Kappa Delta Pi

American honor society for education From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kappa Delta Pi Honor Society in Education (ΚΔΠ or KDP) is an American honor society for education. It was formed in 1911 at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign as one of the first discipline-specific honor societies.

FoundedMarch 8, 1911; 115 years ago (1911-03-08)
University of Illinois
TypeHonor
AffiliationIndependent
Former affiliationACHS
Quick facts Founded, Type ...
Kappa Delta Pi
ΚΔΠ
FoundedMarch 8, 1911; 115 years ago (1911-03-08)
University of Illinois
TypeHonor
AffiliationIndependent
Former affiliationACHS
StatusActive
EmphasisEducation
ScopeInternational
Motto"Knowledge. Duty. Power."
PillarsCommunity, Belonging, Leadership, Celebration
Member badge
Colors  Purple and   Gold
FlowerViolet
PublicationThe Educational Forum
Chapters543 active
Members20,000+ active
1,200,000 lifetime
HeadquartersPO Box 681008
Indianapolis, Indiana 46268
United States
Websitewww.kdp.org
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History

Kappa Delta Pi grew out of the Illinois Education Club, founded by Dr. William Bagley at the University of Illinois in 1909.[1][2][3] In May 1909, the club affiliated with Pi Kappa Mu, with plans on becoming a chapter.[4] However, when Pi Kappa Mu began plans to merge with Phi Delta Kappa (PDK International), the Illinois Education Club withdrew its merger application as this meant that it would have to give up its coeducational status.[5]

Instead, Bagley and the club's members formed the first chapter of Kappa Delta Pi, a coeducational national honorary educational fraternity.[5] Kappa Delta Pi was formed as an educational fraternity that would provide a fellowship for education students and promote excellence in education.[3] Alpha chapter was installed at the University of Illinois on March 8, 1911.[5] The fraternity was incorporated with the State of Illinois on June 8, 1911.[1][2]

A second chapter, Beta, was established at the University of Colorado in 1912.[2] This was followed by Gamma chapter at the University of Oklahoma in 1915 and Delta at the University of Texas in 1916.[2]

Its Laureate chapter was established in February 1924 to honor people who had made outstanding contributions to the development of professional education, similar to the National Academy of Science of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.[1][6][2] John Dewey was inducted as the first member of the society's Laureate chapter.[6]

By 1930, Kappa Delta Pi had chartered 62 chapters.[2] In 1932, it changed from being a "fraternity" to a "society".[1] The society's publication, The Educational Forum, was first published in 1936.[7]

By 1963, the society had initiated 177,782 members and had 294 active chapters, 12 inactive chapters, and 16 alumni chapters.[1] Kappa Delta Pi was a member of the Association of College Honor Societies from 1974 to 2008.

As of 2025, Kappa Delta Pi has more than 20,000 active members and more than one million initiates.[8]

Symbols

The name Kappa Delta Pi was selected from its motto "Knowledge, Duty, Power".[3][9] The society's core values or pillars are Community, Belonging, Leadership, and Celebration.[8] Its colors are purple and gold.[10] Its flower is the violet.[10]

Kappa Delta Pi's insignia is a gold key that is shaped like a scroll, pierced by a stylus, and bears the Greek letters "ΚΔΠ", with the letter "Δ" placed on top of a beehive.[1][11] The scroll represents ancient scrolls of papyrus, the earliest documents of learning.[11] The stylus symbolizes the first tool used to make letters and symbols, and the beehive represents toil.[11] The insignia was produced as a key for men and a pin for women.[11]

Membership

Membership is open only to the top twenty percent of those entering the education field. In addition, undergraduates must have a 3.0 GPA and graduate students a 3.50 GPA. Membership for active professionals varies.[12]

The society's Laureate Chapter is limited to sixty living members at any time.[1]

Activities

Kappa Delta Pi holds annual regional meetings and a biennial convocation where it conducts organizational business.[13] The society also sponsors an awards program and national service projects.The society holds annual regional meetings and a biennial convocation where it conducts organizational business and provides professional development opportunities.[13]

Kappa Delta Pi published the scholarly journal The Educational Forum and the weekly online weekly The Teacher Advocate.[1][14][15] It also published the peer-reviewed The Kappa Delta Pi Record from 1964 to 2023.[16] It also produces The Rooted Teacher Podcast.[17]

The society's educational foundation and local chapters distribute multiple scholarships to members.[13][18] Local chapters provide opportunities for networking, leadership training, community service, and professional development.[19][13] Members can also participate in professional development through the Kappa Delta Pi website.[19]

Governance

Kappa Delta Pi is led by a national board of directors, drawn from the society's three standing committees.[20] The society's national office in Indianapolis, Indiana.[8]

Chapters

As of 2025, Kappa Delta Pi has chartered more than 860 chapters, with 543 active collegiate chapters and four active professional or alumni chapters.[8]

Notable people

Notable members

Laureates

Since 1924, 293 eminent educators have been named to Kappa Delta Pi's Laureate chapter.[6]

Further reading

  • Labisky, Hope. "Beginnings... the Illinois Education Club". Kappa Delta Pi Record, vol. 22, no 3 (1986), pp. 67–68. via Taylor & Francis. doi.org/10.1080/00228958.1986.10517756

References

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