Following guidance from both state and university leaders regarding the COVID-19 situation, we are sorry to inform you that we have made the decision to cancel our initiation ceremony that was scheduled for April 2nd.
Following guidance from both state and university leaders regarding the COVID-19 situation, we are sorry to inform you that we have made the decision to cancel our initiation ceremony that was scheduled for April 2nd.
Be watching for your invitation to join the University of Mississippi chapter of Phi Kappa Phi due to your superior scholastic achievements. Phi Kappa Phi is the oldest and most selective interdisciplinary honor society at Ole Miss, and this invitation reflects your diligent efforts and commitment to scholarship and learning.
Spring initiation is Thursday, April 2, 2020, at 3 p.m. in the Gertrude Ford Center for the Performing Arts. If you wish to have your photograph taken for publication in your local newspaper, you will need to submit your information in an online form at https://news.olemiss.edu/phi-kappa-phi-hometown-news-form and then visit the Studio in Sam Gerard Hall the week prior to the ceremony (dates and times will be announced at a later date).
To accept this invitation and become a member of Phi Kappa Phi, please complete the application online by visiting this address: https://www.phikappaphi.org/join/chapters-list/the-university-of-mississippi. Required access codes are included in your invitation letter.
To become a member and have your certificate available and honor cord available at the initiation ceremony, your membership application must be submitted to Society headquarters as soon as possible and no later than Tuesday, March 17, 2020 (the access code will expire at midnight on that date).
Initiation in absentia is permitted only under certain circumstances. If you wish to be initiated in absentia, please notify Ms. Terry Blackmarr via email at tblackma@olemiss.edu before the March 17th application deadline, stating the reason you cannot attend the ceremony.
Membership in Phi Kappa Phi is a stamp of excellence recognized by graduate school admissions and employers, and when it’s time to apply for a job, scholarship or graduate program we encourage you to take advantage of these resources.
Don’t forget, downloadable Society logos are also available for members to include on their résumés and personalized press releases can be used to share achievements.
Click here to visit your member profile and access the new features in the Membership Documents tab. From there, you will be able to download and print your verification letter.
Member benefits are only available to active members and your member login is required to access many of the webpages listed above. Not active? Click here to renew your membership today. For assistance with your login, email webmaster@phikappaphi.org.
Questions? Contact Jamie Chapman at jchapman@phikappaphi.org or (800) 804-9880, ext. 217.
The spring 2019 Phi Kappa Phi induction ceremony took place April 4 at 3 p.m. in the Gertrude C. Ford Center for the Performing Arts. A record number of students took part in the celebration.
The image below congratulates all of the Phi Kappa Phi initiates for the University of Mississippi chapter for 2018-2019.
A successful Phi Kappa Phi induction ceremony took place at the University of Mississippi Medical Campus on October 17 in the Nelson Student Union.
The Ford Center was packed with friends, family, faculty and hundreds of students on Sunday, Oct. 14. The afternoon marked the 2018 fall induction ceremony for Phi Kappa Phi and its nearly 340 new initiates. That number set a record for the society, which has been active at Ole Miss since 1959.
Tony Ammeter, Ole Miss chapter president and Dean of General Studies, says the record numbers indicate an appreciation of the society’s value.
“I think that it means that more of our students realize that they have done something special by being high achievers academically and that, as lifelong learners, this academic achievement equips them with both the knowledge and the responsibility to help others be lifelong learners as well. This is part of the mission of Phi Kappa Phi,” he said.
As the country’s oldest and most selective honor society, Phi Kappa Phi can count among its members former Chancellor and alumnus of Ole Miss, Robert Khayat, former U.S. Senator and alumnus Thad Cochran, and best-selling novelist John Grisham.
“It’s an amazing experience to look out at the crowd and consider that one or more of the students sitting there may become our next great poet or president, win a Nobel Prize in chemistry or tackle a problem that will make the world a little better place,” said Deb Wenger, past president of the Ole Miss chapter and current board member.
The chapter adds new members from the medical campus once each year and holds both a fall and a spring ceremony in Oxford. The next round of students who meet the criteria to join will receive an invitation from the university in late February or early March.
Phi Kappa Phi was founded in 1897 by ten seniors at the University of Maine. The name Phi Kappa Phi comes from the initial letters of the Greek words which form the society’s motto – “let the love of learning rule humanity.”
Ammeter said this fall’s record-breaking ceremony was impressive.
“What resonated with me the most was the pride, potential, optimism and hopefulness that was on each student’s face and in their bearing as they walked across the stage to receive their Phi Kappa Phi honors cords, pin, and certificate. Our students are our future and from what we see all across campus, our future is bright,” he said.
The full list of names is below.
Hundreds of students, faculty and their families took part in the Spring ’18 induction for Phi Kappa Phi Ole Miss. Speaker Ralph Eubanks inspired and the inductees impressed at the Ford Center on April 5. Thanks to Chancellor Jeff Vitter and Provost Noel Wilkin for making the day even more special.
To see a complete list of the students inducted, view the pdf version of the program: Spring Program 2018.
Visit our Facebook page for more photos from the event.
This year marks the third in a row that a University of Mississippi student has been named a 2017 Walter and Adelheid Hohenstein Fellow from Phi Kappa Phi honor society, the nation’s oldest, largest, and most selective honor society in all areas of academia.
Elizabeth Wicks, who received a Bachelor of Arts degree in International Studies and French, while pursuing a minor in Chemistry from the University of Mississippi, has been named a 2017 fellow of Phi Kappa Phi and also received a $5,000 scholarship for her fellowship. The Ocean Springs native, who is currently in her first year at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, intends to use the money from her scholarship to further her education in the field of medicine.
“Phi Kappa Phi is an honor society with everyday excellence as its core value—a value that I believe we should all strive for from the moment we wake up each morning,” Wicks said. “Being a part of the Phi Kappa Phi Society enriched my experience at Ole Miss and introduced me to a lifelong community of citizen scholars across the nation who seek high values and humble service.”
“It has been truly rewarding to have the honor of being a part of this exceptional organization which focuses on a love of learning.”
Dr. Debora Wenger, Assistant Dean and Associate Professor of the Meek School of Journalism and New Media, is the current president of Phi Kappa Phi at University of Mississippi. She notes the significance of this scholarship for both Wicks and the school.
“This scholarship is an honor, not only for Elizabeth and our previous winners, but also for the University of Mississippi,” said Wenger. “The fact that we have had three students awarded national Phi Kappa Phi scholarships in the past three years proves to me, once again, that our students can compete against any in the country.”
Wicks intends to continue to pursue a career in global health and health policy with her degree in medicine from UMMC.
Past Phi Kappa Phi fellows include poet Rita Dove, YouTube co-founder Chad Hurley and two NASA scientists. Meghan Wagner, who is pursuing a Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of Mississippi, and Marcus Daniels, who earned a bachelor’s degree in biological science in 2015 and went on to medical school at Johns Hopkins University, are two past Phi Kappa Phi fellowship winners from Ole Miss.
“Being named a Phi Kappa Phi Walter and Adelheid Hohenstein Fellow has been an immense honor. I am thankful to have received this support and national recognition from the Phi Kappa Phi organization in order to pursue my career as a physician ” Wicks said.
Story contributed by Meek School of Journalism & New Media graduate student Pepper Taylor, pdtaylor@go.olemiss.edu.
The University of Mississippi chapter of Phi Kappa Phi honor society inducted 270 new members Sunday (Oct. 29), including three juniors from the same family.
Ann Weston, Katherine and Will Sistrunk, triplets from Springfield, Missouri, were inducted into the most selective interdisciplinary honor society at the university. All three are members of the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College.
“The invitation to be a member of Phi Kappa Phi is a great accomplishment and it is especially exciting to be inducted with my siblings, as I owe much of my success to the guidance and support of Katherine and Will,” Ann Weston said.
Ann Weston is a public policy leadership major and is seeking minors in Spanish and intelligence and security studies. She plans to pursue a career in global health policy upon completion of graduate school.
Also a public policy leadership major and a pre-nursing student, Katherine is minoring in Spanish and society and health. She wants to combine her love for public policy with a career in a health-related field.
Will is majoring in biology and pursuing minors in chemistry and society and health. He plans to attend medical school after graduating from Ole Miss.
“Being nominated for Phi Kappa Phi is an awesome honor and reward for me academically,” Will said. “It also is a reflection of the great opportunities I have had at Ole Miss, from advising in the Honors College to meeting with professors who are always willing to help. I am excited for all that Phi Kappa Phi has to offer.”
To receive an invitation to join Phi Kappa Phi, juniors must have completed at least 72 credit hours and rank in the top 7.5 percent of their class. All three made the cut.
Deb Wenger, Phi Kappa Phi chapter president and assistant dean for partnerships and innovation in the Meek School of Journalism and New Media, said this is the first time she is aware of triplets inducted into any chapter of Phi Kappa Phi.
The Sistrunks come from an Ole Miss family. Their parents, William and Camille Sistrunk, are university alumni and Mississippi natives, and when it came to the three choosing a college, UM was always a consideration.
“As we were considering colleges, we initially had varying ideas on where we wanted to go and what we wanted to study,” Katherine said. “At first, I thought it was a definite possibility that we would end up at different schools. But, as we continued to visit other universities, Ole Miss kept calling us back.
“Ever since we were little, we have called Mississippi our second home. Ole Miss has brought us friendships and memories, and we ultimately chose Ole Miss because it was not only where our family went to school, but because it felt like home.”
UM was where the three siblings felt most comfortable and could each pursue the major of their choice.
“We are all very close but independent and different in our own ways, and it was a great thing that we each decided Ole Miss was the right place for each of us,” Katherine said. “Aside from Ole Miss having so many outstanding academic and extracurricular opportunities in which to participate, choosing Ole Miss was like coming home, and I couldn’t image what my college experience would have been like without my family by my side.”
But it wasn’t just the culture and the legacy aspect that drew them in. The Sistrunks said the scholarships offered through Ole Miss were the most generous of any institution to which they applied.
“Ole Miss has been everything we expected and much more in providing an excellent academic environment in which our kids are thriving, and we are very grateful for that,” the triplets’ father, William, said. “We are excited that they are planting roots in Mississippi.”
The university has since allowed each of them to academically perform to the best of their abilities.
“I am motivated to achieve by the desire to one day be able to be a successful professional and say that I am an alumni of the University of Mississippi, and with that, hopefully give back to the university that has given me so much,” Ann Weston said.
Ultimately, their independent achievements allowing them to come together in Phi Kappa Phi has made the family closer than ever.
“To me, my sisters being at the same college has been a great resource and comfort,” Will said. “I wouldn’t be where I am now without them. However, I know wherever they go, they will succeed.”
Their mother, Camille, agrees.
“My husband and I are very proud of Ann Weston, Katherine and Will,” she said. “We are very blessed that they are happy and healthy kids and students who have always academically challenged themselves and each other.”
Next Sunday, I’ll be addressing Phi Kappa Phi’s induction ceremony at Ole Miss. Phi Kappa Phi is the nation’s oldest, largest and most selective honor society. That means that I will be talking to a room of full of people who are both talented and driven. I won’t be the smartest person in the room.
So that’s my challenge. What do I say to a group of really bright and ambitious students?
I could give them a lecture on success.
Um, no. My advice about success would most likely ring hollow. I would bet the farm (if I had one) that they have the success thing pretty much figured out. For most of their academic career, they’ve been acing tests, crushing term papers and moving the needle when it comes to good grades. I’m not sure anything I could tell them would impress them.
“Do your best, kids!”
“Um, Mr. Ramsey, we have. That’s why we are being inducted into Phi Kappa Phi.”
Silence.
That’s when I realize that some of the people in the room can probably bend forks with their minds.
I could talk to them about failure, instead.
Right.
Teaching brilliant people about screwing up doesn’t sound like a good idea (at least on paper.) “Hi Mom and Dad, I want your kiddos to take a new road — the road to failure! And students, just take your hands off the wheel and step on the gas. Seize the nap!”
That would go over like a cowbell in the Grove.
But when I say failure, I don’t mean blowing off a test or plagiarizing a paper. No, I mean the kind of failure that sometimes happens when you push beyond your comfort zone. The kind of failure that ends up giving you a doctorate in success. I learned that first hand my junior year in college.
My academic faceplant moment was Accounting 2. After a miserable semester, I limped into the final with a big fat F. Panic ensued. I had never failed anything before — heck a B was a bad grade to me. But at 3 a.m. the night before the final, I had a caffeine-driven epiphany: You can’t spell “My Fault” without an F. I took responsibility, took the final, got a 92 and passed the class. The professor saw me later and said, “Why didn’t you do that all along?” I told him I had to fail first to learn my lesson. I’m proud of that D. To me, it stands for Determination. It was a lesson I had to learn a couple years later when I was working as a custodian instead of a cartoonist. Walls crumble when faced with a determination and personal responsibility.
Don’t get me wrong. I don’t want the students to make a bad grade. But I do want them to break out of their academic safe places and try everything new that they can. My classes in college gave me a solid education. My activities outside of the classroom gave me a career. My work at the student newspaper launched my cartoonist career.
My job as a custodian made me want my dream really bad. Maybe I could speak about that.
Or I could just beg them to stay in Mississippi. I’m not too proud to grovel, you know. And Lord knows we need them here.
I’ll plead with them to stay here after graduation to make this state better for all of us. I’ll ask them to stop the brain drain. I’ll suggest they grow their leadership in native soil. They are the best of the best. If they choose to stay in Mississippi (as in, if they find the kind of opportunities that fulfill their dreams), they will make our state a better place to live. I’m all for that.
So that’s what I’ll talk about. Because an idea like that will make me the smartest person in the room — for a moment.
This piece was published on the ClarionLedger.com on Oct. 25, 2017 (https://www.clarionledger.com/story/opinion/columnists/2017/10/25/ramsey-smartest-person-room/798855001/).