Setting them free: students as co-producers of honors education

While the attractions and advantages of freedom that differentiates honors education from regular teaching are both theoretically and practically significant, the authors' experience at Utrecht University in the Netherlands has demonstrated drawbacks that need to be addressed and resolved in cr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council 2012-09, Vol.13 (2), p.183
Hauptverfasser: van Gorp, Bouke, Wolfensberger, Marca V.C, de Jong, Nelleke
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container_title Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council
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creator van Gorp, Bouke
Wolfensberger, Marca V.C
de Jong, Nelleke
description While the attractions and advantages of freedom that differentiates honors education from regular teaching are both theoretically and practically significant, the authors' experience at Utrecht University in the Netherlands has demonstrated drawbacks that need to be addressed and resolved in creating effective honors education. Freedom poses certain challenges to students, teachers, and the faculty in general; these challenges include guarding a program's coherence and quality, marketing the freedom in a clear and effective way, and ensuring that students challenge themselves. This essay introduces the challenges and struggles as well as the rewards that have been shaped by the particular contexts of the program within the Faculty of Geosciences, within Utrecht University, and within the Netherlands. The honors program of the Faculty of Geosciences fosters three kinds of freedom: (1) passion; (2) learning strategies and behavior; and (3) involvement. Freedom can only lead to extraordinary achievements when it comes with conditions and requirements. Such requirements have to be clear but also relevant to the students. Freedom needs to be scaffolded, especially in honors programs because critical consumers of education do not necessarily know how to organize education.
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subjects Autonomy (Psychology)
College Faculty
College Students
Creative Thinking
Curricula
Education, Higher
Educational aspects
Foreign Countries
Honors Curriculum
Learning Strategies
Liberty
Methods
Netherlands
Netherlands (Utrecht)
Personal Autonomy
Positive Attitudes
Social aspects
Student Attitudes
Student Behavior
Student Participation
Talented students
Universities and colleges
title Setting them free: students as co-producers of honors education
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