2010 Site Visitors - Richard Badenhausen

Email:   rjb@westminstercollege.edu
Institution: Westminster College
Address:

Honors Program
1840 South 1300 East
Salt Lake City, UT 84105

Phone: (801) 832-2460
Fax: (802) 832-3102
Institution Type: 4-year, independent, private college
Program Type: Institution-wide, General Education Honors program
Program Enrollment:

130 per semester

Present Position: Director, Honors program
Previous Honors Positions: Chair/Honors (Marshall University) (1995-2000)
NCHC Member Since: 1995


NCHC Activities Related to Honors Program/College Assessment & Evaluation (limited to 5):

• Elected Member, NCHC Board of Directors (2004-2007)
• Service on multiple NCHC Committees over the years (Strategic Planning, Research, Small College, Pub Board, Portz Fellowship, Convention Planning, etc.)
• Chair, Pub Board Subcommittee on “NCHC Basic Characteristics of a Fully Developed Honors Program/College”
• Attendance at 13 NCHC annual conventions with presentations/workshops given on a wide range of topics, including Honors handbooks, Honors admissions models, student research in Honors, “City as Text” in the Honors curriculum, recruitment and retention, distinctiveness in Honors, AP credits and Honors, Honors faculty retreats, best practices in Honors website design, Honors community, among others.

Activities in other areas or organizations related to assessment or site visits, workshops, etc.

I have run Honors programs at two very different institutions—one a large, public, state university (Marshall University) and the other a small, private college (Westminster College). Because I have engaged in extensive program building at each, I have insight into the needs of a wide range of programs. I have over a decade of experience teaching in Honors and have team-taught with over two dozen different faculty members from a wide variety of disciplines. In twenty years in higher education, I have sat on just about every imaginable college committee, including those devoted to strategic planning, course evaluations, faculty review, learning communities, budgeting, and development, which are perhaps particularly relevant to Honors assessment.



Self-Identified Areas of Special Interest and Experience

Honors Administration Honors Admissions / Recruitment
Honors Orientation
Honors Curriculum
Honors Student Retention
Extracurricular & Co-curricular Programs
Honors Peer Mentoring
Interdisciplinary Team Teaching
NCHC Involvement
Honors Handbooks
Honors Newsletters
Honors Budgeting
Buildings and Honors Space



The Role of an NCHC-Qualified Site Visitor
Richard Badenhausen, Director, Westminster College Honors Program

Perhaps the two most valuable skills a site visitor can bring to the table are the ability to listen well and the capacity to draw on one’s experience in the local and national Honors communities in offering feedback that will help strengthen the institution’s Honors program or college. Because I have directed programs at both a large, public university and a small, private college (and served a three-year elected term on the NCHC Board of Directors), I have experience with a range of challenges and opportunities that are likely to face most directors. While the NCHC’s two “Basic Characteristics” documents are excellent starting points for a conversation about program assessment, each institution has its own particular needs that grow out of its unique institutional culture. Those needs should establish the context for any evaluation. Ultimately, a site visitor can help lend an outside voice to validate what a program is doing particularly well (and help communicate that message to faculty and administration), as well as assist a program in locating possible solutions to any challenges it faces, while remembering that it is up to the home institution to decide whether or not to act on that advice.