T.J. Sullivan (born 1968) is a writer, blogger and speaker on the American college circuit. Sullivan is the co-founder and chief executive officer of CAMPUSPEAK. The bureau has won national awards from Campus Activities magazine. He studied to receive a B.A. in Journalism at Indiana University from 1985-1988. During his time there he became a rechartering member of Alpha Psi Chapter of his fraternity, Pi Kappa Phi. The chapter was rechartered on November 14, 1987. In 1989, Sullivan began working for the National Headquarters of Pi Kappa Phi. In 1991, Sullivan joined the staff of The BACCHUS Network, promoting alcohol awareness and healthy choices to college students nationwide. While at BACCHUS, he began doing educational keynotes and workshops for colleges and national fraternities and sororities on a variety of topics. In 1992, he co-created an educational keynote called “Friendship in the Age of AIDS” with a friend, Joel Goldman. Sullivan has been recognized by the Colorado Women’s Chamber of Commerce. In 2010, he received the North-American Interfraternity Conference’s “Alumni Award of Distinction.” He is the author of Motivating the Middle: Fighting Apathy in College Student Organizations.
|