Showing posts with label student affairs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label student affairs. Show all posts

Friday, August 9, 2019

Welcome to the Class of 2023!

Nothing excites those of us in higher education more than the arrival of first-year students to campus during the summer months. For four days in June and another three in July, Bloomsburg University’s Class of 2023 spent time on campus for our summer orientation sessions.

These sessions provided our students a critical opportunity to take those first steps from their high school days to their college years. Our colleagues in student affairs work hard throughout the year to prepare for these sessions and ensure that they are both informative and fun — a big thank you to our staff members and all student volunteers for their efforts on behalf of the incoming class.

To the Class of 2023, welcome to BU! We look forward to great things from you, and I know you are ready for the challenges and opportunities ahead. With grit and determination, you will show those who may have doubted you in the past to watch what you can accomplish at BU.

You’re ready to thrive and excel, and inspire those who follow in your path. I also encourage you to get involved with the many clubs and activities at BU. We offer countless opportunities for you to explore and develop as a person in and out of the classroom. Don’t sit back and be a follower — be a Husky and lead the pack!

To parents and guardians of the BU Class of 2023, you have done your part to prepare your child for the next four years. You have instilled in them the character and confidence to meet all challenges head-on. Watch what they can unleash in the years ahead.

Again, welcome to the Class of 2023 and Go Huskies!

    Bashar W. Hanna
    President


Friday, December 21, 2018

Greek Life Update

In response to disturbing allegations of hazing within our Greek community earlier this fall, the University immediately suspended all new membership education activities and commenced an external investigation. In its initial findings, our external investigator (Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr LLP) has shared with us detailed, credible and corroborated information about additional incidents within our Greek community, all of which are deeply troubling. These recent incidents include allegations of assault, forced ingestion, and physical and mental abuse. Such incidents jeopardize the health and safety of our students, and there is absolutely no place for such misconduct within our campus community.

Our students’ safety remains our highest priority. We condemn these recent incidents because they collectively threaten the health and safety of our students. The severity of these allegations, though, compels us to consider not just the safety of our students, but also the ideals of basic human decency and the general respect for the safety and well-being of others. We will not tolerate such reckless behavior, and we must elevate the behavioral and cultural expectations of our students going forward.

To that end, upon reviewing the external investigator’s initial findings, the University has placed several Greek social organizations on interim suspension. For those organizations that are not suspended, the moratorium on new member education activities will be lifted effective the beginning of the Spring 2019 semester. I want to emphasize, however, that the investigation remains ongoing for all Greek social organizations. There remains the possibility of further sanctions for any Greek organization, pending additional findings through our Student Code of Conduct.

To strengthen the overall Greek life experience, and to change the culture to one where students respect and value one another’s health and well-being in accordance with the values espoused by such organizations, we will be implementing new requirements for all members of social fraternities and sororities beginning next semester, including mandatory educational sessions on a variety of topics. I have also asked the Division of Student Affairs to conduct a comprehensive review of the process that governs recognition for fraternities and sororities. This review will include (but not be limited to) structure, membership, risk management, community expectations, and recommendations for new procedures and process.

I remind everyone that if you suspect hazing in any form within any group, team or organization, please contact our Dean of Students Office, or call the Hazing Hotline at 866-755-4293. Our ability to intervene and stop hazing depends on all of us.

The health and well-being of our students will continue to be our highest priority, and I look forward to working with our Greek student leaders, chapter advisors, alumni leaders, and my colleagues in Student Affairs in ensuring this priority. Together, we will eradicate hazing and other misconduct on our campus, we will elevate the behavioral standards and expectations for all our students, and we will change a Greek culture that desperately needs it. As a community, we at Bloomsburg University can and will do better.

Bashar