What Organization Fit your ideals best?

A vibrant and engaging illustration showcasing diverse women participating in community service, education, and empowerment activities, symbolizing sisterhood and unity in a sorority setting.

Find Your Ideal Sorority

Take this comprehensive quiz to discover which sorority resonates most with your values and ideals. Answer a series of thought-provoking questions that will help you evaluate your preferences in areas such as community service, educational initiatives, and sisterhood.

  • Evaluate your beliefs on social action.
  • Reflect on the type of health and economic initiatives you support.
  • Explore your connection to various sorority missions.
15 Questions4 MinutesCreated by EmpoweringVoice27
Would you like your organization to have Affiliate Auxiliaries? I.E Affiliate Auxiliaries are a group of Non-degree seeking women who are not a part of your organization, but are interested and committed to helping the sorority execute the national programs of organization.
Yes
No
Would you like your organization to change it's National Programs frequently as society changes ?
Yes
No
If you could choose one quote that represents your mindset or describes you the most, which one would you choose?
Greater Service, Greater Progress
Intelligence is the Torch of Wisdom
A Community Conscious, Action oriented Woman
By Culture and By Merit
If you could only choose one mission to dedicate your life to, which one would you choose?
Commit to the constructive development of black women and to public service with an emphasis on the black community.
To cultivate and encourage high scholastic and ethical standards, to promote unity and friendship among college women, to study and help alleviate problems concerning girls and women in order to improve their social stature, to maintain a progressive interest in college life, and to be of service to ALL mankind
To foster the ideals of service, charity, scholarship, civil and cultural endeavors, sisterhood, and finer womanhood.
To enhance the life of women and their families in the U.S and Globally, through community service, civil, and social action. To achieve greater progress in the areas of Education, Health Awareness, and Leadership Development.
Which Health initiative are you most likely to donate your life advocating for?
An internal wellness initiative created to promote self-care through physical wellness, emotional wellness, and awareness/advocacy. Specifically, the S.H.O.E. Challenge is the physical health component that encourages members to engage in healthy behaviors. S.H.O.E. Is an acronym for Self-care, Healthy Options, and Exercise.
Stork’s Nest is a community-based, prenatal, health promotion program for low-income pregnant women. The program is designed to promote prenatal care participation and healthy behaviors during pregnancy through two components-incentives and education. Stork’s Nest clients “earn” points toward incentives, such as maternity or baby care items, through a variety of positive, health-promoting activities; attending prenatal care appointments, participating in prenatal education classes, keeping appointments for well-baby visits,, etc. Thousands of women are serviced at Stork’s Nest all over the country every year. In addition to a Prematurity Awareness Program.
Project Cradle Care: Our goal is to have a positive impact on the quality of life for children who are born prematurely, or as a result of teen pregnancy. Program Benefits: Financial contributions to help improve the health of babies by preventing birth defects, premature birth, and infant mortality. Helps teen mothers prepare for life with a newborn. Supports teen mothers so they may continue their education and development.
Heart Health remains a focus as the sorority enhances its commitment to healthy hearts through fitness activities and walking. Chapters will be encouraged to form walking clubs and to invite the community to join the walking initiatives. Breast Cancer Awareness and Prevention will focus specifically on early detection through mammograms to improve the survival rate of women diagnosed with breast cancer. Mobile Breast Cancer Screening Unit that will travel to various locations and provide mammogram screening. Chapters will partner with local clinics, rural health centers, and hospitals to emphasize the need for African-American women to receive regular mammograms.
Which Economic initiative are you most likely to spend your life advocating for?
Personal Financial Planning and Asset Accumulation. Financial Freedom Legacy Workshops will be conducted in partnership with local certified financial planners who will share information on saving, investing, and retirement planning. Chapters will train community residents on ways to perform financial assessments to achieve their financial goals. • Credit Repair and Monitoring. This initiative will focus on ways to repair credit and improve credit scores including how to check for inaccurate or outdated information in credit reports, and how to protect against both identity theft and unauthorized credit history use. • Entrepreneurship and the Black Dollar 365. This initiative will highlight and promote successful African-American owned businesses with an aim toward spawning new entrepreneurial ventures in our communities by encouraging intentional support and leveraging the power of the black dollar 365 days a year. • Operation AKA Assist. This initiative will focus on implementing
I don't have an economic issue I would spend my life advocating for.
An initiative is comprised of ten components and provides a collaboration of information from major economic corporations and other well-known financial institutions. The ten components include: Goal Setting, Financial Planning, Budgeting, Debt Management, Savings & Investments, Retirement Planning, Homeownership, Insurance, Estate Planning, and Entrepreneurship.
Which Set of Education Initiatives are you most connected to and likely to advocate for during your lifetime?
The EMBODI (Empowering Males to Build Opportunities for Developing Independence) program is designed to refocus the efforts of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated, with the support and action of other major organizations, on the plight of African-American males. Both informal and empirical data suggests that the vast majority of African-American males continue to be in crisis and are not reaching their fullest potential educationally, socially and emotionally. EMBODI is designed to address these issues through dialogue and recommendations for change and action. EMBODI addresses issues related to STEM education, culture, self-efficacy, leadership, physical and mental health, healthy lifestyle choices, character, ethics, relationships, college readiness, fiscal management, civic engagement and service learning. Also, A program was created to catch the dreams of African-American at-risk, adolescent girls aged 14-18. It provides the framework to actualize those dreams through the performance of specific tasks that develop a CAN DO attitude. The goals for the program are: To instill the need to excel academically; To provide tools that enable girls to sharpen and enhance their skills to achieve high levels of academic success; To assist girls in proper goal setting and planning for their futures in high school and beyond; and To create compassionate, caring, and community-minded young women by actively involving them in service learning and community service opportunities. The program offers a road map for college and career planning through activities that provide opportunities for self-reflection and individual growth.
Chapters will promote and market historically black colleges and universities and encourage students to attend HBCUs as a sustainability measure. Recognizing that HBCU funding is one of the primary obstacles that threaten the long-term growth and survival of HBCUs, members will be encouraged to financially support HBCUs. Signature Program:CAP, Sorority will assist students as they seek admission to college by providing guidance and support in completing the application and enrollment process. Too many African-American high school students lack the basic support needed to navigate through the college admissions process. Through #CAP, chapters will partner with local high schools and youth groups to bridge the gap between high school and college by demystifying the college application and enrollment process. This educational initiative will extend to all colleges and universities, both HBCUs and non-HBCUs. #CAPSM is a step-by-step approach to facilitate college admission from researching various institutions and submitting applications through completion of the enrollment process. Chapters will assist students in completing college applications, preparing for the ACT and SAT, writing compelling personal statements, identifying scholarships and other financial aid, and compiling a portfolio to track college admission results.
Adopt-A-School allows members to identify low performing schools and provide assistance in a number of ways to enhance the educational experience, increase test scores and grades. Members purchase supplies and/or equipment, provide volunteer hours, assist with parent engagement programs and work with administrators to identify needs that may be specific to that particular school.
Annual Youth Symposium: Youth Symposium serves as a unifying effort. Symposium (supported by undergraduate chapters and affiliates) is designed to highlight some of the prevalent concerns that negatively impact our youth (drugs, teen violence, abuse, low self-esteem, suicide, teen pregnancy, human trafficking, etc.). Our goal is to be relevant in the lives of our youth. Program Benefits: Improved educational outcomes. Improved behavioral outcomes. A highly anticipated annual event supported by local communities. Also, OperationBigBookBag is a program designed to address the needs, challenges and issues that face school-aged children who are educationally at-risk, in local homeless shelters and extended-care hospitals and facilities. Through this program, chapters and members collect and donate educational materials, equipment and school supplies. Our goal is to: Provide quick and easy access to reference materials and other studying aids and tools that will help students with educational endeavors. Equip students with the means of completing their homework assignments in effort to keep them current and up to date. Assist shelters, youth centers, schools and hospitals in their efforts to meet some of the educational needs of children and young adults housed at their facilities.
Do you believe in the statement, "Quality over Quantity"?
Yes
No
Which set of principles define you the most, or you would like to define you someday?( Order of words show level of importance)
Sisterhood, Scholarship, Service, and Social Action
Scholarship, Service, and Sisterhood
Sisterhood, Scholarship, and Service to ALL Mankind
Scholarship, Service, Sisterly Love, and Finer Womanhood
Which activity would you most likely have participated in the early 1900s?
Participate in Women's Suffrage March
Dress dolls and make toys for needy children at a local hospital.
Create a new chapter in Africa
Battle racism on a PWI campus
Which unique program means the most to you?
The sorority will expose students to arts enrichment and culture by focusing on visual and performing arts and by showcasing talent through the exploration of writers, entertainers and various other artists. • Salute to the Harlem Renaissance will celebrate the contributions of African-American artists during the Harlem Renaissance through student research and chapter sponsorship of student talent showcases. This initiative will correlate with HBCUs and African-American culture and will include colleges with art collections. • Salute to the Black Arts Movement will focus on student research and celebration of African-American artists during the Black Arts Movement.
Swim 1922 was created to address the unfortunate truth that according to the CDC, approximately 10 people drown every day in the U.S.A. An even more startling fact is that 70 percent of African American children and 60 percent of Hispanic children in the U.S. Do not know how to swim. Additionally, African American children are three times more likely to drown than Caucasian children. Swim 1922 campaign aims to address this disparity by having. Olympians and members of the sorority teach the community about water safety and how to swim. Our goal is to strengthen USA Swimming’s commitment to diversity and inclusion by breaking down barriers, created by a lack of access and exposure, and expanding our footprint in the local community to increase swim participation and decrease drowning rates. Program Benefits: Provides opportunities for youth and adults within the African-American community to learn water safety in general and swimming specifically. Reduces the level of fear and apprehension of learning to swim. Opens minds and changes attitudes regarding Blacks and swimming.
Elder Care Initiative strives to provide education and awareness about preparing for your senior years. The African American community is least prepared when it comes to retirement, estate planning and understanding the legal and financial preparation needed to care for parents, grandparents and ultimately, for our own long term care. It is a comprehensive program that also focuses on elder abuse awareness, financial peace, supporting the caregiver and volunteering at senior care facilities andWorld Elder Abuse Awareness Day, June 15, kicks off our campaign to distribute information in our communities on identifying signs of elder abuse and where victims can go for assistance. According to Ageless Alliance, 1 out of 10 older adults are victims of abuse. Members throughout the country place informational table tents in restaurants, businesses, churches and libraries all over the country.
ORPHANAGE FOR CHILDREN OF AIDS VICTIMS Dedicated in 2002, the AD is a home for children who became orphans due to the HIV/AIDS pandemic. It is located in what is now known as Vashti Village, in Mbabane, Swaziland along with two similar structures. Built to accommodate 12 children and a housemother, Situated in a picturesque valley, an expansive vegetable garden flourishes behind the Delta House where residents (most of whom are adolescents) grow some of their own food. The village is still a work in progress with an office complex, conference center, church, and apartments envisioned for the future.
Do you want to be in an organization constitutionally bound to another organization?
Yes
No
Would you like for your organization to have a branch designated to Political Awareness and Involvement?
Yes
No
Do you want your organization to have lots of chapters and members, or be smaller in size?
Smaller
Larger
What sorority do you think bests fits you?
DST
AKA
SGRHO
ZPhiB
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