SAU Honors College

The SAU Honors College was founded in 2003 by Dr. David Rankin, president of SAU. Dr. Lynne Belcher served as founding director and recently retired from SAU. The Honors College seeks and admits qualified students who seek to pursue a serious academic program with equally gifted peers and committed teachers. Honors classes are small and provide academically enriching opportunities for students and the faculty who teach them. Currently, SAU enrolls nearly 170 honors students and graduates about 66% of admitees in four years or less. Anyone interested in applying to the Honors College or seeking further information should contact the director, Dr. Edward P. Kardas at epkardas@saumag.edu or at 870 904-8897.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Students Win NASA Grant

Two students recently won a grant from NASA via the Arkansas Space Science Consortium in the amount of $27,300. The two students, Courtney Phillips and Zachary Pinson, (pictured below) will conduct research titled:

Prospective job satisfaction: Female ENGR Students

Here is a brief description of their planned research:

Inspired by recent research on differential attrition of engineering graduates by gender (Fouad & Singh, 2011) this project will survey female and male undergraduate engineering from public universities in Arkansas. The main variable to be assessed will be prospective job satisfaction. Other variables will include GPA and the "Big Five" personality factors: openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism along with GPA and math proficiency. We will create a questionnaire and administer it face-to-face to groups at the various colleges offering undergraduate engineering programs.

 Courtney Phillips
Zachary Pinson

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Brain Day: Honors General Psychology

Today the four honors general psychology groups made brains out of Play Doh. See the YouTube HERE
Sorry 'bout the fat finger on the lens.

Here are the four groups and the brains they crafted (in no particular order).

First is group Meme:



Next is group Aggie:



Here comes group Erin:



Last but not least is group Pilot:



Talk about hands on neuroanatomy.