Executive Director Elected Mississippi Humanities Chair
Phi Theta Kappa Executive Director Rod A. Risley has been elected Chair
of the Mississippi Humanities
Council, a private nonprofit corporation funded by Congress
through the National Endowment for the Humanities.
The Council
sponsors, supports, and conducts a wide range of programs designed to promote
understanding of Mississippi's cultural heritage, interpret common
experience, foster critical thinking, encourage reasonable public discourse,
strengthen a sense of community, and set a vision for the future.
Risley
was elected to a two-year term. He succeeds Dr. Willis Lott, president of
Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College. Community colleges have a tradition
of involvement with the Mississippi Humanities Council, Risley said.
The Council's founding Executive Director, Dr. Cora Norman, is a Phi Theta
Kappa alumna, and past Chairs of the Council also include Dr. Ted Alexander,
former president of Pearl River Community College, and Dr. Billy Thames,
former president of Copiah-Lincoln Community College.
"If
ever there was a perfect marriage of missions, it would be a marriage of community
colleges and state humanities councils," said Risley. "Community colleges
serve as community and cultural building institutions. State humanities
councils build community and cultural appreciation by conducting and
sponsoring community-based programs that serve to inform, educate and
unify diverse audiences. Often, it is only through open discussion of important
and sometimes contentious issues, that we are able to build cultural understanding
and appreciation, and find common ground."
Risley was named
Phi Theta Kappa's second Executive Director in 1985. He is a graduate of
San Jacinto College and received a baccalaureate degree from Sam Houston
State University. Risley received a master of business administration
degree from Millsaps College. He is currently completing his doctoral
dissertation in the Community College Leadership Program at Mississippi
State University.
Since Risley became executive director,
Phi Theta Kappa has experienced unparalleled growth, doubling the numbers
of chapters and increasing membership by some 400 percent. Phi Theta Kappa
has become a strong presence in the international higher education arena,
and in 2006 chartered chapters in the United Arab Emirates, the British
Virgin Islands, and the Pacific republics of Palau, Micronesia and the
Marshall Islands. The Society inducts nearly 100,000 students annually,
and is the largest honor society in higher education in terms of chapters
and number of members.
Risley recently announced plans to launch
a new initiative to help all community college students begin to plan their
transfer from the time of their enrollment in their two-year institution.
The program will specifically address such challenges pertinent to community
college students as access to counselors and information concerning financial
aid, transfer credits and transfer procedures.
Risley also
helped create Phi Theta Kappa's nationally acclaimed Leadership Development
Studies Program, which is now offered in 400 colleges in 49 states.
Under
Risley's leadership, procurement of scholarship funds for Phi Theta Kappa
members has been a top priority. Today, more than 600 four-year colleges
and universities in all 50 states, Canada and Great Britain, in addition
to four online institutions, offer $36 million in scholarships exclusively
for Phi Theta Kappa members.
He led efforts to establish the
All-USA Academic Team for Community and Junior Colleges, the New Century
Scholars Program, the All-State Academic Team Program, the Guistwhite
Scholarships and the Leaders of Promise Scholarships, all providing financial
resources to assist community college students in their educational pursuits.
Through
Risley's leadership, Phi Theta Kappa helped to establish the first formal
collaborative relationship among honor societies in senior colleges,
two-year colleges, and high schools. Phi Beta Kappa, the National Honor
Society for high schools students and Phi Theta Kappa announced the formation
of The Alliance for Educational Excellence, a unified programming initiative
to advance general studies at all levels of education.
Risley
serves on the National Commission for Academic and Student Development
for the American Association of Community Colleges (AACC), and on the Board
for the Mississippi Center for Non-profit Organizations. He has served
as a grant reviewer for the National Science Foundation and AACC, and a national
judge for the Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation, Jack Kent Cooke Scholarship
Foundation, and Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. In 2001, he was
named a Fellow in the Mid-South Community College Fellowship Program.
Risley has been named a Distinguished Alumnus by the American Association
of Community Colleges and San Jacinto College.









