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Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Incorporated

Pi Upsilon Lambda Chapter

Alpha Phi Alpha Special Projects


Alpha Phi Alpha’s Special Projects are programs and activities that are sustained through collaborative efforts, memoranda of understanding, and/or outside financial assistance, which Chapters are encouraged to implement. Current Special Projects include:

  1. Big Brothers / Big Sisters Mentoring Partnership

  2. Boy Scouts of America

  3. College Life to Corporate Life Initiative (C2C)

  4. Leadership Development Institutes


Big Brothers / Big Sisters of America

The Big Brothers/Big Sisters of America program was implemented during the fraternity's 1990 General Convention.The two organizations signed an agreement to assist each other in reaching their goals of working toward the positive development of African-American youth and empowering their families and communities. The focus of this partnership is to:

  • Increase the number of African-American children exposed to positive African-American adult role models;
  • Increase minority representation on local Big Brothers/Big Sisters' Board of Directors;
  • Increase positive perceptions of both organizations in the African-American community;
  • Expose African-American boys of Big Brothers/Big Sisters programs to positive Alpha role models and the programs of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.

Click here for additional information, or contact:

    Dale H. Long, Chairman
    Big Brothers and Big Sisters of America Partnership
    1614 Dorado Street
    Garland, Texas 75040-9301
    972.272.2229
    bbbsa@apa1906.net

    OR

    Director of Educational Activities

    2313 St. Paul Street
    Baltimore, MD 21218
    410.554.0040

Boy Scouts of America


The Boy Scouts of America and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity have goals and objectives which make for a "natural alliance" between the two organizations. Through this alliance, the two organizations are achieving their goals by utilizing the Scouting program to its greatest potential as a programming resource.

Alpha Chapters/Brothers have and continue to:

  • Charter Scout units;
  • Serve as district, council, regional, and national leaders;
  • Refer promising and credible individuals for careers as volunteer and professional leaders in the Scouting program;
  • Develop special relationships and programs in conjunction with established units and levels of leadership.

Through the Scouts, Alpha men get involved in their neighborhoods with young men and help form positive character and leadership qualities in and for future generations.


Click here
for additional information, or contact:


George Randall
8705 Saranac Trail
Fortworth, TX 76118
grandall@netbsa.org

OR

Director of Educational Activities

2313 St. Paul Street
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.554.0040




College Life to Corporate Life Initiative (C2C)

In concert with the mission of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., the College Life to Corporate Life Initiative (C2C) was created to develop the human resources of Alpha Phi Alpha and cultivate mutually beneficial relationships with corporate partners resulting in rewarding career opportunities for the members of Alpha Phi Alpha and increased critical mass of diverse talent for its corporate partners.

For additional information, please contact:

Darryl Jackson
2313 St. Paul Street
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.554.0040


Leadership Development Institutes

Mission

The Leadership Development Institute (LDI) aims to develop a 21st century generation of leaders. This mission starts with young people, particularly those who demonstrate the potential to comprehend and apply the fundamental principles needed by leaders as well as whom, by virtue of their age and education, are often looked upon as role models. Thus, the Institute, which is implemented in five regions, seeks to equip high school students, primarily sophomores to seniors, with vital leadership skills. To this end, the members of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., who organize and facilitate the regional LDIs, working along with other professionals/experts, instruct the participants in parliamentary procedures, conflict resolution, models of leadership, public speaking, community and civic engagement, and educational enhancement skills.


The Objectives of all LDIs are:

1. to develop a cadre of positive youth leadership throughout the nation.

2. to stimulate an appreciation for African American leadership in the United States and the world.

3. to expose students to various leadership skills, opportunities, and challenges.

4. to inform students of the current and emerging economic, social, political, communal, and cultural issues affecting African Americans and people of color in America and the world.

5. to nurture a network of positive youth by providing fertile opportunities for them to interact on various social and cultural settings.

6. to promote and stimulate an appreciation for Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

7. to encourage civic involvement, such as voting.

8. to link the LDI with the fraternity's programs and special projects, such as Project Alpha, A Voteless People is a Hopeless People, and Go to High School Go to College.


HISTORY OF LDI

Since its founding on December 4, 1906, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. has supplied voice and vision to the struggle of African-Americans and people of color around the world.

Alpha Phi Alpha, the first intercollegiate Greek-letter fraternity established for African-Americans, was founded at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York by seven college men who recognized the need for a strong bond of Brotherhood among African descendants in this country. The visionary founders, known as the "Jewels" of the Fraternity, are Henry Arthur Callis, Charles Henry Chapman, Eugene Kinckle Jones, George Biddle Kelley, Nathaniel Allison Murray, Robert Harold Ogle, and Vertner Woodson Tandy.

The Fraternity initially served as a study and support group for minority students who faced racial prejudice, both educationally and socially, at Cornell. The Jewel founders and early leaders of the Fraternity succeeded in laying a firm foundation for Alpha Phi Alpha's principles of scholarship, fellowship, good character, and the uplifting of humanity.

Alpha Phi Alpha chapters were developed at other colleges and universities, many of them historically black institutions, soon after the founding at Cornell. While continuing to stress academic excellence among its members, Alpha also recognized the need to help correct the educational, economic, political, and social injustices faced by African-Americans.

Building on these areas, the Leadership Development/Citizenship Education Initiative is a national program of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc that aims to develop a 21st century generation of leaders. This program was initiated in the Southern Region during the administration of Bro. Dr. A.M. Witherspoon, Southern Regional Vice President. It was Bro. Witherspoon's desire that Alpha, due to its history of leadership and modeling leaders, be the vanguard organization for assisting young people in becoming leaders. As such, the institute, under the leadership of Bro. Dr. Henry Ponder, who was the program's first coordinator and future General President of the Fraternity, began working with a group of high school students on parliamentary procedures and public speaking. These areas were expanded between the years of 1988 to 1990, under the leadership of Bro. Drs. John Kelley and Clarence Christian, to include many of the Fraternity's other national and special programs, such as voting, responsible sexual activity, and going to college. It was also during this period that the initiative expanded to other regions-Eastern and Midwest.

In the 1990s, the program saw even more development, particularly in its reaches to another region- the Southwest. This was due to the generous support of and strong commitment to education by Bro. Dr. Ernest Halloway, President of Langston University. It was during this period that Bro. William Baird, the National Coordinator for LDI, saw the imperative need for new leadership and recommended at the 1997 General Convention that each Regional Vice President appoint a Regional Leadership Development and Citizenship Education Coordinator and that they advance to each of their District Directors to do likewise. It was Bro. Baird's intention that local chapters, after having been trained by the District Coordinator, would sponsor one or more leadership workshops per year in their local area. Although this was an excellent idea for producing a cadre of young leaders, it was wrought with internal and external challenges. The lack of continuity in the local workshops, a training manual, marketing strategies, and resources for local chapters, as well as the tepid level of support that the LDI received at the national, regional, and district level hindered this ideas along with others from becoming a reality. It was during this and subsequent periods that the LDI was faced with its greatest challenges.

In 2000, President Harry Johnson, Sr., Esq.-the 31st General President of the Fraternity appointed Bro. Dr. Said Sewell and Bro. Maurice Foushee co-chairs of the LDI. Bros. Foushee and Sewell resolved to build upon the past and set the Institute on a solid foundation. Upon their appointments as co-chairs of the Leadership Development Institute (LDI), they consulted with Bro. Zollie Stevenson, Ph. D., then National Director of the Educational Activities, and President Johnson regarding their role as Chairmen of LDI. It was from these conversations that they were tasked with the general responsibility of bring uniformity to the various regional LDI. They, from this general directive, developed six benchmarks during their administration. Those benchmarks were: 1) conduct site visits; 2) administer an evaluative assessment of all the LDIs; 3) coordinate a national town hall meeting on the Leadership Development Institute; 4) develop a standard mission statement, objectives, criteria for student selection, and curriculum; 5) develop strategies for increasing awareness of the LDI among the brotherhood and community participation; 6) identify both national and regional methods to raise funds for LDI. At the 2003 General Convention in Detroit they reported the completion of each of the benchmarks. Based on brothers' leadership and support, LDI is poised to be one of Alpha's greatest legacies.

For more information about LDI, please contact:

      Alex DeJarnett
      Leadership Development Chair
      3550 Helton Drive G-4
      Florence, AL 35630
      (256) 740-0589
      
LDI@apa1906.net


      


© 2009 Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. - Pi Upsilon Lambda Chapter

Established 1993 - P.O. BOX 3766 Capitol Heights, MD  20791

All Rights Reserved

For more information about the chapter, send an email to info@pul1906.org