What is an Honors Thesis?

An honors thesis is an original, independent research project undertaken with the guidance of a faculty mentor and culminating in a significant paper or an academic poster (see Appendix One).

As a student, you are familiar with the essays and papers written in our regular courses, and this is at once similar and different. The two forms are similar in the sense that both are characterized by a persuasive argument, judicious use of evidence, originality of thought, and clarity of expression.

But they differ in two important waysan honors thesis is a very much larger project, and it is based on original research carried out according to the standards of the discipline. Although as an undergraduate you are unlikely to make a truly world-shattering discovery, you should expect your honors thesis to make, in at least a modest way, what scholars call "a contribution to the field."

You may hear people refer to an honors thesis as a "senior thesis." In some ways, this phrase is misleading because many students start their theses before the senior year. But, if such a phrase denotes a sense of maturity and culmination, then it is not entirely wrong.

An honors thesis allows you to use your accumulated skills and knowledge to study an important question, test a hypothesis, or produce something truly creative to do so on your own, independently. Thus, an honors thesis is the ultimate, defining accomplishment of your undergraduate education.

The form and length of honors theses vary greatly by topic; recently, most theses have been 40 to 60 pages, but some have been longer or shorter.

Recent Thesis Completions

Year Author and Title
2020 Joseph Gallo “The Long-Lasting Consequences of Pure Blood Ideology on hafu and the Ethnic Other"
2019 Daniel Wethli (2019) “China’s Evolving 1911 Revolution: From Great Men to the Inevitable Rise of a Great Class to… It's Complicated.”
2018 Linus Morales “Traditional and Revolutionary Themes in Modern Chinese Propaganda Posters: Typography, Image, and Parody.”
2017 Matthew Albolino “Between Three Empires: Okinawan Protests Before and After Reversion.”