WAYNE — A Cedar Catholic High School graduate is one of 27 Wayne State College students who will present their honors research projects during the Spring 2025 Honors Col -
loquium Friday, April 30-May 4.
The public is invited to attend.
The first presentation will be held from 2:45 to 3:15 p.m. Wednesday, April 30, in the Providence Medical Center's auditorium, located at 1200 Providence Road in Wayne.
Parker Albers, Hartington, will have his presentation Friday, May 2 from 8-8:30 a.m., at the Kanter Student Center in the Niobrara East room.
His program is on “Nationalism, Sensationalism, and the Perception of American Tragedies.”
Presentations for Thursday and Friday, May 1-2, will be held in the Kanter Student Center’s Niobrara Rooms (east and west) on campus.
The final presentation is at 3 p.m.
Sunday, May 4, in Ley Theatre, located in the Brandenburg Building on campus.
The Wayne State Honors Program allows students to be more involved within an academic discipline, to broaden and deepen an education beyond the usual required work, and to nurture and reward genuine intellectual curiosity. Research opportunities help develop the skills of independent thinking and scholarly inquiry.
The Wayne State Honors Program engages students through a combination of specialized general education courses and research projects completed in the academic major.
At Wayne State, belonging to the Honors Program means not only distinction, but special opportunities and challenges for students with high aspirations. In any academic program at Wayne State, honors students have the option of choosing one of three honors options: High Honors in the Major, Honors in the Major, and Scholar in the Major.
For more information about the Wayne State Honors Program, visit www.wsc.edu/honors-program.