| Frequently Asked
Questions
When can I apply for the
Renaissance Scholar Prize?
Although you may apply for the Renaissance Scholar designation
during and after your sophomore year, you may apply for
the prize only during your senior year. Prizes will be
awarded after a post-graduation review of each prize
applicant's grade point average and time-to-degree completion.
Is this a scholarship?
No, this is not a scholarship. The Renaissance Scholar
designation is an academic honor, awarded upon graduation
to students who meet the criteria. The prize is awarded
to students for the purpose of post-baccalaureate study.
Prize recipients must show evidence of enrollment in
a graduate program of study - this applies to students
matriculating to USC during or after the 2002-2003 academic
year.
What does it take to be designated as a Renaissance
Scholar?
To become a Renaissance Scholar, students must pursue
at least two distinct academic disciplines (major/minor
or dual major combination) that are in widely separated
fields. Students must first have their academic program
certified by a faculty panel as meeting the guidelines
for depth with breadth. To be designated a Renaissance
Scholar, students must also graduate within 5 years at
USC, with a minimum 3.5 overall grade point average, with a minimum 3.5 grade point average in the major(s)
and/or minor(s) course requirements, and with university honors.
How do I know whether or not my major and minor
(or dual major) combination is sufficiently broad to
qualify me as a Renaissance Scholar?
The first step to being considered for the Renaissance
Scholar honor is to submit the details of your academic
program to the Renaissance Scholar Faculty Review Panel.
You may do this by completing the online application form found on
this website.
Once you have requested certification of your
academic program, the faculty panel will review the two
disciplines you are studying. Certification will be based
on the extent to which the two fields of study are widely
separate and distinct, and require you as a student to
stretch intellectually.
If my major/minor combination is certified,
does that mean I am automatically a Renaissance Scholar?
Certification is only the first step. In addition to
the certification, you must graduate within 5 years at
USC with university honors and you must have no less than a 3.5 overall grade
point average and no less than a 3.5 grade point average
in the major(s) and/or minor(s) course requirements.
I have gone abroad twice. USC counts those classes as pass/no pass. Many of my classes for both fields of study were taken abroad. For the purposes of the prize competition, will you average the grades of the classes I took abroad as well as the ones from USC, or will you only average the classes I have taken at USC?
Courses taken through the USC Overseas Studies Program are considered USC units. They are graded CR/NC. Marks of CR/NC do not affect a student’s grade point average. For the prize competition and for Renaissance Scholars honors determination when you graduate, we will look at your cumulative USC GPA, your major GPA(s), and your minor GPA(s). Please keep in mind that your major GPA will factor both lower and upper division course grades. When your record is reviewed for graduation, you must also be eligible for University Honors to receive the Renaissance Scholar designation on your transcript. To be eligible for undergraduate honors at graduation, a minimum overall grade point average of 3.5 for cum laude, 3.7 for magna cum laude and 3.9 for summa cum laude is required. Students must meet these averages, both on residence work attempted and on combined transferred and residence work attempted. The honors award is then determined by either the GPA for the residence work or the GPA for the combined transferred and residence work, whichever is lower.
How soon after I apply for certification will
I know if I've been certified as a Renaissance Scholar
candidate?
Certification decisions are made within one month after
receipt of the application. However, for certain combinations
of major and minor, applicants may be contacted for additional
information.
Can graduate students apply for the Renaissance
Scholar designation?
No. Only undergraduates who are enrolled in undergraduate
major-major or major-minor combinations may apply for
the Renaissance Scholar designation.
If I am certified as a Renaissance Scholar candidate
and I graduate in the fall semester, can I still apply for the Renaissance
Scholar prizes to be awarded the May before I graduate?
No. If you graduate in the fall semester, you may apply for the Renaissance
Scholar prizes to be awarded in the spring of the following year. However,
you will still need to keep apprised, read, and comply with all of the deadline
requirements and updates that are published on the Renaissance Scholars website.
When are prize winners announced?
Prize winners are announced at the end of the spring
semester before commencement.
I plan to take time off to do something else
immediately before graduate school, such as a job, or the Peace Corps. Do
immediate post-graduation plans have to be concrete or could the prize be
deferred, along with graduate plans, and then accepted upon enrollment in
a graduate program?
Your immediate plans do not have to be concrete however, once your undergraduate
degree has been posted, you will have up to 5 years to show us evidence of
enrollment in a graduate program. This policy applies to students who matriculated
during and after fall 2002.
Whom do I contact for more information?
You may call the Office of Undergraduate Programs at
(213) 740-1741 or contact us
for more information.
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