Hutton Honors College
Encyclopedia
The Hutton Honors College (or simply Hutton or HHC) is the honors program of Indiana University
Indiana University
Indiana University is a multi-campus public university system in the state of Indiana, United States. Indiana University has a combined student body of more than 100,000 students, including approximately 42,000 students enrolled at the Indiana University Bloomington campus and approximately 37,000...

. The college was founded as the University Honors Division in 1966 with Warner Chapman as its director. It was renamed the Hutton Honors College in the fall of 2004 in honor of IU alumnus Edward Hutton. The college offers a range of small, challenging courses along with a variety of extracurricular and service programs. These opportunities, which include a close working relationship with some of IU's top faculty, affirm IU's commitment to providing students with both the intimacy of a small college and the breadth of a large research institution. The Hutton Honors College recruits diverse, talented, and highly-motivated students whose presence on campus serves to enhance the education of all undergraduates. By offering a range of small, challenging courses along with a variety of extracurricular and service programs, it strives to ensure an enriched academic and social experience for its students and to create an environment that fosters active, innovative learning.

HHC Achievements

Hutton Honors College graduates have found success in many arenas. Scholars have received fellowships and scholarships from various organizations including Beinecke, Churchill, Fulbright, Gates, Goldwater, Marshall, Mellon, Mitchell, Rhodes, Soros, Truman and Udall.

Those seeking graduate school have been accepted to Brown, California at Berkeley, Cambridge, Chicago, Columbia, Cornell, Duke, Harvard, Indiana, Johns Hopkins, Juilliard, London School of Economics, Northwestern, Oxford, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Sorbonne, Stanford, Tufts, UCLA and Yale.

Graduates have worked with public and nonprofit sector employers inclduing Americorps, Department of Defense, Department of State, Peace Corps and Teach for America.

Honors College alumni work for many corporate employmers such as Abbott Laboratories, Citibank, Eli Lilly and Company, Hallmark, IBM, JP Morgan, KPMG, Lucent, P&G and Smith Barney.

Timeline

  • May 1965: The IU Board of Trustees approves “in principle” the establishment of an Honors Division.
  • 1966: The University Honors Division, with Warner Chapman as its director, is established as a unit within the Office for Undergraduate Development. Within a few years, the Honors Division begins to report to the chancellor of the campus. The “first home” of the University Honors Division is Professor Chapman’s office, Kirkwood Hall 113.
  • 1973-1986: The University Honors Division is housed in the Student Building.
  • 1984-85: Julia Conaway Bondanella, associate director of the University Honors Division, serves as acting director. Professor Bondanella serves as associate director of the University Honors Division from 1983 to 2000 and associate dean of the IU Honors College 2000-01. She was also elected president of the National Collegiate Honors Council
    National Collegiate Honors Council
    The National Collegiate Honors Council is the United States non-profit professional association of undergraduate honors programs, colleges, directors, deans, faculty, staff, and students...

     from 1993-94.
  • Fall 1985: James S. Ackerman, professor of religious studies and former chair of that department, becomes director of the University Honors Division. The first Honors Division merit scholarship recipients matriculate.
  • Spring 1986: The University Honors Division moves into Haskett House, 324 N. Jordan Ave. A converted garage in Haskett called the Brown County Room serves in the coming years as space to welcome students, faculty, and distinguished campus visitors for extracurricular events.
  • Early 1990s: The University Honors Division offers its students the opportunity to earn an Honors Notation in recognition of the completion of honors-level coursework in several departments.
  • Spring 1993: The University Honors Division is given the use of Moody House, 326 N. Jordan Ave., for its advising staff; the offices of other HD administrators remain in 324 N. Jordan Ave.
  • August 1993: James Ackerman retires; Lewis H. Miller Jr., professor of English and co-founder of the Liberal Arts and Management Program, becomes director of the University Honors Division.
  • 1999: The University Honors Division establishes an Honors Residential Community in Forest Quadrangle.
  • 2000: The University Honors Division becomes the Honors College and Lewis Miller is named dean.
  • Summer 2002: Edward Gubar, the Honors College director of publications and of grants and a faculty member in the HC and the IU School of Journalism, serves as acting dean.
  • August 2002: Karen Hanson
    Karen Hanson
    Karen Hanson currently the Provost of the Bloomington campus of Indiana University and one of two Executive Vice Presidents of the university, has been named the senior vice president and provost of the University of Minnesota....

    , chair of the Department of Philosophy and the Rudy Professor of Philosophy, is named dean of the Honors College.
  • Late Fall 2004: The Honors College is named the Hutton Honors College, in honor of IU alumnus, business leader, and philanthropist Edward L. Hutton.
  • August 2007: Jean Robinson, professor of political science, serves as interim dean.
  • July 2008: Matthew Auer
    Matthew Auer
    Matthew Auer is Dean of the Hutton Honors College at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. He is also Professor of Public and Environmental Affairs at the Indiana University School of Public and Environmental Affairs where he teaches and conducts research on international forestry,...

     is named dean of the HHC.
  • January 2008: The new 15000 square feet (1,393.5 m²) Hutton Honors College building opens, made possible by the generosity of Edward L. Hutton.

Admission and Academics

The HHC welcomed 658 new students in the 2010-11 school year, matriculating 658 students in the fall and 254 in the spring pushing the student body over 4,200 students. The students entered with a mean SAT (combined critical verbal and math) of 1385 and average ACT Composite score of 31.4. Seventy-nine National Merit Scholars joined the Honors College, as well as 16 National Merit Finalists. Slightly more than 40% of the entering group received HHC Freshmen Scholarships. Among the incoming students there were also 19 Cox IU Research Scholars, 19 Herbert Presidential Scholars, 18 Wells Scholars, and 10 Kelley School of Business Scholars.

International Dimension

The Hutton Honors College provides many ways for students to broaden their horizons. A vital way to develop one’s worldview is to get out there and see — and experience — the world. The Edward L. Hutton International Experiences Program, made possible by a $9 million donation by Hutton, grants help students to experience the ways of other peoples and the sights and tastes of other cultures. International experiences can involve participation in:
  • a study abroad program for a summer, semester, or year
  • research or creative projects or internships in countries around the world
  • service projects in foreign countries

Indiana University’s Hutton Honors College is among the first university honors programs to make international experience a central feature of its mission and goals. The aim is to help fund an international experience for all of HHC students. Since 2000, the International Experiences Program has helped subsidize overseas experiences for more than 3,500 students. Recipients have traveled to six continents and more than 85 countries.

Grants

During the 2009-2010 school year, Hutton awarded a total of 326 grants amounting to $334,402.50. HHC provides grants for a range of student endeavors including:
  • Research Grants
  • Research Partnership Awards
  • Creative Activity Grants
  • Teaching Internship Grants
  • Pre-Professional Experience Internship Grants
  • Professional Development Internship Grants
  • Travel Grants
  • Fine Arts Capstone Awards
  • IMP Capstone Awards
  • HHC Thesis Awards
  • Alternative Spring Break Grants

Honors Residential Communities

HHC students can choose the culturally and intellectually stimulating environment of an Honors Residential Community (HRC) located in the Northwest, Central and Southeast neighborhoods. HRCs are academically oriented living environments that emphasize the learning and social aspects of campus life. Students can take selected HHC courses at the residence center and consult with a peer mentor living nearby. The communities’ student-planned programming features guest lecturers, faculty dinners, movie nights, trips, and various outings to cultural events.

Extracurricular Opportunities

By being a member of the HHC, students are invited to unique opportunities across campus. Each year the Honors College sponsors 60-70 programs that contribute to the intellectual, cultural and social lives of undergraduates. These gatherings give the opportunties for the students to talk informally with faculty, community leaders and distinguished campus visitors. Additionally workshops and other types of programming offer opportunities to discuss political and social issues. Students can also attend the opera, theatre, and events at the IU Auditorium (often involving a question and answer session with the performer) at discounted rates and other. Other activities take place at the IU Art Museum and Musical Arts Center.

Visiting guests have included:
  • John E. Jones III
    John E. Jones III
    John Edward Jones III is an American lawyer and jurist from the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. A Republican, Jones was appointed by President George W. Bush as federal judge on the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania in February 2002 and was unanimously confirmed by...

     - U.S. District Court Judge
  • Jerry Abramson - Louisville Mayor
  • Wendy Chamberlin
    Wendy Chamberlin
    Wendy Chamberlin is a veteran diplomat who has served in the United States Department of State and USAID, worked for the UN High Commissioner on Refugees , and now serves as President of the Middle East Institute.- US Department of State :...

     - former U.S. ambassador and current president of the Middle East Institute
  • Gary Nabhan - Ethnobotanist and slow food advocate
  • Lord John Roper
    John Roper, Baron Roper
    John Francis Hodgess Roper, Baron Roper is a British politician.John Roper was educated at William Hulme's Grammar School , Reading School, Magdalen College, Oxford and the University of Chicago....

     of the British House of Lords
  • Mark Mercurio - Yale pediatrics professor and practitioner
  • Kamara Thomas - Musician, bassist of Earl Greyhound
    Earl Greyhound
    Earl Greyhound is an American rock trio from Brooklyn consisting of Matt Whyte , Kamara Thomas and Ricc Sheridan . Sheridan replaced original drummer Christopher Bear just after the band recorded its first full-length album. They were previously signed to Some Records but have since started their...

  • Jessica Jackley
    Jessica Jackley
    Jessica Jackley is an American businesswoman and entrepreneur. She is the co-founder and CEO of ProFounder, a platform providing tools for small business entrepreneurs in the United States to access start-up capital through crowdfunding and community involvement.Prior to ProFounder, Jackley was...

     - co-founder of Kiva
    Kiva (organization)
    Kiva Microfunds is an organization that allows people to lend money via the Internet to microfinance institutions in developing countries around the world and in the United States, which in turn lend the money to small businesses and students...

  • Paul Sherman - Darwinian gastronomist
  • David Hatch
    David Hatch
    Sir David Hatch was involved in production and management at BBC Radio, where he held many executive positions, including Head of Light Entertainment , Controller of BBC Radio 2 and BBC Radio 4 and later Managing Director of BBC Radio.- Education :He attended St John's School, Leatherhead and...

     - historian for the National Security Agency
  • Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company
    Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company
    The Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company is an American dance company based out of Harlem in New York City. Founded in 1983 by Bill T. Jones and Arnie Zane, the company made its debut performance at the Brooklyn Academy of Music with the world premiere of Intuitive Momentum with lauded drummer...

  • Kelsey Timmerman - author of Where Am I Wearing?
  • Jonathan Culler
    Jonathan Culler
    Jonathan Culler is a class of 1966 Harvard graduate and Professor of English at Cornell University. He is an important figure of the structuralism movement of literary theory and criticism.- Background and career:...

     - Cornell literary theorist
  • Sir Ivor Roberts - former British ambassador, current president of Trinity College, Oxford University
    Trinity College, Oxford
    The College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity in the University of Oxford, of the foundation of Sir Thomas Pope , or Trinity College for short, is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. It stands on Broad Street, next door to Balliol College and Blackwells bookshop,...

  • Dorothy Cheney
    Dorothy Cheney
    Dorothy “Dodo” Bundy Cheney is the daughter of Tennis Hall of Famer May Sutton Bundy and U.S. doubles champion Tom Bundy . She has been an outstanding American tennis player from her youth into her 90s. She played most of her tennis at the Los Angeles Tennis Club , during the years that Perry T...

     and Robert Seyfarth
    Robert Seyfarth
    - Background : Robert Seyfarth grew up as a member of a prominent local family. His grandfather William Seyfarth had come to the United States in 1848 from Schloss Tonndorf in what is now the state of Thuringia, Germany, with the intention of opening a tavern in Chicago...

     - Primatologists
  • Kandia Crazy Horse - rock music critic
  • Bruce Rich
    Bruce Rich
    Bruce Rich is an American writer and lawyer who has published extensively on the environment in developing countries and development in general. He is the author of a critique and history of the World Bank, and was awarded the United Nations Global 500 Award for environmental achievement for his...

     - Environmentalist and attorney, author of Mortgaging the Earth
  • Sir Nigel Sheinwald
    Nigel Sheinwald
    Sir Nigel Elton Sheinwald GCMG is a senior British diplomat, currently HM Ambassador to the United States of America, appointed in October 2007....

     - British Ambassador to the United States
  • John Haught
    John Haught
    John F. Haught is a Roman Catholic theologian and Senior Research Fellow at the Woodstock Theological Center at Georgetown University. His area of expertise is systematic theology, with a special interest in issues of science, cosmology, ecology, and reconciling evolution and religion...

     - Evolutionary theologist
  • Andrew Knoll - Harvard paleontologist and member of the Mars exploration rover science team
  • Paul Sniderman
    Paul Sniderman
    Paul Sniderman, Ph.D., an American political scientist, is the Fairleigh S. Dickinson Jr. Professor of Public Policy at Stanford University. He is a senior fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution....

     - Stanford political scientist, author of Reaching Beyond Race
  • Joel Salatin
    Joel Salatin
    Joel F. Salatin is an American farmer, lecturer, and author whose books include You Can Farm and Salad Bar Beef.Salatin raises livestock using holistic methods of animal husbandry, free of potentially harmful chemicals, on his Polyface Farm in Swoope, Virginia, in the Shenandoah Valley...

     - Farmer and local food advocate
  • Peter Sinn Nachtrieb - playwright
  • General Peter Pace
    Peter Pace
    Peter Pace is a retired United States Marine Corps general who served as the 16th Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the first Marine appointed to the United States' highest-ranking military office. Appointed by President George W. Bush, Pace succeeded U.S. Air Force General Richard Myers on...

    - former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff


Diversity

Students in the HHC come from many different backgrounds. In the 2010 fall class, 223 of the 658 students were from out of state as far away as California, New York and Pennsylvania. Fifteen students came from 8 foreign countries including China, India, Israel, Nigeria, Taiwan and Canada. Minority students account for almost 17% of the 2010 fall class.
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