Student organisation



         


A student society or student organization is an organization, operated by students at a university, whose membership normally consists only of students. Student societies often aim to facilitate a particular activity or promote a belief system. They are usually affiliated with the university's student union.

Typical examples are:

nationalities and Culture, such as

with a different range of topics and activites.

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Student societies by country

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Belgium

In Flanders, student societies play a unique role in student life. Student societies there have traditionally been politically active, and they played a significant part in the 1960s division of the Catholic University of Leuven into separate Flemish and Walloon universities.

A student society in Belgium is led by a praesidium. The head of the praesidium (and the society) is the praeses.

Other positions include:

Positions are flexible, and change to meet the needs of the student organisation.

Student societies used to be politically engaged, but are now more focused on organizing parties, canti, and cultural activities.

Student societies also exist at high schools.

New members go through an initiation ritual before becoming full members of a Belgian student society: new inductees are called shit, and become schacht after a baptism. For one year following the "baptism", schacht students have almost no rights, and are made to suffer. This suffering is ended by an ontgroening, after which one becomes a normal member of the organization, and can join the praesidium if one so chooses. Normal members are also referred to as anciens.

See also: Education in Belgium

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Germany

In Germany, student societies are wide-spread and various, though by lack of support from the universities (and by force of variety), generally do not boast many members. The most popular are the Studentenverbindungen; most of them are moderate and tolerant, although many are restricted to male or Christian members, and some - among them the so-called Burschenschaften - are right-wing or downright nationalistic.

The counterpart to these more conservative organisations are left-wing and anti-fascist student organisations as AntiFa or Praxis (in Bavaria).

On many universities - although in many states not officially recognised - there are student representations, called AStA (Allgemeiner Studenten-Ausschuss) or StuVe (Studentische Vertretung).

Other organisations include European Student Associations and the student organisations of the German political parties

See also:






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