Limestone's Thriving Honors Program Continues To Attract Best, Brightest Students

Charles Wyatt
Limestone's Thriving Honors Program Continues To Attract Best, Brightest Students

A year after implementing a fresh approach to its solid foundation, Limestone College’s Honors Program continues to present select undergraduates the opportunity to pursue academic excellence within a community of like-minded learners.

In the spring of 2019, Director Dr. Jonathan Sarnoff and a leadership committee took the reins of the College’s Honors Program that offers talented and motivated students the prospect of reaching greater heights through their experiences at Limestone.

“I am fortunate to work with a great team of Honors Committee members, administrators, and faculty members to help deliver a great product for our Honors students,” Sarnoff said recently in talking about the Honors Program’s growth. “Dr. Alex Richardson and Dr. Felicia Cavallini are two of those faculty members. We are likely one of the few smaller institutions of higher learning in the country to have two Fulbright Scholars teaching required courses in an Honors Program. Dr. Richardson will be teaching an Honors Literature class and Dr. Cavallini will be teaching our Capstone course.”

The Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program sends American scholars and professionals abroad to lecture or conduct research for up to a year. Richardson was named a Fulbright Scholar in 2009 and traveled to the Island of Maderia to teach courses on American culture at the University of Maderia. Cavallini earned the prestigious Fulbright Scholar Award in 2014 and served at the University of Guelph in Canada as a Visiting Research Chair in the Human Health and Nutritional Sciences Department, and her primary focus was on physical activity and exercise.

“What we developed is a seminar style class where students will take more ownership of the material,” Richardson said about his Honors Program course at Limestone. “The students will have the responsibility of doing research and reporting back to their classmates. It will not be just a teacher-student classroom environment. Instead, it will be more of a collective group of scholars coming together to learn.”

Sarnoff noted that Limestone’s Honors Program members enter into a community of students, faculty, and administrators committed to the shared ideals of academic excellence, leadership, intellectual curiosity, and mutual respect. They are able to defend and critique ideas, recognize and demonstrate the value of service-learning, identify complex problems and evaluate solutions, analyze and interpret advanced primary and secondary texts, develop a research design and execute research independently or with faculty, and implement leadership principles in everyday life.

“If we are fostering and nurturing life-long learning, we are wanting the students to affect our community,” Cavallini explained. “We expect them to be the gold standard in the classroom. All of their assignments matter, and their decorum matters also. But then we like to transcend that into the public and the real world. We believe they will tackle projects that will make in impact, whether it be here at Limestone or in and around Gaffney and Cherokee County. It’s important to develop a whole and total self so that they can learn to be the best versions of themselves.” 

Criteria used for selection in Limestone’s Honors Program includes SAT and ACT scores, rank in class, the nature of courses taken in high school, and grade-point average.

“Dr. Richardson and Dr. Cavallini are by no means the only excellent faculty we have teaching in our Honors Program,” Sarnoff noted. “We have Dr. Megan Anderson teaching our Colloquium class, Dr. Randy Nichols teaches our Advance Public Speaking class, and Dr. Jack Knipe leads our Freshman Academic Honors Seminar, so we have what I consider to be some of the best faculty around. To have a vibrant Honors Program on campus, it takes a community. It takes a team. And I really like the team that I work with.”

Academically ambitious students are invited to learn about the Limestone Honors Program, which offers academic rigor beyond the standard college experience. For more information about eligibility and requirements, visit www.limestone.edu/honors-program.

“Our professors in the Honors Program want us to have our own original thoughts and ideas and discuss them,” said Limestone English major Abagail Boggs. “With my professors, it doesn’t matter if you are right or wrong. It’s more about talking and trying to get ideas out.”

Limestone’s Honors Program was established in the fall of 1983 by former Professor of History Dr. Tom Thomson.