Eta_Sigma_Gamma

Eta Sigma Gamma

Eta Sigma Gamma (ΗΣΓ or ESG) is an honor society for health education. It was founded on August 14, 1967 at Ball State University "to elevate the standards, ideals, competence and ethics of professionally trained individuals in and for the health science discipline through teaching/education, service and research."

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History and Mission

ESG was founded at Ball State University by Drs. Robert Synovitz, Warren Schaller, and William Bock. The founding mission of ESG was "to further the professional competence and dedication of individual members in the health science discipline and the promotion of this discipline."[1] The Greek letters, ΗΣΓ, were chosen as the organization's letters as a representation of the letters "HSC", an abbreviation of the term health science.[2] It was formally incorporated in August 1967 in Indiana and the formal installation of Alpha chapter occurred on May 12, 1968.[2] Twenty-one current Ball State students, four former Ball State students and five faculty members were installed as the charter members of Alpha chapter.[3]

In 1999, Eta Sigma Gamma became a member of the Coalition of National Health Education Organizations in the United States.[4] In joining the Coalition, ESG joined the ranks of larger organizations including the Society for Public Health Education, American Public Health Association, American Association for Health Education, and American School Health Association.[4]

In 2017, the organization declared its inaugural class of Fellows of Eta Sigma Gamma who were described as "instrumental in the formation and development of the Honorary."[5] The 2017 class of fellows included founding officers and members, instrumental chapter advisors, and officers of the organization. Fellows are entitled and encouraged to use the post-nominal letters "FESG."

Membership

As of ####, there are ## members of Eta Sigma Gamma disbursed throughout the United States.[citation needed]

The primary path to membership is through a student membership with a chapter at an associated university. University students are eligible for membership after declaring a major or minor area of study in health education and meeting a minimum GPA requirement. Professional membership is available to individuals who have a degree in health education and apply to join the Chapter-at-Large.

Chapters

In addition to the national at-large professional chapter, the society has installed over 125 chapters, including the following.[6][7] Active chapters listed in bold, inactive chapters listed in italics.

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Notes

  1. The San Diego chapter went inactive in 2000
  2. The CNJ chapter went inactive in 1987.
  3. The Lincoln chapter went inactive in 1987.
  4. The Bowling Green chapter went inactive in 2010.
  5. The Purdue chapter went inactive in 2002.
  6. The Slippery Rock chapter went inactive in 2000.
  7. The UIUC chapter went inactive in 2009.
  8. The Russell Sage chapter went inactive in 1982.
  9. The Northern Colorado chapter went inactive in 2015.
  10. The Utah chapter went inactive in 2017.
  11. The Brigham Young chapter went inactive in 2002.
  12. The Bradley chapter went inactive in 2016 and was re-activated in 2021.

Notable members


References

  1. Eta Sigma Gamma, Articles of Incorporation. 1967, Aug. 14. Business ID 194525-049. Retrieved from https://inbiz.in.gov/BOS/Home/Index on 2020-09-07.
  2. Schaller, Warren (4 January 1975). "The Search for Excellence". Health Education. 6 (1). American Alliance for Health, Physical Education and Recreation: 19. doi:10.1080/00970050.1975.10618204. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  3. Capwell, Ellen M. (2004-03-01). "Coalition of National Health Education Organizations". Californian Journal of Health Promotion. 2 (1): 12–15. doi:10.32398/cjhp.v2i1.574. ISSN 1545-8725.
  4. "Eta Sigma Gamma | History". Retrieved 2020-09-07.
  5. 127 chapters were installed by August of 2012, according to ESG's published history, accessed 21 May 2022.
  6. EKU Stories: Students Inducted into Eta Sigma Gamma, news article published April 26, 2017.
  7. Lambda chapter of ΗΣΓ is noted on Indiana State University's Public Health department website, accessed 6 Feb 2021.
  8. "Eta Sigma Gamma". www.monmouth.edu. Retrieved 24 March 2021.

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