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DAA Volunteer Leadership Conference 2009
Duke's annual Volunteer Leadership Conference (VLC) will take place
during Homecoming, September 25-26. From alumni admissions interviewers
to career counselors, Duke club volunteers, and reunions planners,
alumni volunteers are vital to the mission of the DAA. Come back this
Homecoming for essential training sessions and a great fall football
weekend. The VLC has been designed to give you an opportunity to connect
with administrators, staff, and other volunteers while still allowing
you time to see the latest and greatest that Duke has to offer.
Alumni Admissions Advisory Committee
Composed of over 3500 active alumni interviewers, the
Alumni Admission Advisory Committee (AAAC)
ensures that nearly every applicant to Duke has the opportunity to be interviewed by an alum during the
admissions process. AAAC volunteers are not only a resource for applicants,
but are ambassadors for Duke. Last year, Duke AAACs conducted almost
12,000 interviews.
Career Networking
DukeConnect, Duke's
online career networking and
mentoring tool, gives alumni the opportunity to interact with current
students and other alumni on career advising, choosing a major, employer
information, interview coaching, networking, regional information,
or resume critiques. Alumni are also invited to return to campus for
the annual Fannie Mitchell
Career Conference as speakers or panel members. Since 2003, more
than 500 alumni have returned to campus to participate in the career
conference.
Reunions Planning
Each year, the DAA celebrates its alumni at its renowned Reunions
Weekend. Held annually in April, ten reunion classes from the 5th
to the 50th reunion come back to campus to reconnect with Duke, their
classmates, and friends. Drawing nearly 4,000 attendees annually, Reunions
Weekend includes three days of arts, performances, educational events,
and general reunion revelry. Alumni volunteers plan each class' Friday
night class party, create the class reunion newsletter, and build attendance
by calling their friends, Greek group members, club members, and others
through the DAA's affinity/attendance networking effort. Whether you're
gearing up for your first reunion or celebrating your 50th, sign on
with the DAA to help make your reunion fun, rewarding, and memorable.
Clubs/Regional
The Duke Clubs program is
the point of contact for alums within their hometowns. With more than
100 clubs spread through the U.S. and abroad, Duke clubs are the primary
regional point of contact for alumn. In 2007-08, 106 clubs held a total
of 450 events, drawing almost 12,000 alumni, parents, and students.
More than 40 international clubs cater to the needs of international
alumni, and Duke is represented on every continent except Antarctica.
Whether planning events, organizing community service/service learning, hosting Forever Duke Send-off parties for
matriculating students, or just getting together to root for the Blue Devils, there are myriad roles and opportunities
available closer to home than you may think.
Affinity
There are numerous ways to connect with Duke: affinity
groups, the huge list of activities, living groups, and campus
associations that you participated in as a student. The marching band,
Hoof 'n' Horn, residents of Blackwell dorm, the swim team, College
Bound mentors, or established social groups such as sororities or fraternities
-- all of these fall under the affinity umbrella. Affinity groups provide
a tangible way for us to identify and engage individuals in the life
of the university.
The DAA is committed to providing affinity
groups more programs and communications, and more chances to interact
with us and each other. Affinity group leaders plan reunions and anniversary
events, assemble group newsletters, and generally provide a way for
alums to reconnect individually, with one another, and with Duke. Almost
100 groups have utilized the services of the Affinity Program since
its inception in 2006. Why not make your group the next?
DAA Board of Directors
The Board of Directors of the Duke Alumni Association comprises alumni
who represent the general body of alumni and alumni from the graduate
school and the schools of divinity, business, engineering, environment,
law, medicine, nursing, health administration, and physical therapy,
as well as a alumni representative from the editorial advisory board
of Duke Magazine. Members are either nominated by other
alumni or appointed by their individual graduate or professional
schools. The business of the board is to keep apprised of and be
advise on the programs and services offered by the university's Office
of Alumni Affairs.
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