fbpx
Wikipedia

National Panhellenic Conference

The National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) is an umbrella organization for 26 national and international women's sororities throughout the United States and Canada. Panhellenic (lit.'all-Greek') refers to the group's members being autonomous social Greek-letter societies of college women and alumnae.

National Panhellenic Conference
AbbreviationNPC
PredecessorNational Panhellenic Congress
FormationMay 24, 1902; 121 years ago (1902-05-24)
Merger ofAssociation of Education Sororities
TypeTrade organization
Headquarters12730 Meeting House Road, Suite 200
Carmel, IN 46032
Region
North America
Membership
26
Websitewww.npcwomen.org

The National Panhellenic Conference provides guidelines and resources for its members and serves as a national voice on contemporary issues of sorority life. Founded in 1902, the NPC is one of the oldest and largest women's membership organizations, representing more than 4 million women at over 650 college and university campuses and 4,600 local alumnae chapters in the U.S. and Canada. Each year, NPC-affiliated collegians and alumnae donate more than $5 million to causes, provide $2.8 million in scholarships to women, and volunteer 500,000 hours in their communities.[1]

The organization is a conference, not a congress, as it enacts no legislation and only regulates its own meetings.[2] Other than basic agreements which its member groups must unanimously vote to follow, the NPC confines itself to recommendations and advice and acts as a court of final appeal in any college Panhellenic disputes. One of its services is providing advisors for sororities.

History edit

Early histories of sororities contain accounts of rushing and pledging agreements or compacts among sororities on various campuses, and many stories of cooperation and mutual assistance. However, no actual Panhellenic organization existed and no uniform practices were observed. The NPC's origin can be traced to 1891, when Kappa Kappa Gamma invited all seven existing sororities to a Boston meeting, with the intention to meet again in 1893.[3]

In 1902, Alpha Phi invited Pi Beta Phi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Chi Omega, and Chi Omega to a conference in Chicago on May 24 to set standards for collegiate sororities. Alpha Chi Omega and Chi Omega were unable to attend and joined the following year. The remaining seven groups met and the session resulted in the organization of the first interfraternity association and the first intergroup organization on college campuses.[citation needed] The first few meetings resulted in several mutual agreements, especially regarding pledging. Up to this time, no guidelines had been set, and women could be pledged to groups before enrolling in college and belong to more than one group.

Many of the current[when?] members joined through the next decade, with Alpha Xi Delta in 1904, Alpha Omicron Pi and Sigma Kappa in 1905, Alpha Delta Pi and Alpha Gamma Delta and Zeta Tau Alpha in 1909, Delta Zeta in 1910, Phi Mu in 1911, and Kappa Delta in 1912.[2] No new members were admitted for the next few decades.

Throughout its early years, NPC members were often racially and religiously segregated and rarely admitted Jewish, Catholic, or ethnic minority members, which led to the formation of group-specific sororities which attempted to provide the same social and academic outlets to groups who were otherwise excluded from membership. These groups included the first Black Greek letter organizations.[4]

By 1922, the NPC (at the time named the National Panhellenic Congress) had an executive committee consisting of a chairman, secretary, and treasurer; a publicity board; and a delegate board with at least one representative from each of its 18 senior members.[5] That year, the Congress also began plans for a centralized headquarters to coordinate and streamline interactions with the separate sororities.[6]

Shortly before its merger with the NPC, the Association of Educational Sororities (AES) was part of a larger multi-panhellenic association, the Council of Affiliated Panhellenics. Created in 1941, it included the AES, NPC, and Professional Panhellenic Association as members.[7]

AES merger and expansion edit

Members of Sigma Sigma Sigma and Alpha Sigma Alpha organized the Association of Pedagogical Sororities on July 10, 1915. Its members were primarily sororities located on state campuses mainly attended by women entering the educational field. In 1917, Pi Kappa Sigma and Delta Sigma Epsilon joined the association, followed by Theta Sigma Upsilon in 1925, Alpha Sigma Tau in 1926, and Pi Delta Theta in 1931. At the third biennial conference, the name of the association was changed to the Association of Educational Sororities. Later,[when?] the word Educational was changed to Education.

From 1915 through 1926, the NPC and AES operated chapters in the same colleges and universities. In 1926, the NPC and AES made an agreement "defining fields of activities of each panhellenic".[citation needed] There was competition between NPC and AES sororities, and dual memberships were often held. By the 1940s many teachers' colleges had begun to add liberal arts programs, and vice versa, which led to difficulties in the organizations functioning separately.[2][8]

On November 12, 1947, at a conference in Colorado Springs, Colorado, the NPC considered and granted associate membership "with reservations" to the six AES sororities. The AES was holding its biennial meeting when it was notified of the NPC decision and, at that meeting, "completed the necessary business and took formal action to dissolve the Association".[9] The NPC admitted five other sororities at the same time: Alpha Epsilon Phi, Delta Phi Epsilon, Phi Sigma Sigma, Sigma Delta Tau, and Theta Phi Alpha. In December 1951, all 11 of these sororities became full NPC members. Since that time, three AES members have merged with other NPC groups, leaving Alpha Sigma Alpha, Alpha Sigma Tau, and Sigma Sigma Sigma as the remaining former AES members.

From the 1940s to the 1960s, various smaller organizations merged into larger ones. On some campuses with two different chapters from merged sororities, a third sorority would organize on the campus to absorb the smaller sorority's former chapter.[10]

By the end of the 1960s and the civil rights movement, NPC sororities eliminated official policies that prevented minority members from joining,[4] although diversity in Greek life remained an issue.[11][12]

21st century edit

As of the 2010s, sorority members and outside observers noticed a shift in sorority culture; though sororities began as feminist organizations, emphasis during the mid-1900s on social reputations and exclusionary recruitment policies (such as a refusal to recruit Jewish and African-American women) led to a reputation for following cultural hegemony and being made up of upper-class white women.[13] Though such issues continue to persist in various ways, sorority and anti-sorority women alike observed sororities becoming more ethnically diverse and moving away from traditional power structures towards their feminist roots.[13] In the 2010s, sorority members began attempts to change how sororities work from within.[13]

In November 2015, eight NPC members (Alpha Phi, Alpha Chi Omega, Phi Mu, Alpha Gamma Delta, Sigma Delta Tau, Delta Phi Epsilon, Delta Gamma, and Gamma Phi Beta) broke ranks from the NPC to withdraw their support for the Safe Campus Act, a controversial bill that would have required campus sexual assault victims to report to police and submit to a law enforcement investigation before their school could begin its own investigation.[14]

In 2016, collegiate members began discussing membership offers for transgender women, which was supported by some national organizations with changes to their national policies;[15][16][17] however, some national organizations delayed membership offers for trans women due to fears about Title IX exemption status, which caused dissent in local chapters.[18] Though the NPC created a gender identity study group to examine potential legal consequences, they concluded that the legal precedents were "incomplete, inconclusive, and inconsistent," and did not enact official policy or recommendations.[19]

By 2021, most national organizations had released political statements on racial and social equity and inclusion, while also developing membership policies regarding gender identity. Delta Phi Epsilon developed a policy explicitly open to trans and non-binary individuals,[20] and sororities open to anyone who identifies as a woman include: Alpha Chi Omega,[21] Alpha Delta Pi,[22] Alpha Epsilon Phi,[23] Alpha Sigma Tau,[24] Chi Omega, [25] Delta Gamma,[26] Gamma Phi Beta,[27] Kappa Alpha Theta,[28] Kappa Delta,[29] Kappa Kappa Gamma,[30]Phi Sigma Sigma,[31] Sigma Sigma Sigma,[32] and Theta Phi Alpha.[33] Sororities open to anyone who identifies and lives as a woman include: Alpha Gamma Delta,[34] Alpha Omicron Pi,[35] Alpha Xi Delta,[36] Delta Delta Delta,[37] Pi Beta Phi,[38] Sigma Delta Tau,[39] and Sigma Kappa,[40] while Zeta Tau Alpha specifies that the individual must consistently identify and live as a woman.[41]

Campus structure edit

A Panhellenic Council consists of executive board members at each university or college. Each institution holds different executive positions based on its size and the NPC's relationship with it. The basic positions at each institution are President, VP of Communications, VP of Finance, VP of Philanthropy and Community Service, VP of Programming, VP of Recruitment, VP of Scholarship, and VP of Judicial.[42] The number of positions is based on the number of NPC sororities at each institution. Along with the delegates each being a representative from their sorority, the executive board includes a member from each sorority as well.

Affiliate organizations edit

 
College students line up in front of Purdue's Alpha Xi Delta sorority house during sorority recruitment

Current members edit

Sorority[2] Greek letters Year founded Year joined[2]
Alpha Chi Omega ΑΧΩ 1885 1903
Alpha Delta Pi ΑΔΠ 1851 1909
Alpha Epsilon Phi ΑΕΦ 1909 1947 (associate), 1951 (full)
Alpha Gamma Delta ΑΓΔ 1904 1909
Alpha Omicron Pi ΑΟΠ 1897 1905
Alpha Phi ΑΦ 1872 1902
Alpha Sigma Alpha ΑΣΑ 1901 1947 (associate), 1951 (full)
Alpha Sigma Tau ΑΣΤ 1899 1947 (associate), 1951 (full)
Alpha Xi Delta ΑΞΔ 1893 1904
Chi Omega ΧΩ 1895 1903
Delta Delta Delta ΔΔΔ 1888 1902
Delta Gamma ΔΓ 1873 1902
Delta Phi Epsilon ΔΦΕ 1917 1947 (associate), 1951 (full)
Delta Zeta ΔΖ 1902 1910
Gamma Phi Beta ΓΦΒ 1874 1902
Kappa Alpha Theta ΚΑΘ 1870 1902
Kappa Delta ΚΔ 1897 1912
Kappa Kappa Gamma ΚΚΓ 1870 1902
Phi Mu ΦΜ 1852 1911
Phi Sigma Sigma ΦΣΣ 1913 1947 (associate), 1951 (full)
Pi Beta Phi ΠΒΦ 1867 1902
Sigma Delta Tau ΣΔΤ 1917 1947 (associate), 1951 (full)
Sigma Kappa ΣΚ 1874 1905
Sigma Sigma Sigma ΣΣΣ 1898 1947 (associate), 1951 (full)
Theta Phi Alpha ΘΦΑ 1912 1947 (associate), 1951 (full)
Zeta Tau Alpha ΖΤΑ 1898 1909

Former members edit

Sorority Greek letters Year founded Year joined Notes[43]
Alpha Delta Theta ΑΔΘ 1919 1923 (associate), 1926 (full) Merged with Phi Mu in 1939 after 26th NPC meeting.
Beta Phi Alpha ΒΦΑ 1909 1923 Merged with Delta Zeta on June 22, 1941
Beta Sigma Omicron ΒΣΟ 1888 1930 (associate), 1933 (full) Merged with Zeta Tau Alpha in 1964, with Alpha Phi absorbing 3 chapters where there was already a Zeta Tau Alpha chapter
Delta Sigma Epsilon ΔΣΕ 1914 1947 (associate), 1951 (full) Merged with Delta Zeta in 1956
Iota Alpha Pi ΙΑΠ 1903 1953 (associate), 1957 (full) Disbanded in 1971
Lambda Omega ΛΩ 1923 1930 (associate) Merged with Theta Upsilon in 1933
Phi Omega Pi ΦΩΠ 1910 1930 (associate), 1933 (full) Merged with Delta Zeta on August 10, 1946
Pi Kappa Sigma ΠΚΣ 1894 1947 (associate), 1951 (full) Merged with Sigma Kappa on May 15, 1959
Pi Sigma Gamma ΠΣΓ 1919 1930 ? Merged with Beta Sigma Omicron in 1932
Sigma Phi Beta ΣΦΒ 1920 1928 (associate) Merged with Phi Omega Pi on October 1, 1933
Theta Sigma Upsilon ΘΣΥ 1921 1947 (associate), 1951 (full) Merged with Alpha Gamma Delta on June 29, 1959
Theta Upsilon ΘΥ 1914 1923 (associate), 1928 (full) Merged with Delta Zeta on May 6, 1962

Chairmen edit

Throughout its history the NPC Executive Board has been led by a chairman.[44] In 2018 the NPC Board of Directors voted to change its governance model. As of 2021, members rotate onto the board in the order their organization joined the NPC, but the chairman is now elected.[45]

Year(s) Chair Sorority
1902–1903 Laura Norton Kappa Alpha Theta
1904 Grace Telling Delta Gamma
1905 Amy Olgen (Parmelee) Delta Delta Delta
1906 Ella Leib Alpha Xi Delta
1907 Jobelle Holcombe Chi Omega
1908 Anna Lytle Pi Beta Phi
1909 L. Pearle Green Kappa Alpha Theta
1910 Florence Roth Kappa Kappa Gamma
1910–1911 Marguerite Lake Delta Gamma
1911–1912 Cora McElroy Alpha Phi
1912–1913 Lillian Thompson Gamma Phi Beta
1913–1914 Lois Crann Alpha Chi Omega
1914–1915 Amy Parmelee Delta Delta Delta
1915–1917 Lena Baldwin Alpha Xi Delta
1917–1919 Mary Love Collins Chi Omega
1919–1921 Ethel Weston Sigma Kappa
1921–1923 Lillian McCausland Alpha Omicron Pi
1923–1926 Dr. May Hopkins Zeta Tau Alpha
1926–1928 Louise Leonard Alpha Gamma Delta
1928–1930 Irma Tapp Alpha Delta Pi
1930–1931 Rene Smith Delta Zeta
1931–1933 Nellie Prince Phi Mu
1933–1935 Gladys Redd Kappa Delta
1935–1937 Harriet Tuft Beta Phi Alpha
1937–1939 Violet Gentry Alpha Delta Theta
1939–1941 Beatrice Moore Theta Upsilon
1941–1943 Juelda Burnaugh Beta Sigma Omicron
1943–1945 Helen Cunningham Phi Omega Pi
1945–1947 Amy Onken Pi Beta Phi
1947–1949 L. Pearle Green Kappa Alpha Theta
1949–1951 Edith Crabtree Kappa Kappa Gamma
1951–1953 Margaret Hutchinson Alpha Phi
1953–1955 Helen Byars Delta Gamma
1955–1957 Beatrice Hogan Gamma Phi Beta
1957–1959 Rosita Nordwall Alpha Chi Omega
1959–1961 Ernestine Grigsby Delta Delta Delta
1961–1963 Mary Burt Nash Alpha Xi Delta
1963–1965 Elizabeth Dyer Chi Omega
1965–1967 Ruth Miller Sigma Kappa
1967–1969 Mary Louise Roller Alpha Omicron Pi
1969–1971 Harriet Frische Zeta Tau Alpha
1971–1973 Myra Foxworthy Alpha Gamma Delta
1973–1975 Virginia Jacobson Alpha Delta Pi
1975–1977 Gwen McKeeman Delta Zeta
1977–1979 Adele Williamson Phi Mu
1979–1981 Minnie Mae Prescott Kappa Delta
1981–1983 Mary Barbee Sigma Sigma Sigma
1983–1985 Cynthia McCrory Alpha Sigma Tau
1985–1987 Sidney Allen Alpha Sigma Alpha
1987–1989 Beth Saul Alpha Epsilon Phi
1989–1991 Louise Kier Phi Sigma Sigma
1991–1993 Harriett Macht Delta Phi Epsilon
1993–1995 Harriet Rodenberg Sigma Delta Tau
1995–1997 Jean Scott Pi Beta Phi
1997–1999 Lissa Bradford Kappa Alpha Theta
1999–2001 Marian Williams Kappa Kappa Gamma
2001–2003 Sally Grant Alpha Phi
2003–2005 Martha Brown Delta Gamma
2005–2007 Elizabeth Quick Gamma Phi Beta
2007–2009 Julie Burkhard Alpha Chi Omega
2009–2011 Eve Riley Delta Delta Delta
2011–2013 Jane Sutton Alpha Xi Delta
2013–2015 Jean Mrasek Chi Omega
2015–2017 Donna King Sigma Kappa
2017–2021 Carole Jones Alpha Omicron Pi
2021–2023 Cheri De Jong Sigma Kappa

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . National Panhellenic Conference. Archived from the original on 2009-01-26. Retrieved 2010-01-01.
  2. ^ a b c d e (PDF). National Panhellenic Conference. Jan 2018. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-06-18. Retrieved 2018-06-17.
  3. ^ "CPC History - Valdosta State University". www.valdosta.edu. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  4. ^ a b Hughey, Matthew W. (2010-11-01). "A Paradox of Participation: Nonwhites in White Sororities and Fraternities". Social Problems. 57 (4): 653–679. doi:10.1525/sp.2010.57.4.653. ISSN 0037-7791.
  5. ^ Banta's Greek Exchange: Published in the Interest of the College Fraternity World. George Banta Company. 1922. p. 260.
  6. ^ Banta's Greek Exchange: Published in the Interest of the College Fraternity World. George Banta Company. 1922. p. 219.
  7. ^ Mansell, Edith L. (October 1945). "The Report on the Association of Education Sororities". The Anchor. Retrieved 2018-06-11.
  8. ^ Alpha Sigma Tau (January 1948). "Alpha Sigma Tau Is Now an Associate Member of the National Panhellenic Conference". The Anchor. p. 3. Retrieved 2018-06-11.
  9. ^ Newell Seaton, Emma (1949). The Golden Years with Pi Kappa Sigma. Har-Lo Printing Co. p. 478.
  10. ^ . Fraternity History & More. 2013-05-07. Archived from the original on 2018-06-12. Retrieved 2018-06-11.
  11. ^ Grasgreen, Allie (2013-09-13). "Segregated sororities not limited to Alabama, experts say". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  12. ^ Chang, Clio (2015-02-25). "Sorority Segregation Is a Serious Issue". US News. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
  13. ^ a b c Bennett, Jessica (9 April 2016). "When a Feminist Pledges a Sorority". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
  14. ^ Kingkade, Tyler (2015-11-13). "Several Sororities Back Away From Safe Campus Act". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
  15. ^ Milbourn, Annie. "Sorority opens to transgender pledges". The Crimson White. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  16. ^ "Panhellenic Encouraging Transgender Women to Join Sororities – KUJH-TV". tv.ku.edu. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  17. ^ "Panhellenic Association encourages discussions about transgender membership - Indiana Daily Student". www.idsnews.com. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  18. ^ "Sorority Members Walk Out When Told to 'Hold Off' on Transgender Member". ABC News. 2016-11-11. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
  19. ^ National Panhellenic Conference Gender Identity Study Group (2017-06-14). "NPC Gender Identity Study Group (Appendix C)" (PDF): 11. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  20. ^ "Delta Phi Epsilon | Delta Phi Epsilon Trans Woman and Non-Binary Gender Policy". Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  21. ^ Weiss, Suzannah (2017-03-14). "U.S. Sorority Accepts Trans Women Nationwide for the First Time". Glamour. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  22. ^ "Inclusion in Alpha Delta Pi". Alpha Delta Pi. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  23. ^ Staff, Emerson Today (2017-09-20). "With National Policy Move, All Emerson Sororities Officially Inclusive". Emerson Today. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  24. ^ "Membership Eligibility". Alpha Sigma Tau. 2017-01-13. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  25. ^ "Chi Omega and Diversity, Equity & Inclusion". Chi Omega. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  26. ^ "Our Story". Delta Gamma. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  27. ^ "Meet Gamma Phi Beta". Gamma Phi Beta. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  28. ^ "Recruitment Information". Kappa Alpha Theta. Retrieved 2020-09-17.
  29. ^ "Join KD". Kappa Delta Sorority. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  30. ^ "Position Statement". Kappa Kappa Gamma. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  31. ^ "Our Expectations". Phi Sigma Sigma. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  32. ^ "Policies and Position Statements" (PDF). Tri Sigma.
  33. ^ "Trans Inclusion". www.thetaphialpha.org. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  34. ^ "Why Join Alpha Gam?". Alpha Gamma Delta. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  35. ^ ALPHA OMICRON PI. "Book of Policies, Policy 9 – Diversity Policy" (PDF).
  36. ^ "Policies". Alpha Xi Delta. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  37. ^ "Our Commitment to Kindness". Tri Delta. 2018-02-18. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  38. ^ "Join Pi Phi". Pi Beta Phi Fraternity For Women. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  39. ^ "FAQ". Sigma Delta Tau. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  40. ^ "Membership Responsibilities | Sigma Kappa". sigmakappa.org. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  41. ^ "Membership Policy Update". Zeta Tau Alpha Fraternity. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  42. ^ "Panhellenic Position Descriptions". Virginia Tech Panhellenic. 2021-09-30. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  43. ^ Becque, Fran (2015-03-02). "NPC Organizations That No Longer Exist; A Reflection on International Badge Day - Fraternity History & More". Fraternity History & More. Retrieved 2018-11-26.
  44. ^ Adventure in Friendship pp. 4, 12
  45. ^ "NPC Manual of Information, 21st Edition (2021)" (PDF). National Panhellenic Conference. p. 7. Retrieved 7 July 2021.

national, panhellenic, conference, confused, with, national, hellenic, council, umbrella, organization, national, international, women, sororities, throughout, united, states, canada, panhellenic, greek, refers, group, members, being, autonomous, social, greek. Not to be confused with National Pan Hellenic Council The National Panhellenic Conference NPC is an umbrella organization for 26 national and international women s sororities throughout the United States and Canada Panhellenic lit all Greek refers to the group s members being autonomous social Greek letter societies of college women and alumnae National Panhellenic ConferenceAbbreviationNPCPredecessorNational Panhellenic CongressFormationMay 24 1902 121 years ago 1902 05 24 Merger ofAssociation of Education SororitiesTypeTrade organizationHeadquarters12730 Meeting House Road Suite 200Carmel IN 46032RegionNorth AmericaMembership26Websitewww wbr npcwomen wbr orgThe National Panhellenic Conference provides guidelines and resources for its members and serves as a national voice on contemporary issues of sorority life Founded in 1902 the NPC is one of the oldest and largest women s membership organizations representing more than 4 million women at over 650 college and university campuses and 4 600 local alumnae chapters in the U S and Canada Each year NPC affiliated collegians and alumnae donate more than 5 million to causes provide 2 8 million in scholarships to women and volunteer 500 000 hours in their communities 1 The organization is a conference not a congress as it enacts no legislation and only regulates its own meetings 2 Other than basic agreements which its member groups must unanimously vote to follow the NPC confines itself to recommendations and advice and acts as a court of final appeal in any college Panhellenic disputes One of its services is providing advisors for sororities Contents 1 History 1 1 AES merger and expansion 1 2 21st century 2 Campus structure 3 Affiliate organizations 3 1 Current members 3 2 Former members 4 Chairmen 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory editEarly histories of sororities contain accounts of rushing and pledging agreements or compacts among sororities on various campuses and many stories of cooperation and mutual assistance However no actual Panhellenic organization existed and no uniform practices were observed The NPC s origin can be traced to 1891 when Kappa Kappa Gamma invited all seven existing sororities to a Boston meeting with the intention to meet again in 1893 3 In 1902 Alpha Phi invited Pi Beta Phi Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Kappa Gamma Delta Gamma Gamma Phi Beta Delta Delta Delta Alpha Chi Omega and Chi Omega to a conference in Chicago on May 24 to set standards for collegiate sororities Alpha Chi Omega and Chi Omega were unable to attend and joined the following year The remaining seven groups met and the session resulted in the organization of the first interfraternity association and the first intergroup organization on college campuses citation needed The first few meetings resulted in several mutual agreements especially regarding pledging Up to this time no guidelines had been set and women could be pledged to groups before enrolling in college and belong to more than one group Many of the current when members joined through the next decade with Alpha Xi Delta in 1904 Alpha Omicron Pi and Sigma Kappa in 1905 Alpha Delta Pi and Alpha Gamma Delta and Zeta Tau Alpha in 1909 Delta Zeta in 1910 Phi Mu in 1911 and Kappa Delta in 1912 2 No new members were admitted for the next few decades Throughout its early years NPC members were often racially and religiously segregated and rarely admitted Jewish Catholic or ethnic minority members which led to the formation of group specific sororities which attempted to provide the same social and academic outlets to groups who were otherwise excluded from membership These groups included the first Black Greek letter organizations 4 By 1922 the NPC at the time named the National Panhellenic Congress had an executive committee consisting of a chairman secretary and treasurer a publicity board and a delegate board with at least one representative from each of its 18 senior members 5 That year the Congress also began plans for a centralized headquarters to coordinate and streamline interactions with the separate sororities 6 Shortly before its merger with the NPC the Association of Educational Sororities AES was part of a larger multi panhellenic association the Council of Affiliated Panhellenics Created in 1941 it included the AES NPC and Professional Panhellenic Association as members 7 AES merger and expansion edit Members of Sigma Sigma Sigma and Alpha Sigma Alpha organized the Association of Pedagogical Sororities on July 10 1915 Its members were primarily sororities located on state campuses mainly attended by women entering the educational field In 1917 Pi Kappa Sigma and Delta Sigma Epsilon joined the association followed by Theta Sigma Upsilon in 1925 Alpha Sigma Tau in 1926 and Pi Delta Theta in 1931 At the third biennial conference the name of the association was changed to the Association of Educational Sororities Later when the word Educational was changed to Education From 1915 through 1926 the NPC and AES operated chapters in the same colleges and universities In 1926 the NPC and AES made an agreement defining fields of activities of each panhellenic citation needed There was competition between NPC and AES sororities and dual memberships were often held By the 1940s many teachers colleges had begun to add liberal arts programs and vice versa which led to difficulties in the organizations functioning separately 2 8 On November 12 1947 at a conference in Colorado Springs Colorado the NPC considered and granted associate membership with reservations to the six AES sororities The AES was holding its biennial meeting when it was notified of the NPC decision and at that meeting completed the necessary business and took formal action to dissolve the Association 9 The NPC admitted five other sororities at the same time Alpha Epsilon Phi Delta Phi Epsilon Phi Sigma Sigma Sigma Delta Tau and Theta Phi Alpha In December 1951 all 11 of these sororities became full NPC members Since that time three AES members have merged with other NPC groups leaving Alpha Sigma Alpha Alpha Sigma Tau and Sigma Sigma Sigma as the remaining former AES members From the 1940s to the 1960s various smaller organizations merged into larger ones On some campuses with two different chapters from merged sororities a third sorority would organize on the campus to absorb the smaller sorority s former chapter 10 By the end of the 1960s and the civil rights movement NPC sororities eliminated official policies that prevented minority members from joining 4 although diversity in Greek life remained an issue 11 12 21st century edit As of the 2010s sorority members and outside observers noticed a shift in sorority culture though sororities began as feminist organizations emphasis during the mid 1900s on social reputations and exclusionary recruitment policies such as a refusal to recruit Jewish and African American women led to a reputation for following cultural hegemony and being made up of upper class white women 13 Though such issues continue to persist in various ways sorority and anti sorority women alike observed sororities becoming more ethnically diverse and moving away from traditional power structures towards their feminist roots 13 In the 2010s sorority members began attempts to change how sororities work from within 13 In November 2015 eight NPC members Alpha Phi Alpha Chi Omega Phi Mu Alpha Gamma Delta Sigma Delta Tau Delta Phi Epsilon Delta Gamma and Gamma Phi Beta broke ranks from the NPC to withdraw their support for the Safe Campus Act a controversial bill that would have required campus sexual assault victims to report to police and submit to a law enforcement investigation before their school could begin its own investigation 14 In 2016 collegiate members began discussing membership offers for transgender women which was supported by some national organizations with changes to their national policies 15 16 17 however some national organizations delayed membership offers for trans women due to fears about Title IX exemption status which caused dissent in local chapters 18 Though the NPC created a gender identity study group to examine potential legal consequences they concluded that the legal precedents were incomplete inconclusive and inconsistent and did not enact official policy or recommendations 19 By 2021 most national organizations had released political statements on racial and social equity and inclusion while also developing membership policies regarding gender identity Delta Phi Epsilon developed a policy explicitly open to trans and non binary individuals 20 and sororities open to anyone who identifies as a woman include Alpha Chi Omega 21 Alpha Delta Pi 22 Alpha Epsilon Phi 23 Alpha Sigma Tau 24 Chi Omega 25 Delta Gamma 26 Gamma Phi Beta 27 Kappa Alpha Theta 28 Kappa Delta 29 Kappa Kappa Gamma 30 Phi Sigma Sigma 31 Sigma Sigma Sigma 32 and Theta Phi Alpha 33 Sororities open to anyone who identifies and lives as a woman include Alpha Gamma Delta 34 Alpha Omicron Pi 35 Alpha Xi Delta 36 Delta Delta Delta 37 Pi Beta Phi 38 Sigma Delta Tau 39 and Sigma Kappa 40 while Zeta Tau Alpha specifies that the individual must consistently identify and live as a woman 41 Campus structure editA Panhellenic Council consists of executive board members at each university or college Each institution holds different executive positions based on its size and the NPC s relationship with it The basic positions at each institution are President VP of Communications VP of Finance VP of Philanthropy and Community Service VP of Programming VP of Recruitment VP of Scholarship and VP of Judicial 42 The number of positions is based on the number of NPC sororities at each institution Along with the delegates each being a representative from their sorority the executive board includes a member from each sorority as well Affiliate organizations edit nbsp College students line up in front of Purdue s Alpha Xi Delta sorority house during sorority recruitmentCurrent members edit Sorority 2 Greek letters Year founded Year joined 2 Alpha Chi Omega AXW 1885 1903Alpha Delta Pi ADP 1851 1909Alpha Epsilon Phi AEF 1909 1947 associate 1951 full Alpha Gamma Delta AGD 1904 1909Alpha Omicron Pi AOP 1897 1905Alpha Phi AF 1872 1902Alpha Sigma Alpha ASA 1901 1947 associate 1951 full Alpha Sigma Tau AST 1899 1947 associate 1951 full Alpha Xi Delta A3D 1893 1904Chi Omega XW 1895 1903Delta Delta Delta DDD 1888 1902Delta Gamma DG 1873 1902Delta Phi Epsilon DFE 1917 1947 associate 1951 full Delta Zeta DZ 1902 1910Gamma Phi Beta GFB 1874 1902Kappa Alpha Theta KA8 1870 1902Kappa Delta KD 1897 1912Kappa Kappa Gamma KKG 1870 1902Phi Mu FM 1852 1911Phi Sigma Sigma FSS 1913 1947 associate 1951 full Pi Beta Phi PBF 1867 1902Sigma Delta Tau SDT 1917 1947 associate 1951 full Sigma Kappa SK 1874 1905Sigma Sigma Sigma SSS 1898 1947 associate 1951 full Theta Phi Alpha 8FA 1912 1947 associate 1951 full Zeta Tau Alpha ZTA 1898 1909Former members edit Sorority Greek letters Year founded Year joined Notes 43 Alpha Delta Theta AD8 1919 1923 associate 1926 full Merged with Phi Mu in 1939 after 26th NPC meeting Beta Phi Alpha BFA 1909 1923 Merged with Delta Zeta on June 22 1941Beta Sigma Omicron BSO 1888 1930 associate 1933 full Merged with Zeta Tau Alpha in 1964 with Alpha Phi absorbing 3 chapters where there was already a Zeta Tau Alpha chapterDelta Sigma Epsilon DSE 1914 1947 associate 1951 full Merged with Delta Zeta in 1956Iota Alpha Pi IAP 1903 1953 associate 1957 full Disbanded in 1971Lambda Omega LW 1923 1930 associate Merged with Theta Upsilon in 1933Phi Omega Pi FWP 1910 1930 associate 1933 full Merged with Delta Zeta on August 10 1946Pi Kappa Sigma PKS 1894 1947 associate 1951 full Merged with Sigma Kappa on May 15 1959Pi Sigma Gamma PSG 1919 1930 Merged with Beta Sigma Omicron in 1932Sigma Phi Beta SFB 1920 1928 associate Merged with Phi Omega Pi on October 1 1933Theta Sigma Upsilon 8SY 1921 1947 associate 1951 full Merged with Alpha Gamma Delta on June 29 1959Theta Upsilon 8Y 1914 1923 associate 1928 full Merged with Delta Zeta on May 6 1962Chairmen editThroughout its history the NPC Executive Board has been led by a chairman 44 In 2018 the NPC Board of Directors voted to change its governance model As of 2021 members rotate onto the board in the order their organization joined the NPC but the chairman is now elected 45 Year s Chair Sorority1902 1903 Laura Norton Kappa Alpha Theta1904 Grace Telling Delta Gamma1905 Amy Olgen Parmelee Delta Delta Delta1906 Ella Leib Alpha Xi Delta1907 Jobelle Holcombe Chi Omega1908 Anna Lytle Pi Beta Phi1909 L Pearle Green Kappa Alpha Theta1910 Florence Roth Kappa Kappa Gamma1910 1911 Marguerite Lake Delta Gamma1911 1912 Cora McElroy Alpha Phi1912 1913 Lillian Thompson Gamma Phi Beta1913 1914 Lois Crann Alpha Chi Omega1914 1915 Amy Parmelee Delta Delta Delta1915 1917 Lena Baldwin Alpha Xi Delta1917 1919 Mary Love Collins Chi Omega1919 1921 Ethel Weston Sigma Kappa1921 1923 Lillian McCausland Alpha Omicron Pi1923 1926 Dr May Hopkins Zeta Tau Alpha1926 1928 Louise Leonard Alpha Gamma Delta1928 1930 Irma Tapp Alpha Delta Pi1930 1931 Rene Smith Delta Zeta1931 1933 Nellie Prince Phi Mu1933 1935 Gladys Redd Kappa Delta1935 1937 Harriet Tuft Beta Phi Alpha1937 1939 Violet Gentry Alpha Delta Theta1939 1941 Beatrice Moore Theta Upsilon1941 1943 Juelda Burnaugh Beta Sigma Omicron1943 1945 Helen Cunningham Phi Omega Pi1945 1947 Amy Onken Pi Beta Phi1947 1949 L Pearle Green Kappa Alpha Theta1949 1951 Edith Crabtree Kappa Kappa Gamma1951 1953 Margaret Hutchinson Alpha Phi1953 1955 Helen Byars Delta Gamma1955 1957 Beatrice Hogan Gamma Phi Beta1957 1959 Rosita Nordwall Alpha Chi Omega1959 1961 Ernestine Grigsby Delta Delta Delta1961 1963 Mary Burt Nash Alpha Xi Delta1963 1965 Elizabeth Dyer Chi Omega1965 1967 Ruth Miller Sigma Kappa1967 1969 Mary Louise Roller Alpha Omicron Pi1969 1971 Harriet Frische Zeta Tau Alpha1971 1973 Myra Foxworthy Alpha Gamma Delta1973 1975 Virginia Jacobson Alpha Delta Pi1975 1977 Gwen McKeeman Delta Zeta1977 1979 Adele Williamson Phi Mu1979 1981 Minnie Mae Prescott Kappa Delta1981 1983 Mary Barbee Sigma Sigma Sigma1983 1985 Cynthia McCrory Alpha Sigma Tau1985 1987 Sidney Allen Alpha Sigma Alpha1987 1989 Beth Saul Alpha Epsilon Phi1989 1991 Louise Kier Phi Sigma Sigma1991 1993 Harriett Macht Delta Phi Epsilon1993 1995 Harriet Rodenberg Sigma Delta Tau1995 1997 Jean Scott Pi Beta Phi1997 1999 Lissa Bradford Kappa Alpha Theta1999 2001 Marian Williams Kappa Kappa Gamma2001 2003 Sally Grant Alpha Phi2003 2005 Martha Brown Delta Gamma2005 2007 Elizabeth Quick Gamma Phi Beta2007 2009 Julie Burkhard Alpha Chi Omega2009 2011 Eve Riley Delta Delta Delta2011 2013 Jane Sutton Alpha Xi Delta2013 2015 Jean Mrasek Chi Omega2015 2017 Donna King Sigma Kappa2017 2021 Carole Jones Alpha Omicron Pi2021 2023 Cheri De Jong Sigma KappaSee also editList of social fraternities and sororitiesReferences edit National Panhellenic Conference National Panhellenic Conference Archived from the original on 2009 01 26 Retrieved 2010 01 01 a b c d e Manual of Information PDF National Panhellenic Conference Jan 2018 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 06 18 Retrieved 2018 06 17 CPC History Valdosta State University www valdosta edu Retrieved 2022 11 30 a b Hughey Matthew W 2010 11 01 A Paradox of Participation Nonwhites in White Sororities and Fraternities Social Problems 57 4 653 679 doi 10 1525 sp 2010 57 4 653 ISSN 0037 7791 Banta s Greek Exchange Published in the Interest of the College Fraternity World George Banta Company 1922 p 260 Banta s Greek Exchange Published in the Interest of the College Fraternity World George Banta Company 1922 p 219 Mansell Edith L October 1945 The Report on the Association of Education Sororities The Anchor Retrieved 2018 06 11 Alpha Sigma Tau January 1948 Alpha Sigma Tau Is Now an Associate Member of the National Panhellenic Conference The Anchor p 3 Retrieved 2018 06 11 Newell Seaton Emma 1949 The Golden Years with Pi Kappa Sigma Har Lo Printing Co p 478 On National Teacher Appreciation Day SIUC and the AES NPC Merger Fraternity History amp More Fraternity History amp More 2013 05 07 Archived from the original on 2018 06 12 Retrieved 2018 06 11 Grasgreen Allie 2013 09 13 Segregated sororities not limited to Alabama experts say Inside Higher Ed Retrieved 2018 11 08 Chang Clio 2015 02 25 Sorority Segregation Is a Serious Issue US News Retrieved 2018 11 07 a b c Bennett Jessica 9 April 2016 When a Feminist Pledges a Sorority The New York Times Retrieved 2018 11 07 Kingkade Tyler 2015 11 13 Several Sororities Back Away From Safe Campus Act Huffington Post Retrieved 2018 11 07 Milbourn Annie Sorority opens to transgender pledges The Crimson White Retrieved 2018 11 08 Panhellenic Encouraging Transgender Women to Join Sororities KUJH TV tv ku edu Retrieved 2018 11 08 Panhellenic Association encourages discussions about transgender membership Indiana Daily Student www idsnews com Retrieved 2018 11 08 Sorority Members Walk Out When Told to Hold Off on Transgender Member ABC News 2016 11 11 Retrieved 2018 11 07 National Panhellenic Conference Gender Identity Study Group 2017 06 14 NPC Gender Identity Study Group Appendix C PDF 11 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Delta Phi Epsilon Delta Phi Epsilon Trans Woman and Non Binary Gender Policy Retrieved 2021 07 04 Weiss Suzannah 2017 03 14 U S Sorority Accepts Trans Women Nationwide for the First Time Glamour Retrieved 2021 07 04 Inclusion in Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Delta Pi Retrieved 2021 07 04 Staff Emerson Today 2017 09 20 With National Policy Move All Emerson Sororities Officially Inclusive Emerson Today Retrieved 2021 07 04 Membership Eligibility Alpha Sigma Tau 2017 01 13 Retrieved 2021 07 04 Chi Omega and Diversity Equity amp Inclusion Chi Omega Retrieved 2021 07 04 Our Story Delta Gamma Retrieved 2021 07 04 Meet Gamma Phi Beta Gamma Phi Beta Retrieved 2021 07 04 Recruitment Information Kappa Alpha Theta Retrieved 2020 09 17 Join KD Kappa Delta Sorority Retrieved 2021 07 04 Position Statement Kappa Kappa Gamma Retrieved 2021 07 04 Our Expectations Phi Sigma Sigma Retrieved 2021 07 04 Policies and Position Statements PDF Tri Sigma Trans Inclusion www thetaphialpha org Retrieved 2021 07 04 Why Join Alpha Gam Alpha Gamma Delta Retrieved 2021 07 04 ALPHA OMICRON PI Book of Policies Policy 9 Diversity Policy PDF Policies Alpha Xi Delta Retrieved 2021 07 04 Our Commitment to Kindness Tri Delta 2018 02 18 Retrieved 2021 07 04 Join Pi Phi Pi Beta Phi Fraternity For Women Retrieved 2021 07 04 FAQ Sigma Delta Tau Retrieved 2021 07 04 Membership Responsibilities Sigma Kappa sigmakappa org Retrieved 4 September 2018 Membership Policy Update Zeta Tau Alpha Fraternity Retrieved 2021 07 04 Panhellenic Position Descriptions Virginia Tech Panhellenic 2021 09 30 Retrieved 2022 11 30 Becque Fran 2015 03 02 NPC Organizations That No Longer Exist A Reflection on International Badge Day Fraternity History amp More Fraternity History amp More Retrieved 2018 11 26 Adventure in Friendship pp 4 12 NPC Manual of Information 21st Edition 2021 PDF National Panhellenic Conference p 7 Retrieved 7 July 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Panhellenic Conference amp oldid 1180442060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.