Brett Mosier
  • Organizational Leadership
  • Class of 2018
  • Lawrenceville, Georgia

Brett Mosier Earns National Engaged Leader Award from Sigma Alpha Pi: The National Society of Leadership and Sucess

2018 Feb 6

Brett Mosier of Lawrenceville, Georgia, a student at Valdosta State University, earned the National Engaged Leader Award from Sigma Alpha Pi: The National Society of Leadership and Sucess during the Fall 2017 semester.

The National Society of Leadership and Success provides a step-by-step program for members to build their leadership skills and take their place among the top student leaders at their campus and across the country. To earn the National Engaged Leader Award Mosier had to complete an orientation session, a leadership training day, six speaker broadcasts, six sucess networking team meetings, and at least five hours of community service.

With 586 chapters and 804,580 members, The National Society of Leadership and Success is the nation's largest leadership honor society, one committed to building leaders who make a better world. Students are selected for membership based on either academic standing or leadership potential. Candidacy is a nationally recognized achievement of honorable distinction.

The National Society of Leadership and Success is devoted to helping members discover and achieve their goals. It does this by offering life-changing lectures from the nation's leading presenters and a community where students help one another succeed.

On the Web:

https://www.societyleadership.org

http://www.valdosta.edu

About Valdosta State University:

Established in 1906, Valdosta State University is a premier comprehensive university that offers both the extensive academic, cultural, and social opportunities of a major university and the small classes and close, personal attention of smaller institutions. It boasts more than 100 degree, certificate, and endorsement programs on campus and online for undergraduate and graduate students. It also has a full menu of extracurricular activities, from national championship athletic and academic teams to honors organizations, sororities and fraternities, intramural sports, educational and service clubs, a symphony orchestra, art and theatre, research opportunities, and more. Even as underclassmen, students file patents on inventions and make life-changing scientific discoveries, present at national and international conferences, publish research in collaboration with their professors, work in campus-based clinics that benefit the community, live and learn at partner institutions around the globe through study abroad, and more. The possibilities are endless.