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Old 06-29-2007, 03:45 PM
adpiucf adpiucf is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2002
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long post...

One thing you CAN do this summer is to look at your chapter bylaws. These should be brought up for amending and discussion annually. Some things you can introduce into the bylaws are the length of chapter meetings and officer announcements, opportunities for non-officers to speak, etc. You can propose these amendments.

One possible and immediate option is to ask to attend an exec board meeting and discuss your concerns. Don't just complain-- recommend solutions. How can you get in and out of meeting in less time, and how can chapter members feel more included in the chapter leadership processes?

Suggestions:
1) Exec should host a semesterly "Town Hall" style membership education meeting, like a workshop, as a time for the chapter members to express feelings, frustrations and concerns. This worked well for another ADPi chapter I used to work with. In lieu of chapter meeting you have "paper chapter" with your announcements on your meeting agenda and the time alloted is spent as a membership "training,"-- in this case, an opportunity to air grievances and work together to effect solutions. Instead of just complaining, members must offer a challenge and a recommended solution. The chapter writes out and assigns goals and timelines. It really works.

2) I think it is a huge problem that the UCF chapters allow serenades and external announcements during chapter meeting time. It may be fun to get visitors, but it eats up your evening. A better time to do this would be during chapter dinner or a free period before the meeting begins. Another school I worked with did this and we were in and out of chapter in 30 minutes-- it took me longer to drive there and back than the amount of time I sat in the meeting! Limiting external announcements and serenades to before chapter begins may help.

3) The officers don't need to talk so much. There should be meeting agendas handed out each week and the bulk of the officers' reports can be listed on these agendas. Some weeks, there may be an important issue, but an officer like the Intramurals Chairman really shouldn't have to say anything but, "Please refer to the agenda for my report" so members know when the next softball game is.

4) Committees. The chapter officers can only do so much on their own and it empowers non-officers to consider leadership positions and develop leadership experience and teamwork opportunities when committees are formed to support the officers and the chapter projects.

My experience, and the experiences of my friends in UCF sororities, was that our meetings were all very formal. Without naming names, some sororities required their members and officers to get any announcements approved up to 72 hours in advance for chapter meeting.

That may seem ridiculous to most, but with chapters that range between 100-180 members, we would honestly be there all night if everyone talked whenever they had an idea. Similarly, "open forum" time is often squashed in the interests of time.

If a meeting can operate "smarter," there will be time for members to offer up any concerns or solutions. However, do be warned that there may be a crazy in your chapter and that this can be squashed if it gets out of hand.

The social chairs at UCF may operate differently than at other school-- right or wrong, the chapter is at the mercy of the social chair to plan socials. And the social chair is at the mercy of the fraternities to call her back and coordinate the events together. Some chapters have less luck than others and can't coordinate events with the fraternities that the chapter might enjoy mixing with. That's more political than anything else, but I digress. If a social event is cancelled for standards reasons, you should look into your chapter bylaws... was every single sister out of control? Maybe the answer is holding a workshop on social conduct or mature alcohol management, or going to GAMMA meetings. If you start cancelling socials, word gets around to the fraternities and you have even more trouble planning events. Plus, chapter members can get disgruntled, and then you start having retention issues. I don't know how "bad" everyone was at the event in question, but those are just some thoughts... Cancelling a social is pretty extreme. There may have been other issues that exec wasn't sharing with you.

Anyway, that's my advice... good luck. I wouldn't go out and form a dissenters committee b/c that can backfire, but there's nothing wrong with talking the chapter officers about your concerns and suggesting ways to make things better.
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Last edited by adpiucf; 06-29-2007 at 03:49 PM.
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