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About Honors
Applying
Curriculum
Classes
Summer Classes
Professors
Research Project
Student Organization (WHO)
Honors Living
Off
Campus Opportunities
Scholarships
Giving to UW Honors
FAQs
London Semester
Transfer
Credits
University of
Wyoming
Honors Program
Dept. 3413, 102 Merica Hall
1000 E. University Avenue
Laramie, WY 82071
(307) 766-4110
(307) 766-4298 fax
honors@uwyo.edu
Persons
seeking admission, employment or access to programs of the University of Wyoming
shall be considered without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national
origin, disability, age, veteran status, sexual orientation or political belief.
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Off Campus
Opportunities
Click Here to go
to the Webpage of the Adventures of Elizabeth and Carrie (in Japan)
The Honors Program encourages you to spend a sum mer,
semester, or a year at another university in this country or abroad.
There are many reasons for studying off campus. You may want to become
fluent in a foreign language. You may want to get a better understanding
of a different culture or a different region of this country. You may
want to study with a particular expert in your field.
Whatever the reason, the Honors Program will help you to find the
right place and time for an experience you will remember for a lifetime.
Honor students have studied marine biology at Humboldt State
University in northern California; engineering in Budapest; Russian
language and history at Saratov State University south of Moscow;
geology at Strathclyde University in Glasgow; art at the University of
Western Washington; international relations in France; and English in
Finland. Contact the
International Programs office to find out more about study abroad options.
M any
honors students have chosen to participate in the London Semester
program. This program involves taking University of Wyoming courses
while living in London. For more information on this exciting program,
please visit the
London semester homepage.

Sometimes travel is an optional part of an honors
course. A class on Broadway theater went to New York to see the real
thing. A Class on urban America spent spring break in Manhattan with a
faculty member who is documenting the transformation of Times Square.
Other classes stay closer to home, but we encourage learning from
experience as well as from books.
Finally, honor students attend conferences to present
their research, to learn more about their field, and to meet others with
whom they share an interest. Groups of honor students have recently
traveled to San Francisco (twice), Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Flagstaff, San
Diego, and Albuquerque.
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