Fraternities Matter

Fraternities have stood the test of time. The first fraternity was formed the same year the Declaration of Independence was signed. With nearly 250 years of history behind us, fraternities have shown how bringing men together around friendship, scholarship and service fosters incredible personal growth and belonging, providing significance for a lifetime.

But the challenges fraternities face today are real. Less men are going to college each year – making up only 40% of the student body. Even fewer are graduating, and higher education is projecting a further significant decline in enrollment over the next few years. Alcohol abuse, addiction and hazing continue to be problems that persist across college campuses. Experts are calling loneliness an “epidemic” among college men, and they are experiencing depression at increasing rates.

Today’s college men need fraternities
more than ever before.

Recent research has also proven how fraternities provide life-changing support, community and connection, and strong leadership development and professional networking to today’s college men.

This important research has enabled fraternities to make data-driven decisions to meet the needs of today’s students. From developing new programs to shifting recruitment strategies, solid data has given us the foundation from which to drive critical support to our chapters, undergraduates and volunteers. And it’s also given us the proof points we need to reshape the narrative around fraternities to potential members, parents, alumni, administrators and even the media.

By continuing our research, we can better understand the next generation of college men and how fraternities can evolve to attract them and provide them with a dynamic, fulfilling experience. And to continue to grow, we must position fraternities as essential in the eyes of our future members and key stakeholders.

Studies Show

  • Fraternities are an accelerator for success in college and beyond.
  • Fraternities create lifelong connection to the campus, community and friends.
  • Fraternity members experience stronger mental health.

The fraternity experience matters.

With your partnership and support, we can future-proof fraternities,
so they may provide life-changing value for generations of men yet to come.

Our Priorities

Uncovering the Truth

Shaping fraternities for today and tomorrow

The fraternity experience can be truly powerful. Done right, it is life-changing for men and fosters their success in college and beyond.

Conducting critical research shows fraternities which practices deliver that dynamic experience – and which don’t. And as we look ahead, we are eager to continue this research which can teach us what the next generation of college students could seek in the experience, helping to strengthen and evolve fraternities for the future.

Uncovering the Truth

  • What’s driving men’s college enrollment and retention trends
  • Understanding middle and high school boys – the next generation
  • Supporting mental health and well-being
  • Member development practices that prevent and curb hazing
  • Self-governance and peer leadership and intervention
  • Providing value to retain juniors and seniors in the fraternity experience
  • Guide how we shape fraternities for the future, including strategies around recruitment, programs and experiences, housing, risk prevention and more.
  • Highlight the value of fraternities to potential new members and their parents through targeted social media campaigns that drive recruitment leads.
  • Show volunteers, alumni and donors the value and impact of the mentorship and contributions.
  • Reshape the public narrative by positioning fraternities positively in the media.
  • Bolster donor and volunteer support for existing and new programs when the data shows evidence around what “works.”
  • Engage stakeholders in expert-led symposiums around key data, trends and their implications.
  • Provide educational resources for important audiences – volunteers, staffs, officers, higher ed partners – to lead their work.
  • Address challenges and respond to external headwinds and prohibitive actions with facts.

$750,000

Funds to cover ten studies over a two-year period at $75,000 each.

Amplifying our Value

And expanding our reach

Good PR is about reaching the audience where they are with what they need to hear. Our plan is to connect with high school seniors, their parents and school counselors through scholarship programs by sharing the value of the experience and drawing in men ready to seize involvement opportunities. We’ll pair this with targeted marketing and media outreach to continue to shape the narrative around fraternities in the public eye. Simply put, driving awareness and expanding our reach is the key to fraternities’ long-term growth and sustainability.

Amplifying our Value

  • Market to high school seniors and drive recruitment leads to fraternity chapters.
  • Focus marketing efforts on prospective members’ parents to highlight the authentic fraternity experience and its benefits.
  • Engaging in PR and media outreach to positively shape the narrative around fraternities.
  • Fraternity communities and chapters will have qualified recruitment leads driven directly to them.
  • Chapters will see a new pool of recruits, who are seeking the leadership opportunities and the community of support fraternities provide.
  • Scholarships will create access and affordability to the increasingly diverse student population, alleviating climbing student debt.
  • Parents will be more informed and readily able to support their sons in joining a fraternity.
  • Audiences will have a balanced look at fraternities, because media response and digital campaigns will focus on the benefits of the experience.

$750,000

Funds to cover outreach to high school seniors, education leaders and parents at $250,000 annually.

We Can’t Do This Without You

Your investment will help us address real-world problems while continuing to advance the fraternal community. We hope you’ll come alongside us as we seek to future-proof fraternities, together!

  • Ten critical research studies: $750,000 ($75,000 per study)
  • Outreach to high school seniors, education leaders and parents: $750,000 (three years at $250,000 annually)

TOTAL: $1,500,000

Contributions toward these projects may be one-time gifts or multi-year pledges made through the Foundation for Fraternal Excellence.

Giving Levels

Includes 5,000 complimentary “Making an Impact” brochures; three-year access to scholarship recipient list; public relations naming rights; research naming rights; three virtual, generic programs with research experts; three personalized in-person or virtual programs with research experts.

Includes 1,000 complimentary “Making an Impact” brochures; three-year access to scholarship recipient list; public relations naming rights.

Includes 3,000 complimentary “Making an Impact” brochures; three-year access to scholarship recipient list; public relations naming rights; research naming rights; two virtual, generic programs with research experts; one personalized in-person or virtual program with research experts.

Includes 250 complimentary “Making an Impact” brochures; three-year access to scholarship recipient list.

Includes: Three-year access to scholarship list; public relations naming rights; research naming rights; one virtual, generic program with research experts.

Organizations with less than 20 chapters will receive 100 complimentary “Making an Impact” brochures and three-year access to scholarship recipient list.

Donor Listing

We are grateful for each donor who has contributed to the campaign thus far. Without their generous gifts we would not be able to continue making an impact on the fraternity experience through research. This list was updated on May 6, 2022.

$150,000 & above$100,000 – $149,999
Phi Gamma DeltaAlpha Gamma Rho
Sigma Chi

$50,000 in Scholarships to be Awarded in Inaugural Men’s College Scholarship

The Foundation for Fraternal Excellence and the North American Interfraternity Conference are excited to announce the recipients of the inaugural Men’s College Scholarship designed to identify and reward outstanding high school seniors who have demonstrated an ability to excel in the fields of academics, extra-curricular school activities and community involvement. 

Men are going to college with less frequency than in the past, and not persisting to graduation at the same rates as women. According to The Wall Street Journal, at the close of the 2020-21 academic year, women made up 59.5% of college students, an all-time high, and men 40.5%, according to enrollment data from the National Student Clearinghouse, a nonprofit research group. U.S. colleges and universities had 1.5 million fewer students compared with five years ago, and men accounted for 71% of the decline. 

To counter this trend, a diverse group of fraternity alumni founded the Men’s College Scholarship Program to inspire college attendance and academic success by young men. A college education is important and opens many opportunities to students including the many potential benefits of fraternity membership. In fact, recent research has proven fraternities are more relevant than ever before and foster success in college and beyond. 

Fraternities create lifelong connections to campuses, communities and friends. Members are three times more likely to obtain an internship while in college and almost twice as likely to have a job waiting when they graduate. The research has also shown that fraternity members experience stronger mental health and are almost five times as likely to be satisfied with their lives as alumni. (Fraternity membership is not a scholarship requirement.) 

The 2022 scholarship recipients represent a wide variety of backgrounds from 29 different states and a third are first generation college students. We look forward to seeing this program grow in future years. 

The 2022 Scholarship Recipients:

2022 Men's College Scholarship

First NameMiddle NameLast NameHigh SchoolCityState
CarterStephenAlbanoColumbia High SchoolEast GreenbushNY
ArjunHAthalyeHigh Tech High SchoolSecaucusNJ
DevinADavisonG.W Carver Engineering and Science High SchoolPhiladelphiaPA
JordanMekhiEdwardsGeorge Westinghouse College PrepChicagoIL
CaydenMichaelFeemsterBentonville West High SchoolCentertonAR
TravelianAFieldsPlano West Senior High SchoolPlanoTX
AdrianFloresKapaun Mt Carmel Catholic High SchoolWichitaKS
JacobGasiorMaine East High SchoolPark RidgeIL
RaymundoHernandez Jr.Cathedral High SchoolEl PasoTX
MichaelAndrewHowardLost River High SchoolMerrillOR
HaoyangHuTMI EpiscopalSan AntonioTX
StevanJiangMonroe High SchoolMonroeOH
AbdulRasheedKamaraEleanor RooseveltGreenbeltMD
MichaelAnthonyLagoMiami Palmetto Senior HighPinecrestFL
IanLeeBaltimore City CollegeBaltimoreMD
RaefMakraiCapuchino High SchoolSan BrunoCA
MichaelNinoDon Bosco Cristo Rey High School Corporate Work Study ProgramTakoma ParkMD
JohnOdneyKIPP Academy Lynn CollegiateLynnMA
SamuelOtchereBroad Run High SchoolAshburnVA
LuisAlfonsoPerezVerbum Dei High SchoolLos AngelesCA
ConnorPhamMater Dei Catholic High SchoolChula VistaCA
FernandoRubioOrthopaedic Hospital Medical Magnet High SchoolLos AngelesCA
AnthonyTorres CarrilloSumner Academy of Arts & ScienceKansas CityKS
MatthewWheatonKing George High SchoolKing GeorgeVA
JonathonHYoungThompson High SchoolAlabasterAL

First NameMiddle NameLast NameHigh SchoolCityState
JourdanLeeArmstrongBloomington High School SouthBloomingtonIN
GarrattWilliamArmyMarin Catholic High SchoolKentfieldCA
KarthikAlwarBagavathyNeuqua Valley High SchoolNapervilleIL
EthanMacLaneBardKinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts (HSPVA)HoustonTX
JasonMBlainRancocas Valley Regional High SchoolMount HollyNJ
QuinnPBrennanKnoxville Catholic High SchoolKnoxvilleTN
AustinWilliamChapmanNaples High SchoolNaplesNY
ColbyWalkerDarnellEdmond North High SchoolEdmondOK
EvanBradleyEhlersWilliam Mason High SchoolMasonOH
JordanEnarleKlein Oak High SchoolSpringTX
AlexMichaelGaetoAlbuquerque AcademyAlbuquerqueNM
ArmanGasparyanFlorida Preparatory AcademyMelbourneFL
ChazJamesonGodleyPowers Catholic High SchoolFlintMI
BlakeKGreenTheodore Roosevelt High SchoolKentOH
KyleAndrewHoltanPrescott High SchoolPrescottWI
PeytonRHulighanDavid W. Butler High SchoolMatthewsNC
WilliamLimHuynhQueens High School for the Sciences at York CollegeJamaicaNY
WilliamKleebergerPerrysburg High SchoolPerrysburgOH
TheoSKruegerMount Mansfield Union HighschoolJerichoVT
MaxwellThomasKuenziHomestead High SchoolMequonWI
CooperJonathanLandGrace Christian SchoolRaleighNC
CadenLasleyCondor High SchoolOxnardCA
TateThomasMcDonaldCentaurus High SchoolLafayetteCO
AkshayMehtaBrownell TalbotOmahaNE
RyanMengoWorthington KilbourneColumbusOH
LoganPerryMilanovichCherry Creek High SchoolGreenwood VillageCO
TimothyLynnMiller IIITrinity Christian AcademyWillow ParkTX
ZacharyThomasMommaertsWest De Pere High SchoolDe PereWI
NicholasNgoc KhaiNguyenCypress High SchoolCypressCA
KeshavPatelCanton Preparatory High SchoolCantonMI
JustinTylerPecayoSouthwest Career and Technical AcademyLas VegasNV
LiamShuenPilarskiMillburn High SchoolMillburnNJ
JamesDavidPuttTuscarora High SchoolLeesburgVA
EvanRobertQueringMadonna High SchoolWeirtonWV
NakaiLucienstarReny-HamerNeah-Kah-Nie High SchoolRockawayOR
AleksandrJosephSallaySaint Ignatius College PrepChicagoIL
AlfredoSantillanAntonian College PreparatorySan AntonioTX
ColbyAlanSnyderWilson High SchoolWest LawnPA
BlakeAustinStanleyElkhorn High SchoolElkhornNE
JosephInnocentSuekThe School for the Talented and GiftedDallasTX
EvanRobertTroupThe Woodlands High SchoolSpringTX
DavidAlbertonewnVaqueraMoriarty High SchoolMoriartyNM
RohanRamVigMoorestown Friends SchoolMoorestownNJ
JonahVinasLa Salle AcademyProvidenceRI
EthanMichaelWaldeckWheeling Park High SchoolWheelingWV
JoshuaBrentWhittonC.E. Byrd High SchoolShreveportLA

Annual Meeting of Members

August 25, 2025

For several years, the NIC has successfully hosted the Annual Meeting of Members in conjunction with the Foundation for Fraternal Excellence Seminar, offering a dynamic dual experience at the Indianapolis Marriott Downtown in Indianapolis, Indiana.

2025 Schedule-at-a-Glance

The 2025 NIC session lineup will highlight critical topics for fraternal industry professionals. By attending the NIC Annual Meeting of Members, volunteer leaders and staff have access to timely and relevant education that offers direct application to further their work.

Schedule subject to change and will be updated as presenters and sessions are confirmed.

Sunday, August 24
FGA Symposium (FGA members only) 9 – 2 p.m.
Governing Council Meeting 1 – 3:30 p.m.
Jason N. Butler Memorial Gathering 4:30 – 5:45 p.m. (Round-trip transportation to Delta Chi Headquarters will be provided from the Indianapolis Marriott Downtown)

Monday, August 25
Keynote: Trends & Insights from the 2025 Donor & Alumni/ae Engagement Survey with Jeff Dubberly, Vice President at Cygnus Applied Research 9 – 10:30 a.m.
NIC Session I 10:30 – 12:00 p.m.
NIC Luncheon with Alliance Partner Recognition 12:30 – 1:30 p.m.
NIC Alliance Partner-Executive Speed Dating  1:30 – 2:30 p.m.
NIC Session II 1:30 – 2:30 p.m.
NIC Meeting of Members 3 – 4:30 p.m.
Networking Reception with Alliance Partners 5:15 – 6 p.m.

Who Should Register

  • NIC member organization executives
  • NIC member chapter support staff
  • NIC member volunteer leaders/board members

All registrants attending the Annual Meeting of Members will have the opportunity to attend the Meeting of Members, which will address the business of the Conference; network with Alliance Partners to discuss how their business could benefit your organization; and attend programming that is timely and relevant to the future of fraternity life.

When registering, we encourage you to consider if one of the following pre-con or fraternal foundation programs supports your role:

2025 Registration & Costs

Registration will open on May 1 and close on August 8.

  • Early-bird registration: May 1-June 30
  • Standard registration rates: July 1-July 31
  • Late registration rates: August 1-8

How to register: Log into FS Central through the button below and complete the 2025 NIC Annual Meeting & FFE Seminar registration form on the Events tab. Select “Monday Only – NIC Meeting” registration type to attend.

Annual Meeting of Members Registration Rates

Number of Organization Attendees Total Cost (Early-bird Rate) Total Cost (Standard Rate) Total Cost (Late Rate)
1 $300 $400 $500
2 $500 $600 $700
3-5 $750 $850 $950
6-10 $1,500 $1,600 $1,700
If you would like additional information about registering with bundle pricing, please contact Gretchen Foran with the number of attendees from your organization.

Do you have team members who support both the fraternity and foundation? Consider the registration options below: 

Register for the Dual Meeting experience (NIC Annual Meeting of Members & FFE Seminar). See 2025 schedule for more details about the Monday and Tuesday programming. 

Dual Meeting Registration Rates

Number of Organization Attendees Total Cost (Early-bird Rate) Total Cost (Standard Rate) Total Cost (Late Rate)
1 $550 $650 $750
8-10 $4,250 bundled rate $4,250 bundled rate $4,250 bundled rate

If you would like additional information about registering with bundle pricing, please contact Gretchen Foran with the number of attendees from your organization.

How to register for the NIC/FFE Dual Meeting: Log into FS Central through the button below and complete the 2025 NIC Annual Meeting of Members & FFE Seminar registration form on the Events tab. Select “Monday & Tuesday – Dual Meeting and/or FFE Seminar” registration type.

Location & Lodging

The event will take place at the Indianapolis Marriott Downtown.

  • A room block is available at the Indianapolis Marriott Downtown for attendees. NIC/FFE rates start at $184/night + taxes/fees for reservations booked by August 11, 2025.
  • In the event the Indianapolis Marriott Downtown room block is fully booked before August 11, attendees will be able to book their stay at the Courtyard by Marriott Downtown Indianapolis at a rate of $149/night + taxes/fees. The Courtyard is an 8-10 minute walk from the Indianapolis Marriott Downtown.

    Indianapolis Marriott Downtown
    350 West Maryland Street, Indianapolis, Indiana 46225

    Courtyard by Marriott Downtown Indianapolis
    601 W. Washington Street, Indianapolis, IN 46204

Cancellation Policy for NIC/FFE rate: Hotel cancellations made 48 hours or less before arrival will be subject to a charge of one night plus applicable taxes.

Questions?

Your contact by subject area or audience is:

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Shelton departing NIC staff for new venture

Indianapolis, December 21, 2021— The North American Interfraternity Conference (NIC) announces Todd Shelton will depart staff on December 31 to pursue independent communication and public relations consulting.

With two decades of strategic communication experience, Shelton joined the NIC in 2018 and has served as Chief Communication Officer since January 2019.

“We greatly appreciate Todd’s efforts on behalf of the NIC and the greater fraternal community,” said Judson Horras, NIC President & CEO. “We look forward to his continued success.”

During his time at the NIC, Shelton further developed industry-wide response protocols and resources and directed the communication strategy for the NIC and Foundation for Fraternal Excellence (FFE). He led the development and successful execution of the myFraternity proactive campaign. He provided leadership for rebrand efforts for the NIC and FFE and co-led the Stand Up To Harvard public relations effort in defense of the single-sex fraternity/sorority experience.

As Shelton exits, Hillary Brewer will continue her role as Director of Communication. Brewer joined the NIC staff this year from Alpha Omicron Pi Fraternity where she began her career in 2012 as an educational leadership consultant followed by a role in new chapter development for the women’s organization. Since 2015, she served the fraternity in communication roles including Creative Director for their award-winning efforts since 2019. She currently serves a volunteer role as Vice President of Programming on the board of directors for the Fraternity Communications Association.

Shelton will continue to provide communication project assistance to the NIC on a contract basis. Member fraternities and Interfraternity Councils should continue to email PR@nicfraternity.org for public relations assistance. Shelton can be reached at todd.shelton@yallcomm.com.

# # #

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What We Shared With 60 Minutes

Image: CBS

November, 28, 2021— Tonight, 60 Minutes ran a segment on the tragic death of Sam Martinez. Our condolences go to Sam’s family as we continue the fight to end hazing.

As an important stakeholder for fraternities, we want to ensure that you know about fraternities’ efforts to combat hazing through increased education, transparency and most importantly, accountability.

When NIC leadership communicated with 60 Minutes in July, the producers said the segment’s intended focus was to raise awareness of hazing and educate viewers on how fraternities and universities were addressing hazing. With this aim, NIC CEO Judson Horras agreed to sit down with Anderson Cooper to interview for the program.

Following his interview, the NIC shared thorough information with producers to ensure they had key facts as they prepared their segment. Unfortunately, the broadcast didn’t include much of this information or Jud’s interview, which focused on the progress our member fraternities — including Alpha Tau Omega  — and the Anti-Hazing Coalition are making to directly address the concerns the segment raised. 

Here’s the critical information missing from tonight’s broadcast: 

With almost half of high school students exposed to hazing and 55% of college students involved in clubs, athletics and organizations experience hazing, it is on all of us to educate all students on the danger. Hazing and hazing deaths have been documented since long before the United States was founded with one of the first documented U.S. deaths in 1737. 

The sheer scale and longevity of this societal problem clearly demonstrates that having anti-hazing policies, advisors, reporting hotlines, and education on its dangers are important to moving the needle, but are not enough. To impact this issue, we must recognize this is misconduct of individual students. Individuals who haze must feel impactful penalties.

To further address the issue, we formed the Anti-Hazing Coalition in 2018 as a collaboration of the North American Interfraternity Conferencethe National Panhellenic Conference and parents whose children were tragically killed by acts of hazing. The Coalition now includes nine additional interfraternal associations, hazing experts and higher education partners. Through our Coalition, fraternities and sororities are educating and advocating at both state and federal levels for tougher anti-hazing laws.

We’ve championed federal legislation to increase transparency around collegiate hazing incidents. The Report and Educate About Campus Hazing (REACH) Act and End All Hazing Acts would require colleges and universities to annually publish hazing incidents on their websites for all student organizations and teams, just as they do for other critical safety information required under the Clery Act.

For the past three years, the NIC and our Coalition have helped organize thousands of alumni, students and parents to actively lobby Congress in-person and virtually for passage of both Acts. To our knowledge, we are the only coalition that has invested resources at this scale focused on strengthening federal and state hazing laws.

The state level is where we can best impact criminal law. Our Coalition worked with prosecutors, legislators and parents to develop model state legislation to strengthen accountability for individuals, organizations or campuses involved in hazing.

Coalition lobbying efforts have thus far resulted in stricter hazing laws in Ohio, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Texas, Florida, Georgia and Louisiana. In Ohio for example where NIC President and CEO Judson Horras testified to urge passage, Collin’s law broadens the definition to hazing, increases penalties, requires reporting of hazing to authorities, and mandates education for all students and advisors.

The Coalition is also committed to education around hazing. Our parents’ programs in the last three years have provided education to over 130,000 college students on more than 100 campuses and virtually. It is critical to build a culture that empowers students with “if you see something, say something.”

Our efforts to educate and advocate continue. We are seeking to better inform our efforts with upcoming research studies around hazing through the Postsecondary Education Research Center (PERC) at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and the Timothy J. Piazza Center for Fraternity and Sorority Research and Reform at Penn State.

In addition to our anti-hazing efforts, all members of the North American Interfraternity Conference came together to pass new, critical health and safety standards that built upon existing fraternal prevention efforts and programs. Three important measures included implementing medical Good Samaritan policies, raising the bar for health and safety programming and addressing alcohol abuse. A further effort, which went into effect in 2019, is a hard alcohol prohibition in fraternity chapter facilities and events.

Hazing, or bullying as it is sometimes known to younger students, has been a pervasive issue across this country for centuries. Rather than ignore it or shift responsibility for change to others, fraternities are leading in efforts to make an impact for a safer campus community. We invite other organizations to work with us to change the culture.

Sincerely,

The members of the North American Interfraternity Conference Governing Council

Rex Martin, Alpha Gamma Rho
Wynn Smiley, Alpha Tau Omega
Jeff Rundle, Beta Theta Pi
Jerod Breit, Delta Chi
Phil Rodriguez, Delta Sigma Phi
Jack Kreman, Delta Tau Delta
Justin Kirk, Delta Upsilon
Christian Wiggins, FarmHouse
Kevin Bennett, Iota Phi Theta Fraternity, Inc.
Buddy Coté, Phi Gamma Delta
Ron Ransom, Phi Kappa Psi
Tim Hudson, Phi Kappa Tau
Justin Buck, Pi Kappa Alpha
Mark Timmes, Pi Kappa Phi
Chris Hancock, Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Mike Greenberg, Sigma Chi
Brad Beacham, Sigma Nu
Tim Smith, Tau Epsilon Phi
Tanner Marcantel, Theta Xi
Libby Anderson, Zeta Beta Tau
Judson Horras, NIC President and CEO

(Media Contact: Todd Shelton)

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