Rho Delta Brother attends IFC academy
Thursday, February 11, 2010
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Posted by: Jon Moore
CHI PSI BROTHER MICHAEL ESTRY PARTICIPATES IN 2010 IFC ACADEMY,
LEARNING MODELS FOR HIGH-PERFORMANCE
IFC OPERATIONS
Michael Estry, an Chi Psi brother at Miami
University, joined more than 150 Interfraternity Council (IFC) officers, advisors,
chapter presidents, chapter delegates, and graduate advisors from 34 U.S. colleges and universities in
participating in the 2010 IFC Academy, hosted Jan. 30 in Indianapolis by the North-American
Interfraternity Conference (NIC).
The one-day, 14-hour program, focused participants on
their role in developing high-performing IFCs – specifically the role of the
IFC in serving the needs of its member fraternities, and the role the NIC
Standards play in supporting high performance.
"The fraternities of the NIC operate by an agreed-upon
set of standards,” said Peter D. Smithhisler, president and CEO of the
NIC. "Developed by the membership with
the goal of helping younger members clearly understand what membership means,
and helping older members understand their responsibility in teaching and
modeling, the Standards provide an excellent co-curricular education for every
member,” he said.
On
campus, the IFC’s role is to understand and promote the Standards to the
leadership of their member fraternities.
Individual chapter leaders hold responsibility for interpreting the
Standards to their chapter members, explaining how they apply to the chapter’s
individual mission and values. While NIC
standards encourage and support academic achievement; campus involvement and
leadership; risk management on topics such as alcohol use, fire safety, hazing,
and sexual abuse; the value of ritual; and the importance of communicating the
value of education, career preparation, civic engagement, leadership
development, values, and ethics, each chapter applies them differently to
accommodate their individual fraternity’s mission and values.
At the Academy, Estry renewed his sense of
commitment to the interfraternal community.
He completed a personalized assessment of his own council effectiveness,
and he developed a task list to work through once he returned to campus. Because open (year-round) recruitment of
members and open (to any interested fraternity) expansion of chapters on a
campus continue to be issues IFCs have difficulty understanding and explaining
to their members, Estry also learned how to identify restrictive clauses in IFC
polices and, along with NIC professional staff, discussed ways to work with
campus advisors and administrators to remove restrictive policies.
The
Academy offered two tracks, one for officers responsible for marketing and
public/member relations, and another for executive officers responsible for
operation and stewardship. Presenters
included Josh Orendi, CEO of Phired UP Productions, who led the
marketing/communication track; Ben Pendry, NIC vice president for advancement,
who led the executives track; Marc Katz, past chairman of the NIC, who provided
a legal update for council officers; Bob Marchesani, current NIC chairman, who
focused on the importance of interfraternalism; and NIC Chairman and CEO Pete
Smithhisler, who led the session on the value and importance NIC Standards hold
for IFC operation.
Founded
in 1909, the NIC is the trade association representing73 international
and national men’s fraternities. Through advocacy, collaboration, and
education, the NIC works to ensure that fraternities can operate in an
environment conducive to their success.
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