It’s that time of year at ACU again.
The time when students, new and
old, are learning about the ways to get involved in student leadership
organizations on campus.
There is one particular week at
the beginning of every school year that receives particular attention. A week
that students run from table to table in the Bean. A week of creative and
thought-provoking posters and ads on the my.acu page. A week full of stress
over lagging responsibilities and public popularity. A week that can only be
best described as deadlocked combat amongst friends, but friendly competition.
This week is Election Week 2012
for Students’ Association.
Here is my quick spill Students’ Association:
The Students’ Association at ACU
is the name of student government and every
student is a part of it. Whether they want to or not, every student is part of
SA because of the student-activity fee everyone attending must pay. Then you
have a choice in whether or not to be involved. For example, I am running to
represent our sophomore class in SA and to be involved with SA. My involvement
is described as Congress. During our weekly Wednesday meetings, the Executive
officers (Rebecca, Dylan, and Joseph) will call the meeting to order and lay
out our agenda. Usually we will have some student organizations come and ask
for money and we shall have debates within Congress about how much money to
give them. There are other things that SA does besides hand out money to the student
organizations and social clubs. We also plan events (like dodge ball or school
dance), represent the student body to the faculty and staff (we have had Dr.
Schubert, Jeff Arrington, Dr. Thompson, and Byron Martin come in and ask
questions about the student body), and even do some really cool likes like
changing the ACU dance policy (yeah that was SA).
You
may have noticed my own little plug in about running for sophomore class
president. I will take some time to tell you the real truth about what that
position does.
My
freshman year in SA, I was not the class president but my responsibilities and
powers were the exact same as the other members of Congress. When it comes to
the meetings, every student bears an equal weight in representing the student
body (whether they are a dorm rep, academic rep, or class rep).
So, it is basically a title, but
with that title comes recognition. My ultimate role in SA is to one day be an
executive officer. These roles are the really important ones. The three EO are
the go-to students when faculty or staff has questions or when students want to
know about more ways to get involved in the school. By having the experience
and repetitive position of class president, my chances of being voted in as an
EO are much better than another candidate that represented a dorm or academic
building.
Once election week comes to an end,
the officers for Congress are all called via telephone and told the news. For
the past eight years, I have anticipated a victory call from my EO’s, yet have
still to receive one. Hopefully this is the year. Hopefully I can pull one out
for the students who weren’t plugged the moment they walked onto campus. Hopefully
I can bring about a change in the university that no other student has ever
thought of.
Vote Blair Agan,
Sophomore Class President
“Choose Agan, Choose
a Team Leader”

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