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STUDENT AFFAIRS OFFICE > STUDENT LEADERSHIP WEEK

National Student Leadership Week
 

2010: "Step Up for Safety: Student Leaders Working for Safe Schools and Communities."

This year’s theme for National Student Leadership Week (April 12–18, 2010) is "Step Up for Safety: Student Leaders Working for Safe Schools and Communities." The National Association of Student Councils (NASC) reminds you that safety is not an issue that can be addressed in a single week, and it is not just about violence. Being safe means being prepared for disasters and emergencies. It means using safe driving practices and making the right choices when confronted with drugs and alcohol. It means having safe and healthy relationships with family and friends. It means going to school without having the threat of being ridiculed, humiliated, or physically bullied. And it means being safe when using the Internet and being free from cyber-bullies and online predators.

The theme of safety is going to resonate throughout NASC this school year. Several health- and safety-related issues have day, week, or month-long awareness campaigns or events in November that your student council may want to feature or highlight in its activities. They include the following:
- Child Safety and Protection Month (National Network for Child Care, www.nncc.org)
- Great American Smokeout (American Cancer Society,
www.cancer.org/docroot/subsite/greatamericans/index.asp)
- National Family Week (November 22–28) Focus on Weapon Safety (Students Against Violence Everywhere, www.nationalsave.org/main/novembertheme)

Check out the Montgomery County Public School’s web site on Cyber Safety. This is a collaboration of Montgomery County Public Schools, the Montgomery County State’s Attorney’s Office, and the Montgomery County Police Department.

Suggested activities, posters, sample certificates, etc. are all available on the National Student Leadership Week web site of the National Association of Student Councils (NASC) web site. Click here and plan your celebration/recognition activities!

Photos and information from past years:
2009: "Step Up and Go Green"
2008: "Step Up" April 13 - 19, 2008
2007: "Find Your Voice"
2006: "Activities for All"
2005: "Life's Journey Starts Now!"
2004: "Stand Up and Be Counted"
2003: "Who Says You Can't Change the World?"
2002: "Celebrating Our Heroes"
2001: "R-E-S-P-E-C-T, find out what it means to me"
2000: "Team Leadership: United We Stand"

Significant Dates
> The First National Student Government Day was September 26, 1972
> Nation Student Government Day was changed to April in 1976
> The name was changed to National Student Leadership Day in 1979
> National Student Leadership Week became a week long celebration in 1983

History
National Student Leadership Week began as a single day of recognition of student council leaders on September 26, 1972. Praising student councils for offering young people "early and vital experience in exercising a voice in matters of common concern, recognizing diverse interests, and selecting leaders to express representative views," President Richard M. Nixon paid tribute to the nation’s student councils and their leaders when he signed a Presidential Proclamation officially declaring National Student Government Day.

"One of the clearest lessons of the past decade in America," the official statement begins, "is that students want and deserve an appropriate voice in their own affairs, and that education can be better when they have such a voice." The President closed the Proclamation by urging "all students to acquaint themselves fully with the activities and programs of the student governments and to take full and constructive part in that government."

This Proclamation was announced following nearly a year of negotiations between the National Association of Student Councils (NASC) and the White House. In the fall of 1971, then Assistant Director of Student Activities, Terry Giroux approached White House aides regarding the need to direct national attention to the remarkable efforts of the nation’s student councils and their role in involving young people directly in participatory democracy.

NASC asked its members to strengthen the message by initiating projects and programs focusing on the organization of student councils in their individual schools and communities. According to an article in the September 1972 issue of Student Life Highlights (a predecessor of Leadership for Student Activities), the "NASC staff members view the celebration of National Student Government Day as a substantial shot in the arm for the nation’s student councils." "Our hope," said then Director of Student Activities Robert Gaut, "is that honoring America’s youth leaders in this way will spark renewed interest in the concept of student government and will point the way to increased student participation in the workings of this country’s schools."

National Student Government Day recurred each fall over the next two years, then was switched to the month of April beginning in 1976. In 1979 the name was changed to National Student Leadership Day following a suggestion to expand the recognition to all student leaders, including participants in student council, National Honor Society, and clubs. The day of recognition was held each year in April through 1982. The following year, Secretary of Education Terrel Bell declared April 25-29 National Student Leadership Week. A week-long celebration has occurred every year since then.

(Information from Leadership for Student Activities, February 2000)

 

Updated October 10, 2009 | Maintained by Karen Crawford


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