is essay describes how an honors classroom introduces public speaking and active listening to encourage heroism and social justice among students. Asserting that people often look for a hero in times of crises, the author suggests that honors programs can become safe places where students learn the skills necessary to advocate for those in need and demonstrably help their communities. By cultivating essential skills in rhetoric and oral presentation, honors students identify with heroic, altruistic aspects of themselves and others
Many colleges profess a deep commitment to teaching the values of social justice by simply following...
This presidential speech to attendees of the 2019 NCHC annual conference in New Orleans resituates h...
As teachers in the University of Nevada, Las Vegas Honors College, we face semester after semester a...
This essay contends that honors education should seize the opportunity to expose our students to the...
This volume of Honors in Practice covers a spectrum from visionary to practical, providing an array ...
Risk-taking in honors education entails not only anxiety about grades and intellectually disturbing ...
This paper explores the risky proposition of encouraging students to question deeply held values and...
Honors faculty often engage students in service-learning and community- engaged courses to help stud...
Topics and resources from honors education are used to teach argumentation in writing composition. T...
In his book “The Courage to Teach,” Parker Palmer discusses the various roles of the teacher in the ...
A recent (2020) report by the Modern Language Association addresses the ethical treatment of graduat...
The best approach to honors students is to acknowledge that they are fully operating adults. This ap...
Deeply ingrained in honors culture and curricula is the value of connecting with and supporting stud...
The last issue of JNCHC (spring/summer 2019) included a Forum on “Current Challenges to Honors Educa...
I thought I was ready for her, a sophomore in my honors rhetoric class. I have been teaching the hon...
Many colleges profess a deep commitment to teaching the values of social justice by simply following...
This presidential speech to attendees of the 2019 NCHC annual conference in New Orleans resituates h...
As teachers in the University of Nevada, Las Vegas Honors College, we face semester after semester a...
This essay contends that honors education should seize the opportunity to expose our students to the...
This volume of Honors in Practice covers a spectrum from visionary to practical, providing an array ...
Risk-taking in honors education entails not only anxiety about grades and intellectually disturbing ...
This paper explores the risky proposition of encouraging students to question deeply held values and...
Honors faculty often engage students in service-learning and community- engaged courses to help stud...
Topics and resources from honors education are used to teach argumentation in writing composition. T...
In his book “The Courage to Teach,” Parker Palmer discusses the various roles of the teacher in the ...
A recent (2020) report by the Modern Language Association addresses the ethical treatment of graduat...
The best approach to honors students is to acknowledge that they are fully operating adults. This ap...
Deeply ingrained in honors culture and curricula is the value of connecting with and supporting stud...
The last issue of JNCHC (spring/summer 2019) included a Forum on “Current Challenges to Honors Educa...
I thought I was ready for her, a sophomore in my honors rhetoric class. I have been teaching the hon...
Many colleges profess a deep commitment to teaching the values of social justice by simply following...
This presidential speech to attendees of the 2019 NCHC annual conference in New Orleans resituates h...
As teachers in the University of Nevada, Las Vegas Honors College, we face semester after semester a...