Standards for Written Work
The College requires satisfactory standards of correctness in all written work. Students are encouraged to take writing-intensive courses, which are offered by most departments and programs. Writing-intensive courses include any so designated by the Committee on Academic Policy. The description of each course indicates whether it is writing-intensive.
The Writing Program requires that every student pass at least three writing-intensive courses, each taken in a different semester. One must be taken during the first year of study and a second completed by the end of the second year. This requirement should be completed by the end of the junior year.
Only one writing-intensive course in mathematics and one language course in which assignments are written in a language other than English may count towards the required three courses. Matriculated students must complete the writing requirement through Hamilton coursework; transferred credit, including study away, may not be used. In exceptional circumstances, the Committee on Academic Standing will allow a student to earn no more than one writing-intensive credit by completing a suitably constructed independent study. At least one course must be outside the student's area of concentration.
Writing-Intensive Student Learning Outcomes
- Students will refine their writing through a recursive process that involves drafting, revising, and receiving feedback from readers.
- Students will substantiate and develop ideas through the analysis of evidence and the critical use of sources.
- Students will employ appropriate rhetorical strategies and mechanical conventions for specific disciplines, audiences, genres, and media.
- Students will properly incorporate, cite, and document sources.