Fraternity & Sorority Life Learning Outcomes
At Baylor, fraternity and sorority life is a unique part of our campus life; breathing life into many of our campus traditions, raising money and awareness for national philanthropies, and living out our institutional mission of being worldwide leaders and servants in our communities near and far. With a total community membership of almost 30% of our undergraduate population, these students are a recognizable part of campus life and have had a profound impact on the student experience for decades.
We believe that students who make a commitment to these learning outcomes and join one of our chapters not only feel a greater sense of belonging to the campus community, but they are more likely to remain invested in the university when they become alumni.
People matter most! Building connections with others helps us not only develop a deeper self-awareness, but an appreciation and love for others. Our ability to care for and consider one another is one of the most important virtues we can cultivate as leaders.
Opportunities include:
Collaborating with Campus Partners
Strengthening Advisor Relationships
Building Bridges Across Councils
Mutual Cooperation with Administration
National Office Support
Positive Baylor Community Perspective
As values-based organizations rooted in virtues like responsibility and integrity, it is important that not only do we align our own leadership values with our organization, but that we are equally dedicated to ensuring that our organization’s missions align with the university.
Opportunities include:
Recruitment Practices
New Member Education Processes
Conduct Processes
Communication
Advisors
Administration
Membership/Leadership Development
One of the most important things we can do as leaders is develop a clear understanding of who we are and what we believe about leadership. Your individual leadership philosophy helps guide your decisions and actions which will impact your members, our FSL community, and the broader Baylor community, through the following events and opportunities.
Opportunities include:
Leadership Speaker Series
Advisor Relationships
Leadership Certificate
All Greek Roundtables
National Conferences
Tangible leadership skills are important because they better equip you to support chapter operations, membership, strategic planning, and build teams that will enhance the student experience for years to come.
Opportunities include:
All Greek Roundtables
Executive Board Dynamics
Strategic Planning
1-1 Meetings
National Resources
Alumni & Advisors
People with intercultural maturity seek to understand, value belonging, and model care and respect for others. As we endeavor to meet this global need for interculturally mature servant-leaders, we do so out of our firm Christian commitment—embodying the biblical virtues of humility, justice, and wisdom
Opportunities include:
Caring for our community members
Campus Partnerships
Virtuous Leadership Development
Story Exchange
Chapter policy and procedure review