Governance
It is important to know how ADEA is organized to understand the Association’s policymaking procedures. ADEA is organized into four basic components:
- The House of Delegates, which is the ADEA governing body.
- The Board of Directors, which is the ADEA executive committee.
- Councils and their administrative boards.
- Sections and Special Interest Groups.
View the ADEA Governance Organizational Chart.
Download the Bylaws of the American Dental Education Association.
The ADEA House of Delegates is the Association's legislative (policymaking) body. It convenes twice at each ADEA Annual Session & Exhibition. The House of Delegates consists of the Board of Directors and all or some members of the Association’s seven councils.
The Board of Directors is ADEA’s administrative body and is responsible for running the Association’s affairs between ADEA Annual Sessions. The Board of Directors can establish interim Association policies that are consistent with existing policies if it apprises the House of its actions at the next ADEA Annual Session & Exhibition.
Six of the Association’s seven Councils represent different constituencies at Member Institutions. The seventh consists of the councilor and chair of each ADEA section (see below). Councils identify, initiate and oversee projects and reports of value to their members and other Association members. Councils may also participate in the Association’s policymaking process. When requested, they identify and recommend potential consultants to the Board of Directors and other groups. All councils meet at the ADEA Annual Session & Exhibition and some hold additional meetings between Annual Sessions.
Council Administrative Boards: Each council, except the Corporate Council, has a five-member administrative board comprised of a Vice President (an Association officer who serves on the ADEA Board of Directors), a Chair, a Chair-elect, a Secretary and a Member-at-Large. Each administrative board meets at least once between Annual Sessions and is responsible for planning its council’s ADEA Annual Session & Exhibition program and for managing the council’s affairs. Administrative boards relate to their councils much as the Board of Directors relates to the House of Delegates.
The Board of Directors or House of Delegates may designate and appoint one or more committees and their members. Committees that include non-directors and non-delegates are considered Advisory Committees.
Current ADEA Advisory Committees are: