direction taken in the next year will de- termine whether the college will crystalize into the exprimental laboratory and model intellec- tual community it was conceived to be, or whether it will. become simply a mechanism for' relieving LSA enrollment pressures.' Indications are good: that the college will fulfill its' mission, if the enthusiasm and innovative spirit now present in the Col- lege prevails. Academically, the college breaks all, the rules in the book. Curriculum is more fixed than in the rest of the University. All students take eight-hour "core" courses in logic and language, and western man. In addition, all students take something call- ed freshman seminar which is a sophisticated version of that eighth grade Unified Studies course you had before they started dividing culture up into history and English. In some courses students write a paper each week. Seminars are limited to 10-12 students and grading is ,on a pass-fail basis, with a 60-70 word evaluation written by the instructor for every student in every course, at the, end of the term. * Contact with professors is not lin ited to the classroom. Faculty are frequent visitors at the col- lege at mealtimes, and impromp- tu bull sessions at professor's 'homes occur often enough to be worth mentioning. With a student body totalling slightly over 200 and approximately 35 faculty members, such face-to- face meetings are possible. Not all of the college's inno- vations in academics have work- ed, however. James H. Robert- son, Director of the College and Associate Dean of LSA, asserts, that some changes in curriculum' will be made next year. But ex- periments, after all, do not lose their value if they don't confirm the hypothesis. One change Robertson would. like to instigate is more flexi- bility for students in math and science. At present students take all their4 core courses within their first, four semesters at the ol- lege, with a comprehensive eiam at the end of this period. "This makes it difficult," Robertson says, "for math and science stu- dents to get at some of their basic pre-requisite courses." This means that these students are forced to go to summer. school or change their major, which is "hardly fair," Robert- son says. The college staff has also run into difficulty interpreting their pass-fail grades for the honors program and scholarship offi- cials. At present the translation. is being done by Robertson's own office staff. Students Robertson has talked with are "quite adamant about keeping pass-fail grading", he says. Many have suggested that if the office must compile grades, they be made known to the stu- dent only if he requests then. Robertson feels this issue is an extremely important one for the college's 'future, and may put it to a college-wide referendum in the fall. The college's system of govern- ment, which gives students a high degree of control over all affairs of the college, is as innovative as the College should provide a Icw its curriculum. The main deci- apartment houses outside the sion-making body is the Repre- dormitory. house upperclassuien sentative Assembly, which son- in apartment suites* within the sists of eight students, four fac- dormitory. (with present plans, ulty members, four administrators the quadrangle could accomnmo- and twoyresident fellows. It is date 700 students) or lethupper- chaired by_ Dean Robertson,i Awho, classmen find their own housig. has a vote. The options open to the college' This Assembly is vested by the may be narrowed considerably if college constitution (adopted in a finances remain as shaky as they college-wide vote early in the have been in the' past. winter term) with final authori ,y Originally, the Residential Col- for decisions within the college. lege was to be located in two It is responsible only to the Dean buildings on what is now the Ann and Executive Committee of tne Arbor Municipal Golf Course. One, literary college, and the Regents. !a classroom dormitory unit, was All administrative committees, budgeted at $11.8 million. A sep- including building, a c a d e m i c arate library and science facility standing and curriculum commit- was priced at $5.2 million. tees, must report to the Assembly. In 1965, the Legislature offered Robertson feels the government planning money for the library- has worked very well, "So far the science building. However the Assembly's decisions have not University refused the money, be- broken down on student vexsus cause it was felt that aprovision non-student lines. I think Lhis in the 1965 capital outlay act re- indicates a great deal of mutual quiring state supervision of build- trust and understanding. ing planning interfered with the A comment made by one stu- University's autonomy. dent in response to charges of Since that time the University "selling out" by having faculty has tried unsuccessfully to get the members on the governing body act dropped, even challenging it is revealing: "Surely," the 'stu- in the courts. In April,'1966, how- dent said, "thie !faculty members ever, the Regents approved a fi- have as much vested interest, rele- nancing plan for the classroom vant material and feelings to be a dormitory building, even though part of our government as does financing was insecure. any student." In June the 'Regents approved So far the Assembly has taken as "sources of funds" for the pro- no action' that would excite an posed college $7.5 million in reve- outsider hoping for dramatic evi- nue from d bond issue to be re- dence of student power. Curfew paid from student fees; $1.1 mil- regulations, always a prime con- lion from refinancing South Quad, cern of students, were abolished $1.4 million from other residence in the first month of the fall term hall income, and $1.8 million in by a vote of the student body as gifts from the $55 million alumni a whole, and later endorsed by a fund drive. pro-tem government of student,!Unfortunately the plans never faculty and administrativerepre-materialized, because only $35,000 sentatives. in gift money came in, leaving the This done, the new Assembly project almost $2 million short of has been concentrating on work funds. Other University funds which is less dramatic, perhaps, were tied up in construction of a but essential nonetheless; care- new administration building an'd fully drawing the lines of auto-anentbuliglavgth cousplanlege Residential College low on the lit committees of thecollege., of priorities. That was when the "The students recognize," Rob- decision was made to move the ertson says, "that if they give a college to East Quad. mandate to 'an administrative There is little hope now that committee, the committee must be the present Residential College able to exercise it with some de- will ever move to'North Campus. gree of responsibility, and not be If the University ever succeeds in second-guessed on major issues." its fight over the capital outlay In the fall the Assembly will act, or substantially changes its begin to make more visible de- priorities, futur6 Residential Col- cisions on the structure and con- leges (original plans called for tent of life within the college. four within four, years) may have Besides proposed grading and a separate location in which to curriculum changes, a primary is- develop, away from the melee of sue of 1969 will be where to house central campus. 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