Difference between revisions of "Valedictorian"

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(Valedictorians of Columbia College)
(Valedictorians of Columbia College)
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*[[1987]] - Linda Mischel
 
*[[1987]] - Linda Mischel
 
*[[1985]] - [[Noam Elkies]]
 
*[[1985]] - [[Noam Elkies]]
 +
*[[1972]] - [[Gerard E. Lynch]]
 
*[[1969]] - Michael Brown
 
*[[1969]] - Michael Brown
 
*[[1957]] - [[Erich S. Gruen]]
 
*[[1957]] - [[Erich S. Gruen]]

Revision as of 23:45, 19 April 2009

The Valedictorian of Columbia College is selected each year by the faculty Committee on Honors, Awards, and Prizes each year along with the Salutatorian. While Valedictorian is the higher honor, at Columbia College only the Salutatorian gets to deliver a speech at Class Day. The Valedictorian gets to sit on stage and smile.

Each year COHAP identifies no more than 15 students with GPAs over 4.00 on the basis of the "strength, breadth, depth, and rigor of the student's academic achievements as well as on evidence of the student's intellectual promise, character, and achievement outside the classroom." Following the identification of this cohort, the departments in which the students majored are contacted and asked to submit evaluations of the identified students, which are used by the committee in selecting the winners.

In recent years, Rabi Scholars have dominated the Valedictorian competition, having been selected as the Val in 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, and 2007. This may be a result of their tendency to be among the brightest science students accepted to Columbia (and therefore likely to take advantage of the GPA bias inherent in the hard sciences, where top students earn A+s, a grade typically not awarded by professors in 'softer' disciplines), the close relationship with faculty that the scholars typically enjoy, or a combination of the two.

Valedictorians of Columbia College

External links