Honors Thesis
IGS Senior Thesis Declaration Form
Overview
The International and Global Studies program offers majors the opportunity to write an honors thesis. To receive departmental honors, students must write a two-term thesis. Students have the option of writing a fall-winter, winter-spring, fall-spring or spring-fall thesis. Students are expected to use some foreign language sources in their senior thesis or project.
Eligibility
Students are eligible to write a senior honors thesis if they have a 3.5 GPA or better in all courses that count towards their IGS major.
Research Methods for a Thesis
Students should be aware that many faculty advisors require a methodology course before registering for IGST 070X, and the IGST program strongly encourages thesis writers to take a research methodology course when applicable. It is therefore important for students to meet with their track directors and to identify a possible thesis advisor as early in their career as possible to discuss their interest in writing a thesis.
Research methods vary across the humanities and social sciences. IGS faculty in different departments offer the following guidance for prospective thesis writers:
- Anthropology: Students who wish to work on a senior project should work with their advisor(s) to ensure they are sufficiently prepared. Those who elect to work on a project for more than one semester must present their progress for review by two professors who will decide whether the project qualifies for extended study.
- Geography: Students interested in writing an IGST thesis with a faculty member in Geography should work closely with that advisor to assure they complete coursework to sufficiently prepare themselves methodologically for thesis work.
- History of Art and Architecture: students should take HARC 0301 (Ways of Seeing) in lieu of one of the 4 electives at the 0200-level.
- History: Students interested in writing an IGST thesis with a faculty member in History should work closely with that advisor to assure they complete coursework to sufficiently prepare themselves methodologically for thesis work.
- Political Science: take one methods course (either PSCI 0213 or PSCI 0210).
- Religion: Students must begin by writing a one-semester Senior Project which, if judged successful by the thesis adviser, may be continued as a two-semester thesis.
- Sociology: Students must take SOCI 105. Additionally, students are strongly encouraged to take SOCI 301 or SOCI 302 by their junior year.
Thesis Advisor and Second Reader
Any full-time faculty member at Middlebury College is potentially eligible to serve as a thesis advisor, though students are strongly advised to take at least one class with a professor prior to working with them as a thesis advisor. It is the student’s responsibility to identify an advisor. Given leave schedules and various departmental obligations, students should approach possible thesis advisors early in their planning process.
The second reader should be from a different academic department than the primary thesis advisor. Students should talk to both their primary advisor and secondary reader in order to determine an individualized schedule of meetings, interim deadlines and feedback throughout the thesis writing process.
Before the Thesis: Advising and Registration
During the semester preceding the start of the thesis, the student should (1) meet with their track director (in person or via Zoom if off campus) (2) meet with their potential thesis advisor (in person or via Zoom if off campus) and (3) submit an unofficial transcript and an advising wizard listing all courses counting towards the major. In order to ensure they are well positioned to develop a theoretically rigorous project, students should identify their thesis advisor early in the thesis planning process.
By one week prior to registration (for Winter/Spring 2025 or Spring/Fall 2025 by late October) students should:
- complete the thesis declaration form, which requires finding a thesis advisor and second reader (from different academic departments) and securing their signatures. The form should then be submitted via email to the Program Director and IGS coordinator.
- If the student plans to write a thesis in a foreign language, permission must be obtained from the Chair of the appropriate language department. The Chair may ask to see a two-page précis in the language of the main thesis ideas.
The IGS coordinator will arrange the specific course number (each track and each professor has a specific course number) and provide that course number to each student for registration.
Prospectus and Bibliography
The thesis prospectus should be 1500-2000 words long and a) define the research question(s) to be answered in the thesis; b) explain the intellectual importance of the thesis; and c) outline how the project will be completed, including sources and methodology.
- For students starting in the fall or spring, the prospectus and bibliography are due no later than 3 p.m. on the Friday of the third week of classes during the first semester.
- For students starting in winter, the prospectus and bibliography are due no later than 3 p.m. on the last day of the second week of classes.
- Copies of the prospectus and bibliography must be delivered to the principal thesis adviser, the second reader, and the track director.
Thesis Deadlines
Thesis writers will submit a final version of their thesis to their advisors and second readers by the deadlines below.
The thesis should be a minimum of 13,750 words (approximately 50 double-spaced pages) and no more than 20,625 words (approximately 75 double-spaced pages) if written in English. If written in one of the IGS languages, the thesis should be a minimum of 9625 words (approximately 35 double-spaced pages), and no more than 16,500 words (approximately 60 double-spaced pages). These word counts do not include acknowledgements, footnotes, bibliography or works cited pages. Each thesis should have a table of contents, total word count, and abstract.
After submission, the student and advisors will schedule an oral defense (see below).
- Fall-Winter: By 3 p.m. on January 26, 2026 (three weeks into winter term).
- Fall-Spring, Winter-Spring: By 3 p.m., Monday, April 28, 2025 (the Monday of the 11th week of classes)
- Spring-Fall: By 3 p.m. on November 2, 2025 (the Friday of the 11th week of classes)
By the last day of classes, the student should email the final version (with signatures) to the IGS director and coordinator. Please also provide a paper copy to the IGS Coordinator. The final version should include a title page and honor pledge (see fillable PDF).
Oral Defense
An oral defense will be held with the two readers during the last week of classes. The purpose of the defense is twofold: to demonstrate verbal command of the thesis material and arguments and to clarify information or points in the thesis. Excellent performance on the defense cannot increase the thesis grade by more than one-third of a grade. Similarly, poor performance on the defense cannot reduce the thesis grade by more than one-third of a grade. Failure to appear for the defense may result in a failing grade for the thesis. Students who write their theses in a foreign language must defend in that language.
Honors and Awards
Nominations for the best thesis award are due to the IGS program director by Friday, May 9, by 12 p.m. (noon).
- Honors will be awarded to students with a GPA of 3.5 and a thesis grade of B+
- High honors to students with a GPA of 3.7 and a thesis grade of A- or A
- Highest honors to students with a GPA of 3.8 and a thesis grade of A
International and Global Studies has no grace period. Failure to submit the thesis on time, to the thesis advisors, will automatically result in no honors being awarded. The thesis advisers have the discretion to award a grade penalty of their choosing for late theses.