Office of Academic Resources
Committee on College Honors
Information on Fellowships


The Committee on College Honors, which is composed of three faculty members, three students, and Dean Phil Bean (pbean@haverford.edu), has three principal functions:
  • chooses Haverford's nominees for certain outside fellowships, notably Beinecke, Goldwater, Jack Kent Cooke, Luce, Marshall, Mitchell, Rhodes, and Truman. It also provides guidance to candidates for the Fulbright Scholarship.
  • makes recommendations to the faculty on the awarding of two fellowships exclusively for graduating seniors at Haverford College: the Clementine Cope Fellowships and the Augustus Taber Murray Research Fellowships.
  • makes recommendations to the faculty regarding which graduating seniors should receive College Honors: magna cum laude and summa cum laude (Haverford does not award the distinction of cum laude). The Committee interprets the criteria for College Honors as defined by the rules of the faculty, and it establishes suitable procedures for the selection of students (see below). 

TOPICS ON THIS PAGE:
Expectations and Advice for Scholarship Candidates
Internal Deadlines
Haverford College Honors: The Process

INFORMATION ON SPECIFIC SCHOLARSHIPS:
Scholarships Requiring a Haverford Nomination
Other Scholarships


General Expectations and Advice

The national selection committees for the Beinecke, Goldwater, Jack Kent Cooke, Luce, Marshall, Mitchell, Rhodes, and Truman fellowships require the college to confer an institutional endorsement, or an official nomination, on a limited number of students.

Students who would like to apply for consideration for these scholarships are therefore required to submit the requisite application materials, including letters of recommendation, to the Committee on College Honors (by way of Dean Phil Bean, Chase Hall 205) by the internal deadlines summarized below.

Please note that Haverford's internal deadlines differ significantly from those established by the national selection committees (as published on the websites for those fellowships), and that students are responsible for meeting the college's internal deadlines.

Students interested in the Watson Fellowship also need to obtain an institutional endorsement. However, students interested in the Watson need to submit their materials to Dean Steve Watter (swatter@haverford.edu), Chase Hall 213.

The Committee on College Honors has certain expectations which must be met if a student expects to get full consideration for a College nomination:

  • Applications must be complete by the time the relevant internal deadline; those submitted after those deadlines, or which are not complete by the time the deadlines lapse, may not receive consideration by the Committee on College Honors. If you are experiencing difficulty getting your materials together in time, please be in touch with Dean Bean (pbean@haverford.edu) as soon as you sense that there may be a problem.
  • Application essays will be thoughtful, insightful, well-written, and tailored to the interests and objectives of the scholarship for which the candidate would like to be nominated. It is the experience of the Committee that the vast majority of students, regardless of how accomplished they are, cannot write compelling and authentic personal statements in the last few weeks before the deadline.
  • If students are applying for a scholarship to study at a particular university, the Committee on College Honors expects that they will be informed about the institution in question and the specific degree program they would like to pursue there.
  • Students will be prepared to speak insightfully about their experiences, their studies, their aspirations and plans for the future, as well as current events, when they are interviewed by the Committee on College Honors. Interviews will play an important role in the decision by the Committee regarding which candidates will receive Haverford's institutional endorsement.

Candidates for the Fulbright are also required to submit their application materials to the Committee on College Honors by Haverford's internal deadline (see below). However, Fulbright places no limitations on the number of Haverford students who can apply for consideration in any given year, and while the Committee on College Honors invites Fulbright applicants to an interview, the objective of these on-campus interviews for the Fulbright is simply to give candidates advice regarding how to improve their application materials.

Students who are interested applying for any fellowship are strongly encouraged to contact recommenders in a timely fashion; again, waiting until shortly before a deadline is not helpful, as it only tends to make it more difficult for recommenders to do justice to the students about whom they have been asked to write. Those interested in applying for scholarships with internal deadlines that fall in September or October are encouraged to contact faculty recommenders before they leave in May or during the summer. Students are also encouraged to provide recommenders with a copy of their curriculum vitae, and to make sure that recommenders are aware of the criteria of the scholarships for which they are applying. Candidates for Fulbright and Watson are encouraged to give a copy of their project proposal to their recommenders. Recommenders are welcome to send letters to the Committee on Honors (by way of Dean Phil Bean) during the summer for consideration in the fall.

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2008-09 Internal Deadlines

Application materials, including letters of recommendation, for scholarships that require an institutional endorsement must be submitted to Roxanne Clark, Chase Hall 205, by the dates specified below, except in the case of the Watson, applications for which need to to be submitted to Dean Steve Watter, Chase Hall 213:

September 2, 2008
Marshall, Mitchell, Rhodes, Churchill

September 26, 2008
Watson

September 23, 2008
Fulbright

October 31, 2008
Luce, Goldwater, Truman, Beinecke

January 20, 2009
Jack Kent Cooke, St. Andrew's Society

March 3, 2009
Cope and Murray

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College Honors: The Process

Each spring, the names of the top 15% of the graduating class, as measured by cumulative GPA, are circulated confidentially among the Faculty, who are invited to send written recommendations to the Committee on Honors for any student on the list; the faculty are also invited to recommend any student who is not on the list. After discussing these letters and the transcripts of the students under consideration, the Committee on Honors devises a list of nominees for the distinctions of magna cum laude and summa cum laude, which is then submitted to the Faculty for its approval.

The criteria used by the Committee in doing its work are outlined in the Haverford College Catalog:

"Whereas distinguished performance in the major is the criterion for departmental honors, the award of college honors recognizes students whose work has been outstanding overall. Special attention is given to study that goes beyond the requirements of the major. Such study can be interdivisional, as evidenced by superior work outside one's major division; interdisciplinary, as evidenced by superior work in more than one department of a single division; by superior work in several converging domains of knowledge represented by an area of concentration or the equivalent; or by other evidence of superior work beyond the requirements of the major and the College."

Students will please note that the criteria used in this process differ from those used in the choice of recipients of other distinctions, like departmental honors and election to Phi Beta Kappa, and it is therefore not unusual for a student to be awarded some form of recognition of academic achievement but not be chosen for College Honors. In addition, particularly given the emphasis placed on breadth of study, it is not unusual for students with high GPAs not to be chosen for College Honors.

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