Calvin's Honors Program names new director
History professor Bruce Berglund is the new director of Calvin's Honors Program.
In 1993, the year classics professor took on the job of mentoring the at Calvin, two students graduated with honors. This year, as Bratt retires, 51 students graduated with honors, 176 seniors were on the Dean鈥檚 List every semester they鈥檝e been at Calvin, and faculty from a whole range of disciplines assisted students in 330 honors projects.
Putting students at the center
Calvin鈥檚 Honors Program is significantly different from most higher education honors programs, which feature a small cohort of liberal arts students taking the same few classes. Rather than follow that kind of highly prescribed, highly selective model, Calvin鈥檚 program is student-centered, allowing honors students to delve deeper into subjects that interest them. Calvin offers a wide variety of 鈥攆rom the humanities to the sciences鈥攁nd students select six that spark their interest the most. 鈥淭he honor is not the point,鈥 Bratt said in a 2006 article. 鈥淭he point is deepening your work in the discipline and strengthening your relationships with professors and peers.鈥
As English professor and former Honors Program associate director explained, 鈥淭he way Ken designed Calvin鈥檚 Honors Program ensures that the program is about deepening student learning rather than hoop jumping. The Honors Program is not meant to be more work, but deeper learning. If you have strong academic gifts, we want to invest in your academic achievement. We want you to join professors as colleagues, not just passive receivers.鈥
Honors projects provide students with the opportunity to research alongside a faculty member. Project topics in the past year included asteroid collisions, late Cretaceous Paleoecology and international adoptions.
Other unique innovations in the program include an honors , taking up one floor of van Reken Hall; clustered core honors classes (for which students take two paired core courses simultaneously, such as psychology and biology of the brain); the (a scholarship through ); an honors semester in Oxford; and a city-wide honors conference for students.
鈥淜en has given so much to the institution, but he does so very quietly,鈥 said Holberg. 鈥淗e steps up all the time, taking on tough projects and unglamorous assignments for the betterment of the college.鈥 She furthered, 鈥淚t may sound clich茅, but he has a true servant鈥檚 heart.鈥
Passing the torch
History professor will be taking the reins of the Honors Program, and he plans no major program revisions. While attending a National Collegiate Honors Council conference with Bratt, Berglund explained, 鈥淥ther honors program directors kept approaching me to say they had come to Calvin to see what Ken had done when structuring their programs. I would attend a conference session, and every suggestion the speaker made we had already implemented at Calvin. I concluded that ours is a model program.鈥
Berglund said that given the size of the program, students have asked for help in building a tighter-knit community. This past academic year, the program added more social activities, including a movie night at Celebration Cinema and a trivia and chocolate fondue event. And, he plans to continue to implement more ways of bringing students together.
With experience teaching a clustered core honors course, Berglund is well acquainted with the quality of Calvin鈥檚 honors students. 鈥淚t was through teaching the core course 鈥楬istory of the West and the World鈥 alongside Henry Luttikhuizen鈥檚 art history class that I became excited about the innovative work the Honors Program is doing. I enjoyed seeing mini-communities formed among first-year students taking these two core classes side-by-side.鈥
Berglund and enrich their classes by venturing to Chicago for a day. 鈥淲atching students run around the University of Chicago鈥檚 Oriental Institute excitedly pointing out the elements of Greek capitals and snapping photos with a sculpture of King Tut is priceless,鈥 Berglund said. 鈥淭hese students demonstrate a deep love of learning.鈥
Creating opportunities
Berglund has been Calvin鈥檚 Fulbright faculty adviser for nearly a decade, and he sees that role as a good fit with the Honors Program. A two-time winner of Fulbright awards himself, Berglund established a committee of faculty to review and hone student Fulbright proposals, helping students create competitive applications. Last year, . Many of Calvin鈥檚 Fulbright applicants have come from the honors student population.
鈥淭hrough the Honors Program,鈥 said Berglund, 鈥渟tudents who are passionate about learning get the opportunity to envision the opportunities that exist for them through higher education. It is great fun to work with these students and help them to reach their full academic potential.鈥