To earn an Honors degree students must meet the CLA standards for Graduation with Honors. A thesis is required of all candidates for the degree summa cum laude. which must be read by three evaluators. One of the readers must be from a program other than Linguistics. The thesis should involve original research and is completed by registering for the two-semester sequence LING 3051H-3052V. These courses must be taken on an A-F grade basis. The first semester is conducted as an independent study under the supervision of a professor with expertise in the subject of the dissertation, and usually consists of background reading, data gathering and other research and should culminate in completion of an initial draft of the research. The final writing of the thesis is done in the second semester, LING 3052V, which will meet concurrently with LING 4901W. This is a seminar devoted to the writing and structure of linguistics papers, as represented by models to be examined and discussed in class. It will include peer review and commentary on successive drafts, along with discussion of the linguistic issues appropriate to the topics students are writing about in each seminar. The final thesis usually is between 30 and 50 pages, although actual length may vary according to the topic.
Honors theses are subject to the Guidelines for Major Projects which can be found in the Senior Project section. Summa theses are expected to be of particularly high quality from the point of view of both content and form/mechanics.
For further information on the Honors Thesis, and guidance in choosing a topic and an advisor for the first semester's research, contact the Honors Advisor in Linguistics, Hooi Ling Soh prior to registering for the course.
The following are some of the Honors theses written by Linguistics graduates in recent years: