Honors Colleges in the Carolinas can offer an ‘Ivy’ experience

The saying goes … “It is easier to make a big school smaller than it is to make a small school bigger.”

Shortly after the decisions roll in, high school seniors often find themselves deciding between a small private college and a larger university.

One way to make a big school smaller is an honors program. Fans say that participating in an honors program offers an Ivy League education at state school prices.  Honors Colleges are each state’s smartest tool for attracting and retaining their best and brightest at their home institutions. It is no surprise, then, that honors programs have exploded and can now be found on more than 1,400 campuses nationwide. Honors programs and large public institutions are reaching out and offering substantial substantive inducements to encourage their state’s strongest students to stay in-state.

Here in North Carolina, each of the 16 state campuses offer honors programs, except the prestigious N.C. School of the Arts with just 845 students. In South Carolina, there are honors programs offered at the University of South Carolina in Columbia as well as at Clemson and the College of Charleston.

A number of states across the country offer in-state tuition to out-of-state applicants if they meet specific criteria;  grades and test scores. The University of South Carolina (USC)  publishes their financial aid incentives on their website www.sc.edu (click on “Financial Aid” and then “non-resident scholarships.”) USC boasts an out-of-state enrollment of 39 percent which is more than double the 18 percent maximum allowed at any University of North Carolina campus. The difference between in-state and out-of-state tuition at USC would save a family roughly $20,000 per year or $80,000 over the course of a four-year education. That’s worth looking into.

Students typically qualify for honors programs and in-state tuition discounts at out-of state institutions based on three factors: rigor of the high school curriculum, performance in high school classes and standardized test scores. To be competitive with private colleges and universities, public institutions try to appeal to the highest performing students with perks that capitalize on the theme of making the students feel that they are  “bigger fish in a smaller pond.”

Perks of honors programs

The best perks of honors programs are student focused. Colleges design their own programs and offer a combination of the following:

  • Priority class registration
  • Honors classes and seminars just for honors students or smaller classes with limited enrollments
  • Honors housing with more amenities and often more convenient and desirable locations
  • Specialized programming with guest speakers, “meet and greet” opportunities with visitors to the university
  • Living and learning communities that combine academic interests and housing
  • Team-building and leadership programs
  • Enhanced career guidance services
  • Greater access to undergraduate research opportunities
  • Greater access and scholarship dollars towards study abroad opportunities
  • Guaranteed admission to highly selective majors and programs

John Willingham has literally written the book on Honors Colleges. INSIDE HONORS: Ratings and Reviews of Sixty Public University Honors Programs. Public University Press, www.publicuniversityhonors.com, where he shares his methodical research results. His research has demonstrated that increasingly one can find equally excellent value in the growing number of honors colleges in non-flagship institutions.” But to find that value, you have to look deeply into what Willingham calls the “ground game” of honors colleges and programs.

Bierer is an independent college adviser based in Charlotte. Send questions to: lee@collegeadmissionsstrategies.com; www.collegeadmissionsstrategies.com