Two Education Students Inducted into the Hyer Society
Karron Youngkin and Erin Elliott, both SMU undergraduates who are
minoring in elementary education, have been inducted this spring 2009 into
the Hyer Society. Named for the founding President of SMU, the Hyer
Society was established in 1983 to recognize SMU 's most intellectually
gifted undergraduates who have distinguished themselves through high
academic achievement. At a minimum, Hyer Society members must have a
cumulative grade point average of 3.85 after 36 SMU credit hours.
Members are then chosen by a faculty committee based on academic performance
and on an essay written each year on a different topic. Only a small
fraction of SMU students are nominated each year for membership, roughly the
top 4% of the student body.
A story on the inductions appeared in the February issue of the Daily
Campus; the article follows:
SMU inducts top students
By: Nicole Jacobsen, Editor in Chief, njacobse@smu.edu
Posted: 2/17/09
Most students take Winter Break to enjoy time away from school and excess
amounts of homework. Rarely are they seen hidden behind stacks of books in
the library, trekking through South Dallas or pouring over online articles.
However, a select group of students spent their six weeks of freedom
researching ways to improve South Dallas in hopes of earning a spot in SMU's
Robert Stewart Hyer Society.
Dinner was served to students, their parents, professors and administrators
Sunday night in the Cox School of Business' Ernst and Young Gallery.
The 13 new junior and senior members were inducted into the university's
most prestigious academic honor society for having at least a 3.85
cumulative grade point average and a minimum of 36 credit hours in
conjunction with demonstrating exceptional academic qualities.
The society's selection committee includes one professor from each
undergraduate school at SMU as well as they Hyer Society chair. In November,
eligible students were given en essay prompt, along with a resumé and three
teacher recommendations. Inductees were announced in January.
Erin Elliott, a junior English major, with minors in elementary education
and cinema studies, was one of two juniors selected for the University
Achievement Award for her essay describing a 26-mile trek though Dallas.
Elliott's list of extracurricular activities includes involvement in the
Wesley Foundation, Mustang Corral and the SMU-in-Oxford study abroad
program.
"I decided to embark on a prayer walk through Dallas," explained Elliott.
"[The] route took us from the Ledbetter Dart Station to Richardson, and
totaled over twenty miles. We stopped every hour for about ten minutes to
reflect upon what we were seeing around us, and to pray for the people
living in the South Dallas communities. It was truly an eye-opening
experience for three SMU students to get out of the Highland Park bubble and
into the parts of Dallas that are too often overlooked. It was absolutely
one of my most beautiful, meaningful memories of my college experience thus
far."
Larry James, the President and CEO of Central Dallas Ministries delivered a
speech about the importance of working to improve South Dallas, rather than
investing all of one's time and money into expanding North Dallas. Touching
on several key points that were addressed by students present at the dinner,
James agreed that without the help of SMU students, South Dallas would
continue to hold a negative connotation in peoples' minds.
"I was really inspired and touched by the words of Larry James for
exhibiting such passion for improving Dallas," said Elliott. I enjoyed that
each dining table was comprised of both students and faculty, so that we
could get to know some of the important faces behind the Society. It seemed
clear that the professors and staff were interested in really getting to
know the students and their families."
Other students to be recognized were junior Brittany Raetzman for receiving
the University Achievement Award and seniors Peter McCaffrey and Tiffany
Griffen for the University Award for Outstanding Scholar.
"It means a great deal to me to be recognized by the Hyer Society," said
Elliott. "The thing I appreciate the most about the Society is its rich
legacy. I feel like I am a part of something that is really ingrained in the
history of the university."
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