Phi Theta Kappa was founded in 1918 by two-year college presidents in Missouri. The founders were seeking to recognize scholastic achievement by their students, and to establish a common purpose and standard for honors organizations on their different campuses. The founders chose to model their new Society after the prestigious senior honor society, Phi Beta Kappa. The name “Phi Theta Kappa” was taken from the initial letters of the three Greek words meaning “wisdom,” “aspiration” and “purity.”
Eleven years later, Phi Theta Kappa was officially recognized by the American Association of Junior Colleges on November 19, the date now traditionally observed as the Society’s Founders Day.
Phi Theta Kappa is structured on three levels:
Local: A student becomes a member of Phi Theta Kappa through the local chapter at a two-year college.
Regional: The Society has 29 regions; some regions are one state such as Texas or New York. Others are made up of several states such as New England (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont) or Nevada/California. You can find contact information for your Regional Coordinator and regional officers as well as upcoming regional meetings at www.ptk.org/regions/.
To recieve information about our regions information go to, gnrptk.org.
International: The Center for Excellence, Phi Theta Kappa’s International Headquarters, is located in Jackson, Mississippi. Today Phi Theta Kappa is the largest honor society in American higher education with more than 2 million members and 1,200 chapters located in all 50 of the United States, U.S. territories, Canada, Germany, British Virgin Islands and the Pacific Rim.
Information from the PTK website http://www.ptk.org/chapters/resources/getting-started/intro-ptk/mission-history-structure/
Our Chapter is the Delta Kappa Chapter of Phi Theta Kappa of North Idaho College.