In general, most teens want to get their courses completed as quickly and easily as possible, often with a “just git ‘er done” attitude. But once in a while a student really puts extra effort into a course, delving into personal study of an area of interest, entering a contest that requires additional research and polished performance that complements a subject being studied. It would be nice to somehow draw attention on the transcript to the exceptional effort. And there is a way! You can designate it an “Honors Course”

To be an honors course the following requirements should be met:

  1. The main course has to be completed in full
  2. A learning project has to be completed that relates to the subject
  3. The project must involve 30 or more hours of additional work (an hour a day for six weeks, or a full week of school days, for example)
  4. Something significant has to be learned — not just a summary of general knowledge on a topic
  5. Some type of presentation must be made (research paper, oral report with notes, video project, display board with accompanying documentation, etc)

 

Some examples:

 

Recommendations: try to find and utilize “primary documents” or use first-person interviews or historical site visits when applicable

Again, to recap, the project should involve “real learning” and reach or exceed the minimum 30 additional hours of work beyond the normal course work, and have some type of presentation at the end.

 

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