Guide Right


The fundamental purpose of the Guide Right Program is to simply guiding young boys and girls of the local community in the right direction by providing scholarships, leadership, and other necessities to students.  Also to inform young people in the professions and career options. It's the fraternity's primary community service duty and every chapter has one. 

The in-depth concepts of Guide Right Program is summarized as follows:

  1. To help youth, especially those of high school age, in the selection of courses leading to vocations compatible with their aptitudes, interests, and personalities.

  2. To assist students, while they are in training, to become started in employment, and to progress successfully in their chosen fields.

  3. To assist parents in the handling of their children by giving them opportunities to talk over their problems with those who know and are successful in their chosen vocations.

  4. To afford the less fortunate youths a respite from the drudgery of the streets, through sponsored entertainment and cultural enrichment.

  5. To inform youth of the values of higher education, of assistance available for continued educational pursuits, scholarships, loans, professional counseling, fellowships, etc.; of various occupational and professional opportunities; and of current lab or demands and the trends on the labor market, supply rewards, etc.

Kappa Alpha Psi's commitment to young people is well established, and our Guide Right efforts, both individual and collective, can continue to serve as a mechanism to "inspire service in the public interest", excerpts taken from "Guide Right - A Historical Perspective"

NU NU's Guide Right Program

Boys and Girls Club of Aiken, SC
AASA of USCA
Contributions and more...

History

The very foundation of Guide Right can be traced to the St. Louis Alumni Chapter and Leon W. Steward, who rightfully is dubbed as the "Father of the Guide Right Movement".

According to THE STORY OF KAPPA ALPHA PSI, soon after the St. Louis Alumni Chapter's beginning in 1921, Brothers Leon W. Steward and J. Jerome Peters were assigned to study the needs of active chapters for guidance and funds and to devise a "meaningful an d practical approach" to the problem.

Ultimately, Brother Steward, a Y.M.C.A. secretary, proposed a program of guidance to be designated as Guide Right, with the purpose of assisting high school seniors to choose and pursue useful careers, consistent with fraternity purpose. This program was immediately adopted at the local level and the 12th Grand Chapter adopted Guide Right as the national service program.