Skip to main content
A community college sponsored by Niagara County

© 2019 SUNY Niagara | All rights reserved.

Phi Theta Kappa

Honor Society

About Phi Theta Kappa

PTK Officers

Please see our Phi Theta Kappa: Alpha Pi Beta Brightspace group for information regarding our current officers and openings for the next academic year.

Meetings

Please see our Phi Theta Kappa: Alpha Pi Beta Brightspace group for information regarding meeting dates throughout the semester.

Membership Requirements

To be eligible for membership, students must:

  • Adhere to the moral standards of the society.
  • Be enrolled in a regionally accredited institution offering an associate degree program
  • Have a grade point average of 3.5
  • Have completed at least 12 credits that may be applied to an associate degree (part-time students may be eligible)
  • Receive an invitation to membership from the chapter at the College where presently enrolled

Students join Phi Theta Kappa by invitation only. Invitations are mailed once every semester and contain the necessary registration information. All members must register online.

Have you received an email from Phi Theta Kappa regarding your eligibility for membership, but are unable to pay the membership fee? Fill out our Phi Theta Kappa Hardship form and we will contact you.

History

Phi Theta Kappa is the oldest honor society for community college students, and the only one founded by college presidents. In 1918, at a meeting at Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri, eight community-college presidents created this academic honors organization, using the historic senior honor society Phi Beta Kappa as their model, to recognize their outstanding students. The Society grew, expanding into other states, and into coeducational and public institutions. In 1929, the American Association of Junior Colleges, now the American Association of Community Colleges, recognized Phi Theta Kappa as the official honor society for two-year colleges.

In the early years, Phi Theta Kappa membership was conferred to students at the time of graduation, and few programs and services were offered. The explosive growth of community colleges in the 1960s led Phi Theta Kappa to expand its mission to reflect the nurturing philosophy of the institutions it served. Students were inducted as freshmen, and study programs were offered.

Phi Theta Kappa today includes 1,250 chapters in all fifty of the United States as well as in Canada, Germany, and other countries. The Society is constantly growing, and approximately 100,000 students are inducted annually.

PTK seal

Contact

Paul Ratka
Economics
Phone: 716-614-6758
Email: ptk@niagaracc.suny.edu
Location: E-126