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ELAIA

Volume 2 (2019)

DIRECTOR'S NOTE

Volume 2

Each fall, the Honors Program at Olivet Nazarene University admits a small number of academically gifted students into its freshman class. From the moment they set foot on our campus, these women and men join a community of scholars, and together they read, reflect upon, and discuss the most important ideas of the past and present—all within a Christian fellowship. The first two years of the program involve a series of Honors courses, taught by a team of faculty and modeled on the historic “old-time college,” where small class relationships, interdisciplinary discussion, and debate prevailed.

In the junior and senior years, the Honors Program shifts its focus away from the classroom to the laboratory or library. There, students work on a capstone scholarship project within their major that involves original research and writing. Honors students gain experience comparable to what happens at large research institutions as they work one-on-one with a faculty mentor and alongside their classmates in research seminars to conceive and complete their individual projects. For our graduates—many of whom go on to advanced study in medicine, law, or other fields—scholarship becomes a deeply personal, transformative, and spiritually meaningful act. Throughout their four years, Honors students ultimately learn how to love God with their minds, as well as their hearts.

Since its establishment in 2007, the program has continued to grow and flourish, and the depth of its research continues to increase. This second volume of ELAIA represents the fruits of that development, containing capstone research projects from the 2019 Honors Program senior class and their faculty mentors. The Table of Contents is diverse, and in that way it is a crystalline reflection of our program’s community of scholars.

I, along with the members of the Honors Council, am gratified by the work of each student and faculty mentor printed within these pages.

- Stephen Lowe, Honors Program Director

Articles

PDF

ELAIA 2019
Stephen Case

Honors Program Administration

Honors Program Director
Stephen Lowe
Editor and Associate Director
Stephen Case
Administrative Assistant
Cheryl Paarlberg

Honors Faculty Council

Chair and Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences
Stephen Lowe
Mathematics
Justin Brown
Geosciences
Stephen Case
Church History
Mark Frisius
Benner Library
Pam Greenlee
English
Dave Johnson
Economics
Paul Koch
Engineering
Joseph Makarewicz
English
Elizabeth Schurman
Biology
Daniel Sharda
Education
Brian Stipp
Music
Neal Woodruff
Psychology
Alison Young-Reusser

Honors Program Teaching Faculty

Geosciences
Stephen Case
Biology
Ryan Himes
English
Karen Knudson
Economics
Paul Koch
Sociology
Charles Perabeaur
English
Elizabeth Schurman
Biology
Daniel Sharda
Education
Brian Stipp
Psychology
Alison Young-Reusser