SENIOR YEAR PROGRAM
2006-2007
Try to think of your senior year program as a connected whole. The central
elements are:
the College Seminar, taught in the fall;
a sustained year-long investigation in the form of either an Honors
Thesis or a Senior Project.
In close consultation with your advisers, try to make the remaining courses
in your program connect to the seminar and your thesis/project. Each senior
program must have the signature of his or her adviser by Monday, September 18, the University deadline for first-semester course registration.
If you plan to complete an Honors Thesis to satisfy the senior year
requirements, note the following tentative Honors College deadlines for
2006-2007:
Monday, September 18: By this date you must enroll in CSS 409.
Tuesday, February 6: By this date you must enroll in CSS 410.
Work in Progress forms due in Honors
College.
Thursday, April 12: Submission and registration of completed thesis to
Honors College.
You will receive further notice and confirmation of these dates from Honors
College as the deadlines approach. You are personally responsible for meeting
these deadlines.
If you plan to undertake a Senior Project instead of an Honors thesis,
this project must have a coherent theme and plan, approved by Peter Rutland, Co-Chair. Such a project is constructed of elements of course work and
independent study. It should include a substantial amount of critical writing
which brings out the scope and coherence of the project; this normally takes the
form of an individual writing tutorial during the second semester. The project
is due on Tuesday, May 8. Under normal circumstances, Senior Projects
earn one credit. For projects of unusual scope and length two credits may be
assigned, with approval from your tutor and the CSS Chair no later than
January 24.
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Mon., Sept 4, 4:00 p.m. |
Mon., Sept. 18 |
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CSS Orientation Meeting of whole College, tutors and students, in the CSS Common Room. Senior Workshop
4:45 p.m. Meeting to discuss Senior Theses/Projects. |
Wesleyan Registration Ends Last date
for course registration. Last date for approval of senior program. |
All required reports and papers should be given to Madeleine
Howenstine
who will see to their proper distribution.
Thesis Proposal:
This should contain (1) the tentative title of the proposed thesis; (2) the
name of the student's thesis supervisor and his or her initialed agreement to
undertake this responsibility; and (3) a brief statement of the central
problem of the thesis and the general approach the student plans to employ.
The proposal need be no longer than one or two pages.
Senior Project Proposal:
This should list courses to be taken and the general nature of the writing
to be done. It should present a short (one or two page) statement on the focus
of the project and the relationship between the written work and the courses.
3 days before your scheduled workshop -- Thesis workshop papers due. The
thesis workshop paper, five to seven pages in length, should provide: (1) a
detailed statement of the problem to be examined, together with (2) an
explanation of its significance and (3) an account of the proposed methods of
inquiry. It should describe (4) the research materials to be used and give (5) a
capsule bibliography.
First Week in November on -- Thesis workshops. Each student makes a brief
presentation of his or her thesis proposal, expanding on the workshop paper
which will be distributed in advance to all interested participants. The senior
tutor, the student's thesis adviser, and CSS seniors attend the workshop, and
all other interested faculty, CSS tutors, and students are encouraged to
participate. The purposes of the workshops are to provide information about the
proposed study to members of the community, to stimulate an interdisciplinary
criticism and defense of the proposal, and to provide the senior with a wide
range of advice at an early stage in the inquiry. These workshops have proved
extremely useful to the College as a whole, as well as to seniors.
Project workshops will be scheduled in second semester.
Attendance at these workshops is mandatory for all seniors.
Monday, December 11 -- Preliminary draft of part of thesis due.
Preliminary progress report on senior project due. At this time a rough draft of
a substantial piece of the thesis (for instance, one full chapter) should be
ready for initial evaluation by your thesis supervisor. You should also submit a
provisional table of contents of the entire thesis. (Note: It is most important
to meet this deadline so that supervisors can respond to drafts handed in before
students leave for Winter break.)
Students undertaking senior projects should submit a brief statement
outlining the work completed during the first semester and plans for the second
semester. Any changes made in the original program must be approved by the
senior tutor.
Wednesday, January 24 -- Second installment of thesis draft due. A second
substantial chunk of thesis draft (for instance, another full chapter) must be
submitted to your supervisor at this time. It should be accompanied by outlines
of the remainder of the body of the thesis, and a brief statement of the
research (if any) that remains to be done.
At this time an evaluation is made of whether the thesis is progressing
satisfactorily. If the progress made to this point does not point to success,
the student is expected (1) to drop the thesis tutorial in the second semester
and replace it with an appropriate course, and (2) to work up the unfinished
thesis into an acceptable senior essay, with no additional credit.
Thursday, April 12 -- Honors Thesis due at Honors College.
Tuesday, May 8 -- Senior project essays due. The major written exercise
that is part of each senior project is due, as is the senior essay from any
student who undertook an Honors Thesis but previously abandoned it.
N.B. In recent years a number of students who failed to take these deadlines
seriously were unable to graduate with their class.
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