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Student Alumni Council members collectively spanning nearly a decade and a half gathered on campus this fall. Top row from left: Savina Ross, CAHS '06; Jenna Yoder, Bus '10; Rachel Brookbank, Ed '08; Brad Johnson, DAAP '08. Bottom row from left: David Slack, Eng '98; Tami Lanham, Ed '97, '00; Anna Godby, Bus '06; Christina Wagner, Bus '06; Drew McKenzie, Bus '05. |
Cultivating engagement and spirit among students is the mission of the Student Alumni Council (SAC), a group of about 60 undergraduates organized under the umbrella of the University of Cincinnati Alumni Association.
"UC is a great university with a rich history," says Brad Johnson, DAAP '08, current SAC president who quickly developed fierce Bearcat pride upon arriving in 2003 from Raleigh, N.C. "Of course, we recognize and honor our alma mater as alumni, but it should start while we're students.
"To that end, the Student Alumni Council works toward creating a greater 'alumni culture' on campus today so that we'll have a more vibrant alumni family tomorrow. Our work is aligned with the work of the UC Alumni Association so that we can get a good start on stewarding this vital, lifelong relationship between individuals and their university."
The group takes its mission seriously and comes by its reputation honestly. It currently holds the Metro Spirit Cup, awarded annually by UC's Men of Metro to the student organization demonstrating the greatest spirit and attendance at various campus and athletic events. Furthermore, SAC was named UC's top student organization overall (out of more than 300 groups) twice in the past five years.
"Traditionally, alumni are the enduring 'keepers of the school spirit,' and we're proud that SACers are living and spreading this passion more than any other UC student group," Johnson says.
Founded in the early 1980s, the Student Alumni Council boasts more than 500 alumni carrying the organization's ideals into successful careers worldwide. Membership is coveted; each year more than 100 candidates seek to join, with only about 20 selected through a process that leverages the full membership's participation.
"Our mission is very important in the big picture of UC's ongoing success, which means membership is an honor and responsibility," Johnson adds. "We feel a sense of 'passing the torch' as we move through our time as students, so we're all involved as our membership process helps define the organization. After all, SAC is our people and passion."
From the Alumni Association's perspective, the Student Alumni Council serves the university's needs in key ways.
"The UCAA is very interested in student development because we understand the direct correlation between engagement and leadership as students and then later as alumni," says Jessica Kinnemeyer, Bus '06, past SAC president. Like many of her peers, she formed her Alumni Association connection as a student, then continued in her active role as an alumna; she's now chair of UCAA's Young Alumni Scholarship Committee.
Student Alumni Council's mission manifests itself in a variety of tangible ways, including:
- Volunteer work at such events as the annual Crosstown Helpout community service day, Commencement, Convocation and pre-game events at the Myers Alumni Center
- Coordination of the annual Sibs Weekend, in which UC students invite their younger brothers and sisters to join them for two days of activities
- The assembly and marketing of Welcome Kits for incoming freshmen, which parents purchase for delivery during a new student's first few days on campus
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The Bearcats fought Louisville to take back the Keg of Nails at this year's Homecoming. |
The University of Cincinnati's Alumni Association has always had a student Homecoming Committee to help stage the annual event, with the group typically consisting of mostly Student Alumni Council members. So last year, SAC accepted UCAA's offer to take greater ownership of the planning, production, coordination and implementation, while still working under UCAA's advisement.
"The Student Alumni Council worked year-round to effectively 'place students at the center' of the event as appropriate, while making it more special for alumni," says UCAA program manager Steve Rosfeld, A&S '04. "And there's a succession plan within SAC to bring new members into the process, let them gain experience, then migrate them into leadership positions. This ensures fresh ideas, greater student involvement and a better Homecoming experience for all."
This year's result: Homecoming 2007, which drew tens of thousands of UC alumni and friends to campus on Oct. 13, was essentially a student-driven experience with the Student Alumni Council collaborating with other groups across campus, which further strengthens the bond between UC's current and future alumni.
'The Red & Black' book
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"The Red and Black" book tells new students what it means to be a Bearcat. |
"We had already begun to more closely evaluate our organizational mission," SAC president Brad Johnson says. "Here came this new opportunity to impact our new students -- to let freshmen understand right away that UC is a special place with great history and pride and that they are now a part of it. They're in a long line of Bearcats for whom UC has tremendous lifelong importance and value."
Led by the initiative's executive director, Brittney Hyde, Eng '07, SACers completely developed the project into a volume called "The Red & Black," with copies distributed to the 4,000 incoming freshmen at Freshman Convocation in September. Books are available for purchase through the UC Alumni Association or UC Bookstore.
"This is just the beginning," says Ryan Vose, Eng '08, who was executive editor. "Student Alumni Council plans to update and distribute 'The Red & Black' each year, creating a new UC tradition even as it tells our newest Bearcats about all of our old traditions."
'The Red & Black' As SAC members attended the annual Association of Student Advancement Programs (ASAP) Conference in mid-2006, they saw great potential in adapting an initiative of their counterparts at the University of Florida into a UC project -- a book that speaks to new students about what it means to be a Bearcat from historical, cultural, social and practical perspectives.
"We had already begun to more closely evaluate our organizational mission," SAC president Brad Johnson says. "Here came this new opportunity to impact our new students -- to let freshmen understand right away that UC is a special place with great history and pride and that they are now a part of it. They're in a long line of Bearcats for whom UC has tremendous lifelong importance and value."
Led by the initiative's executive director, Brittney Hyde, Eng '07, SACers completely developed the project into a volume called "The Red & Black," with copies distributed to the 4,000 incoming freshmen at Freshman Convocation in September. Books are available for purchase through the UC Alumni Association or UC Bookstore.
"This is just the beginning," says Ryan Vose, Eng '08, who was executive editor. "Student Alumni Council plans to update and distribute 'The Red & Black' each year, creating a new UC tradition even as it tells our newest Bearcats about all of our old traditions."
Visit the Homecoming gallery
Read about the Homecoming game