'High school Fraternities and sororities', or secondary
Fraternities and sororities, are
social fraternities and sororities for high school-aged men and women. Most secondary fraternities and sororities, like their college counterparts, have Greek-letter names. Although there were countless local high school fraternities and sororities with only one or two chapters, many secondary fraternities founded in the nineteenth and twentieth century
United States grew into national organizations with a highly evolved governing structure and regularly chartered chapters in multiple regions. Most of the local chapters of these national fraternities were not tied to (or affiliated with) individual
high schools but were instead area based, often drawing membership from multiple
high schools in a given area.
High school fraternities and sororities were inspired by, and modeled after, the Greek-letter
fraternities which became prevalent in
North American colleges and
universities during the nineteenth century (Owen 492). Most of the American secondary fraternities that were successful in the twentieth century had national governing body, produced regular publications and convened in regular (often annual) national conventions. They also each possessed a secret ritual and handshake and a Greek-letter name which, like college
fraternities, was derived from the abbreviation of a secret Greek motto. These groups were identified by a coat-of-arms and members wore distinctive fraternity badges, or pins.
The
Mississippi code of 1972 addressed these organizations and defined them as "any organization composed wholly, or in part, of public
high school pupils, which seeks to perpetuate itself by taking in additional members from the pupils enrolled in such high school on the basis of the decision of the membership of such fraternity, sorority or secret society, rather than upon the free choice of any pupil in the school." Today, however, at least one high school fraternity has stepped outside of this definition as
Sigma Alpha Rho, in the 9
th edition of its handbook states that "blackball votes are considered undemocratic."
Some of the more successful high school fraternities included Delta Sigma (ΔΣ), Gamma Delta Psi (ΓΔΨ),
Phi Kappa (ΦΚ), Phi Lambda Epsilon
[1] (ΦΛΕ), Phi Sigma Chi (ΦΣΧ), Phi Sigma Epsilon (ΦΣΕ),
Sigma Phi Omega (ΣΦΩ) and
Theta Kappa Omega (ΘΚΩ). Most of these once-powerful national groups have fallen apart after long term opposition from teachers and administrators beginning at least as early as 1906(Owen 493) and continuing through the 1920s when Glen Perkins called them "a problem recognized by all school men" and claimed that "no one familiar with boys and girls of high school age would argue in favor of [them]."
Sigma Alpha Rho (SAR) (ΣAP) and
Tau Epsilon Chi (TEX) are a Jewish secondary fraternity and sorority respectively that are still active today.
SAR was founded in
1917 in
West Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, while
TEX was founded in
Atlantic City,
New Jersey in
1921. These two organizations have proved a general exception to the rule of weak and dying organizations as they continue to provide valuable learning and life experiences today. Both allow their members to plan, execute, and attend any events that they wish and bring the entire organization together with semi-annual conventions.
''See Also:'' ''
List of high school fraternities and sororities''
References
★ Owen, William Bishop. "The Problem of the High School Fraternity" The School Review Vol. 14 No. 7 492-504. The University of Chicago Press, 1906.
★
Sigma Alpha Rho Handbook, 9th Edition
★ Perkins, Glen O. "The Elimination of Fraternities and Sororities in the Tucson High School" The School Review, Vol. 31, No. 3. (Mar., 1923), pp. 224-226.