Mortar Board | |
---|---|
Founded | February 15, 1918 Syracuse, New York, US |
Type | Honor Society |
Affiliation | ACHS |
Status | Active |
Scope | National |
Motto | ΠΣΑ "Scholarship, Service and Leadership" |
Colors | Gold and Silver |
Symbol | Mortar Board |
Publication | Mortar Board Forum |
Chapters | 104 active |
Members | 250,000+ active |
Headquarters | 1200 Chambers Road, Suite 201 Columbus , Ohio 43212 United States |
Website | www |
Mortar Board is an American national honor society for college seniors. It was established in 1918 in Syracuse, New York through the merger of four local women's organizations from four institutions. It started admitting men in 1975. Mortar Board has chartered 235 collegiate chapters. It is a member of the Association of College Honor Societies.
Mortar Board was founded in Syracuse, New York on February 15, 1918. It was the first national honor society for college senior women and continues to promote women's interests in higher education today. The organization coalesced by the agreement of four local women's honor societies. The founding local organizations were:
These and other chapters continue the tradition of adopting unique, historical, or symbolic local names as their chapter designations, and do not use traditional alphabetized Greek Letter names as are common among other honor societies. [2]
The society was originally unnamed. One of the predecessor locals (at OSU) had been called Mortar Board, using two separate words, and it was noted that they and the group at Swarthmore both wore pins in the shape of a mortarboard; from this, a pin representative of a mortarboard was adopted at the first national convention on February 15, 1918, and finally, the name Mortar Board was adopted at the second convention, a year later. [2] [3]
The Society proliferated, adopting a district governance structure by 1923 when it had already grown to eighteen chartered chapters. By 1925 the Mortar Board Quarterly was established as the official publication, now called the Forum. [2] Mortar Board was invited into the Association of College Honor Societies (ACHS) in 1937, the only women's honor society to be invited up until that time.
The society admitted men in 1975 as a ramification of Title IX, at which point a clause was added in its purpose to include "to promote and advance the status of women." This was further revised the following year to read, "...to emphasize the advancement of the status of women" and "to promote equal opportunities among all people." [2] [3]
Mortar Board's motto is the Greek letters "Pi Sigma Alpha", representing the ideals of "Scholarship, Service, and Leadership". [3] The society's symbol is the square academic cap known as a mortarboard, symbolizing honor and distinction. [3] Its colors are gold and silver. [4] Gold symbolizes achievement and silver symbolizing opportunity. [3] Its badge is in the shape of a mortar board in black, with a gold tassel and edging, and the Greek letters ΠΣΑ in gold. [4]
It publications are Mortar Board Forum and MBits. [5]
Membership in Mortar Board is open to college juniors and seniors for outstanding academics, leadership, and service. [3] New members are recruited through a tapping process. [6] Tapping ceremonies vary between chapters, with some using the "Tapping Song". [6]
Mortar Board, Inc. is governed by collegiate chapters. National officers come from the ranks of alumni and collegiate members. [2]
Mortar Board's national office is located at 1200 Chambers Road, Suite 201, in Columbus, Ohio. [3] It is the source of records and information related to chapter operations, national conferences, alumni, the Mortar Board National Foundation and the historical archives of Mortar Board. The staff enacts policies and procedures established by the National Council and the Mortar Board National Foundation. [2]
The National Foundation was established in 1955 as the fundraising arm of Mortar Board, as well as to serve the educational aims of Mortar Board, Inc. The mission of the National Foundation is to support Mortar Board, Inc. in furthering its ideals of scholarship, leadership, and service. [2]
Section coordinators work directly with chapters, serving as close primary contacts for chapters within a specified geographic region. The section coordinator is available to assist the chapters with a variety of tasks, including planning and execution of events.
As of 2024, the Mortar Board has chartered 235 chapters in 45 states, and has 104 active chapters. [3]
More than a quarter of a million members have been initiated nationwide. Some notable alumni include:
Alpha Omicron Pi is an international sorority founded on January 2, 1897, at Barnard College on the campus of Columbia University in Manhattan, New York City.
Alpha Lambda Delta (ΑΛΔ) is an honor society for students who have achieved a 3.5 GPA or higher during their first year or term of higher education.
Phi Beta Fraternity (ΦΒ) is an American professional collegiate fraternity for the creative and performing arts. It was founded in 1912 at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. Phi Beta is gender inclusive and incorporates all art forms into its membership. It is a founding member of the Professional Fraternity Association.
Gamma Theta Upsilon is an international honor society in geography. It was established in 1928 as a professional fraternity at Illinois State University and became international in 1969. Gamma Theta Upsilon is a member of Association of College Honor Societies.
Beta Gamma Sigma (ΒΓΣ) is an international business honor society. Founded in 1913 at the University of Wisconsin, University of Illinois and the University of California, it has over 980,000 members, selected from more than 600 collegiate chapters in business schools accredited by AACSB International. It has collegiate chapters in over 190 countries.
The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi is an honor society established in 1897 to recognize and encourage superior scholarship without restriction as to the area of study, and to promote the "unity and democracy of education". It was the fourth academic society in the United States to be organized around recognizing academic excellence, and it is the oldest all-discipline honor society. It is a member of the Honor Society Caucus.
SPURS National Honor Society was an American collegiate sophomore honor society. It was established in 1922 at Montana State University and disbanded in 2005. Several chapters remain in operation as independent, local societies.
Pi Kappa Lambda (ΠΚΛ) is an American honor society for undergraduate students, graduate students, and professors of music. There are over 270 chapters nationally; a complete roster of current chapters is listed in the organization's official web site. The National Office is currently located in Saint Simons Island, Georgia.
Rho Pi Phi International Pharmaceutical Fraternity (ΡΠΦ) is a co-ed collegiate professional fraternity dedicated to the profession of pharmacy.
Lambda Iota Tau (ΛΙΤ) was an international honor society for literature, whose purpose was to recognize and promote excellence in the study of literature in all languages. It was founded at Michigan State University in 1953. The society was admitted to the Association of College Honor Societies in 1965. It was absorbed by Sigma Tau Delta in 2016-2017.
Lambda Kappa Sigma is an international pharmacy fraternity headquartered in Muskego, Wisconsin. Founded in 1913, it t was created to promote the profession of pharmacy among women and advance women within the profession. LKS is the oldest and largest professional pharmacy fraternity for women in the world. Lambda Kappa Sigma has initiated more than 30,000 members and has 45 chartered chapters. It also has 36 chartered alumni groups internationally.
Lambda Sigma (ΛΣ) is an American college honor society for second-year students. Originally named the Society of Cwens, the society was established at the University of Pittsburgh in Fall 1922 as a women's honors society and became a national organization with the 1925 foundation of chapters at Miami University and the University of Missouri. The society is "dedicated to the purpose of fostering leadership, scholarship, fellowship, and the spirit of service among college students, and to promoting the interests of the college or university in every possible way".
Sigma Lambda Alpha (ΣΛΑ) is a North American scholastic honor society that recognizes academic achievement among students in the field of landscape architecture. It was established in 1977 at the University of Minnesota by the Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture.
Rho Chi (ΡΧ) is an international honor society for pharmaceutical sciences. It was founded on May 19, 1922, to "encourage high scholastic achievement and fellowship among students in pharmacy and to promote the pharmaceutical sciences".
Alpha Epsilon (ΑΕ) is a scholastic honor society recognizing academic achievement among students in the fields of agricultural, food, and biological engineering. It has thirty active chapters across the United States and a total membership of around 8,000.
Alpha Epsilon Rho (ΑΕΡ) is an international scholastic honor society recognizing academic achievement among students in the field of electronic media. The honor society is managed as part of the larger Broadcast Education Association (BEA).
Phi Upsilon Omicron (ΦΥΟ), sometimes called Phi U, is a scholastic honor society that recognizes academic achievement among students in the field of family and consumer science.
Pi Delta Epsilon (ΠΔΕ) was an American collegiate honor fraternity for journalism. It merged to form the Society for Collegiate Journalists in 1975.