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Secretary: Delores A. Jackson, C 330, 702-7148
Students in Tutorial Studies are held to all College requirements and to the
NCD requirements, including the language requirement and the requirement of
long independent papers in the junior and senior years (except that students
admitted as seniors are not held to the junior paper). Tutorial Studies makes
no other requirements of all students, but particular students may be held to
certain requirements as judged appropriate by the tutor and the program
chairman. All this, of course, is worked out in discussion with the student.
Students in Tutorial Studies have no concentration; instead, all students have
a tutor--a member of the Chicago faculty who has agreed to take responsibility
for their work. An individual student's education is worked out between the
student and the tutor under the general supervision of the program chairman.
Because of the special burden placed on the tutor, the rule states: the
student and the tutor are admitted together. Students may enter Tutorial
Studies only when they have found a tutor and after there has been sufficient
discussion between student, tutor, and program chairman to establish to the
satisfaction of all three that (1) the student knows what he or she wants to
do, (2) the tutor understands it and wants to take charge of it, (3) it is
something worth doing and something that will constitute an appropriate segment
of a College education, (4) it can be done with the available resources, and
(5) it cannot be done effectively within any existing College program.
A student in Tutorial Studies, like other NCD students, takes both regular
courses and reading courses. Reading courses may be taken with members of the
faculty other than the tutor.
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In the past, successful Tutorial Studies students have generally belonged to
one of two categories: (1) students who wish to focus on some relatively narrow
topic--the poetry of Baudelaire, for example--but in a rather broad way, that
is, in terms of poetics, culture history, psychology, and so on; or (2)
students who wish to construct some more conventional program that the College
does not offer: American studies, for instance, or education.
Grading, Transcripts, and Recommendations. The independent study and major
papers required by the New Collegiate Division are best evaluated in faculty
statements on the nature and quality of the work. In support of the independent
study grades of Pass, Incomplete, and No Credit, faculty
supervisors are asked to submit such statements to student files maintained in
the NCD office. Responses to the major papers and copies of the papers
themselves are also available in this collection of statements, which is used
to support graduate applications and to evaluate NCD candidates for Phi Beta
Kappa, College honors, and other awards. Students should request statements of
reference from faculty with whom they have worked.
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At the student's request, the registrar will include the following
statement with each transcript:
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Tutorial Studies
Program Chairman: Dennis J. Hutchinson, C 328, 702-3093
Program of Study
Tutorial Studies is a program only in an administrative sense; it serves as an
alternative for students who propose a coherent course of studies that clearly
will not fit within a regular concentration. Students in the College may be
admitted to Tutorial Studies at any point in their careers; their requirements
will then be written to fill the time they have left until graduation. On the
whole, the New Collegiate Division (NCD) prefers to admit students to this
format late rather than early--for a senior year in Tutorial Studies rather
than a two-year concentration and for two years rather than three. Admission to
Tutorial Studies is handled separately from admission to other NCD programs.
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Program Requirements
Admissions to Tutorial Studies are made by the master of the New Collegiate
Division upon the recommendation of the program chairman. In the nature of the
case, requirements in Tutorial Studies can hardly be specified. It is expected
that thirteen courses will be devoted to the immediate purposes of the
student's project, of which several will be individual study courses with the
principal tutor or other faculty members.
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