According to the current Grinnell College catalog, Each department
recommends for graduation with honors those senior majors who have clearly
distinguished themselves within their major field of study,
subject to
the approval of the Dean of the Faculty. The catalog imposes the following
condition: In order to qualify for recommendation, a student must,
after seven semesters of college work, have achieved at least a 3.5
grade-point average in the major field and a cumulative grade-point average
of 3.4. The required seven semesters need not all be completed at Grinnell
...; however, only credits completed at Grinnell and Grinnell-in-London
will be used in determining grade-point eligibility.
The catalog also specifies that these are minimum standards and should not
be regarded as the only criteria. For majors in computer science, the
Department of Computer Science considers the following guidelines in
addition to the college's grade-point requirements:
- Core courses of study
- Completion of Computer Science 211 or Physics 220, and
- Completion of Computer Science 213
- Additional course work that is not used to fulfill another requirement
- Completion of a 200- or 300-level course in computer science,
or
- Completion of a statistics course at the 200-level or higher (MAT
209, 309, 335, or 336), or
- Completion of MAT 220 (Differential Equations), MAT 306 (Mathematical
Modeling), MAT 314 (Topics in Applied Mathematics), or MAT 321
(Foundations of Abstract Algebra), or
- Completion of Physics 220 (Electronics), or
- Completion of PSY 222 (Industrial Psychology) or PSY 260 (Cognitive
Psychology).
- Participation in local activities related to computer science, judged
to be excellent by department faculty; such activities might include
- Giving talks at Extras sessions, or
- Doing independent projects (totaling four credits or more) in
computer science, or
- Carrying out research under the direction of a member of the
department, or
- Developing a successful software package with positive assessment by
department faculty.
- Participation in the study or use of computer science outside of the
department, judged to be excellent by department faculty; such
activities might include
- Achieving a score at or above the 75th percentile on the Graduate
Record Examination in Computer Science, or
- Receiving an award in the Mathematical Competition in Modeling,
or
- Achieving a strong performance in the ACM Programming Competition,
or
- Having a paper accepted by a refereed computer science journal or
conference, or
- Developing a successful software package with positive assessment by
outside referees or evaluators, or
- Contributing to an open-source software package or resource,
or
- Carrying out supervised research elsewhere.
The department last revised these guidelines on November 20, 2006.