Student organizations There are over 225 chartered student organizations of all sorts. Student sports organizations are highly visible on campus. Special interest organizations range from the academic, such the
Model United Nations team, to the artistic, such as the
handbell choir. In spring of 2006, the
Mock Trial team was notable in qualifying for the national tournament while only in its 2nd year in operation. Religious organizations are also numerous. Both the
College Republicans and
College Democrats have active chapters at the university. Historic student organizations such as the Philomathesians, an artistic literary magazine, are also present. Students are entertained by numerous performing groups, including
The Lilting Banshees Comedy Troupe, The Living Parables Christian Drama Troupe, and The Anthony Aston Players. The Office of Student Engagement, oversees all student organizations and fraternities and sororities. Student Engagement also organizes leadership oriented student activities such as CHARGE (Formerly called LEAD), a semester long course in campus leadership.
Student Union The event-planning arm of Wake Forest is an undergraduate student-run organization known as Student Union. Student Union events include
Homecoming, Family Weekend, Special Lectures, Concerts, the Coffeehouse music series and other weekly events such as movie screenings and Tuesday Trivia nights. Its signature event is the annual "Shag on the Mag" where a big tent covers Manchester Quad (formerly the Magnolia Quad) during Springfest and students
shag dance to a live band. It started in 2005 under then Springfest chairman Joseph Bumgarner.
Student government Founded in 1923, Wake Forest Student Government (known as SG) works under a
semi-Presidential system. Four executive officers (Student Body President, Speaker of the House, Secretary and Treasurer) are elected each spring. The President appoints a Chief of Staff. The Executive Officers coordinate with the Cabinet, formed by the Co-Chairs of the seven standing committees. The seven committees are Academic, Campus Life, Diversity & Inclusion, Judiciary, Public Relations, Physical Planning, and The Student Organizations Council (SOC). The executive committee and Cabinet work with members of the Senate to pass legislation and advocate on behalf of students. The Senate, which acts as a student legislature, is made up of about 60 senators, chosen in fall and spring elections each year. The legislators are assigned to one of seven committees focused on an area of student needs. The student trustee is an ex-officio member of Student Government and acts as a liaison between the
board of trustees and Student Government.
Student media • WAKE Radio was founded by a student group in 1985 after
WFDD terminated a long-standing position of student broadcast assistants. •
The Student was founded in 2004 and is a website created and run by students to help integrate the student body with academic activities and social events around campus and the Winston-Salem area. •
Wake Forest Review is an independent student newspaper providing news and commentary "from a libertarian and conservative perspective." • Wake TV is the university television channel. It features weekly television content like
Wake TV News and
Entertainment Wakely. Past students have also collaborated with
ESPNU to create media packages featuring Wake Forest athletes. •
Wake Forest Journal of Business and Intellectual Property Law was founded in 2001 and is a student-run law journal. •
Wake Forest Law Review founded in 1965, it is a law journal edited and published by
Wake Forest School of Law students. •
The Howler is the annual yearbook. •
3 to 4 Ounces is the official literary magazine on campus, publishing a collection of student prose, poetry and art through a blind application process each semester. It is also the longest-running media outlet on campus, as it began in 1882 as
The Student when the school was still known as Wake Forest College.
WFDD WFDD is an
NPR-affiliate which was founded in 1946. The station has a signal strength of 36,000
watts and broadcasts to 32 counties in North Carolina and
Virginia. The station has been broadcast on 88.5 FM since 1967.
Debate team The Wake Forest Debate team has won the National Debate Tournament in 1997 and 2008, made the finals in 2006 and 2009 and has had six semifinal teams: 1955, 1993, 1994, 1995, 2017 and 2019. Wake Forest has had two winners of the "National Coach of the Year" award: Ross Smith (1997) and Al Louden (1988). The award is named for Smith. Notable Debate alumni include:
Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, the director of the Center for the Study of Terrorist Radicalization at the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies;
Larry Penley, the former president of
Colorado State University;
John Graham, the former regulatory czar for George W. Bush; and Franklin Shirley and Martha Swain Wood, both former mayors of Winston-Salem. In 2010, Wake Forest became the first top-tier debate team in the country to go "open source" and share all its evidence and arguments online through a wiki accessible to other debaters.
Volunteer Service Corps The Volunteer Service Corps (VSC) is one of the most popular student organizations. It coordinates volunteering in both the local and international/national setting via service projects and trips. The organization has annual service trips to Russia, Vietnam, and Latin America. In light of the disaster caused by
Hurricane Katrina, VSC sent 30 Wake Students on a Wake Alternative Spring Break in the Spring of 2006.
Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps Wake Forest University offers an
Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps (AROTC) program. At Wake Forest contracted ROTC cadets are given full scholarship, a monthly stipend, and book money by the US Army. The university extends the scholarship with free room and board. The program also serves students from
Winston-Salem State University and
Salem College.
Fraternities and sororities With 24 chapters,
fraternity and sorority membership consists of around 45 percent of the undergraduate student population. Wake Forest requires that all new members of fraternities and sororities complete at least one semester of full-time studies, so the primary recruiting time is during the spring semester. In the mid-2010s, fraternities at Wake Forest began to come under more public scrutiny for claims of sexual assault, racism, and violence.
Athletic activities Wake Forest offers classes in
yoga,
Pilates, High-Intensity Interval Training (HIIT),
Zumba,
BodyPump, and
indoor cycling. Wake Forest students field 36 club sport teams that compete against other colleges and universities at the regional and national level. Over half of the student body participates in 18 different intramural sports. The university's fitness and recreation center, Reynolds Gym, is the oldest gym in the ACC. It was renovated in March 2018 and renamed the Wake Forest Wellbeing Center. The project includes the addition of the Sutton Center which opened in January 2016.
Undergraduate student housing Students are guaranteed housing for four years. As of 2010, students were required to live on campus for their first three years as full-time enrolled students. The three main community areas for the 2025–2026 academic year are: • South Campus (First Year Student Housing): Babcock Hall, Bostwick Hall, Johnson Hall, Luter Hall, Collins Hall, Hopkins Hall, Huffman Hall, and Angelou Hall • Quad Area (Upperclass Student Housing): Kitchin Hall, Davis Hall, Poteat/Huffman Halls, Taylor/Efird Halls • North Area (Upperclass Student Housing): Magnolia Hall, Dogwood Hall, Polo Hall, Martin Hall, Palmer Hall, Piccolo Hall, North Campus Apartments, Student Apartments, Polo Road houses area.
Personal and career development In 2009, President Nathan Hatch outlined in his strategic plan a campus culture in which personal and career development would become an integral component of the undergraduate student experience. Later that year, he created a cabinet-level position and appointed Andy Chan as the vice president for personal and career development. Chan's work has included hosting a national conference in 2012 ("Rethinking Success: From the Liberal Arts to Careers in the 21st Century") featuring
Condoleezza Rice, and issuing "A Roadmap for Transforming the College-To-Career Experience" in 2013. Wake Forest quadrupled the size of the staff, integrated personal and career development into freshman orientation, and added "College to Career" courses.
Arts Every student takes at least one course in the arts (art history, studio art, theatre, dance, music performance and music in liberal arts) before graduating. In 2011–2012, more than 500 Wake Forest students were directly involved in performances on campus, and 110 public exhibitions in theatre, music dance and visual arts held in Scales Fine Arts Center in 2012–2013. The university's home,
Winston-Salem, calls itself the "City of Arts & Innovation". Students also can take advantage of a number of other art-related opportunities: • The WFU Art Collections consist of nine independent collections with more than 1,600 works located in 35 on- and off-campus locations. Every four years, selected students make an art-buying trip to New York City to add to the collections. • Students are within walking distance of the
Reynolda House Museum of American Art, the Wake Forest Museum of Anthropology, the Charlotte and Philip Hanes Art Gallery and START, the student art gallery. • The
Theatre Department, which allows students to participate from their first year, supports interdisciplinary exploration of its plays through the Interdisciplinary Performance and the Liberal Arts Center (IPLACe), which connects the performing arts and other academic departments. • The student-run Reynolda Film Festival is a free weeklong series of film screenings and workshops featuring a keynote address by a well-known and respected representative of the film industry. • The Secrest Artists Series offers the Wake Forest community several free opportunities each year to hear world-class concerts.
Traditions • Arnold Palmer Day: Each year Wake Forest University and its students celebrate
PGA Tour legend
Arnold Palmer who attended Wake Forest in the late 1940s and early 1950s. • Bell Tower/Tunnel Tours: Each year during the spring, Wake Forest seniors get an opportunity to tour and explore the tunnels of the
Wait Chapel and often sign their signatures on the chapel's woodwork. • Deacon Dash/First Year Field Run: Every year during the first Wake Forest Football game, first-year students rush the field. • D.E.S.K: This longstanding campus tradition brings together local elementary students each spring to campus to create inspiring and colorful study spaces. • CP3 Day: Every year Wake Forest and its students celebrate former Wake Forest basketball alum and NBA player and Winston-Salem native
Chris Paul on Manchester Plaza, where students are offered
Krispy Kreme doughnuts. • Hit the Bricks: Started in 2003, this campus-wide tradition is a philanthropic event that benefits the Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund as well as the Comprehensive Cancer Center at
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist. Every fall semester, members of the campus community meet at Hearn Plaza and take turns running and walking around the Quad to support the fight against cancer. • Lighting the Quad: Each year, the Wake Forest community celebrates the holiday season at Hearn Plaza. • Lovefeast: Originally started 1965 by Moravian student Jane Sherrill Stroupe ('67), this longtime tradition has become the largest Moravian-style lovefest in the nation. • Pitsgiving: Each fall, Pitsgiving is an annual Wake Forest
Thanksgiving holiday dinner. • President's Ball: Each year, the university, students, staff and faculty celebrate the university president. • Pro Humanitate Days: During this annual event, Wake Forest alumni, students, faculty and staff from around the world join and volunteer to give back or help the local community. • Project Pumpkin: Started in 1988, this is normally a student-led project and community-building event to bring together the campus as well as the Winston-Salem community. The event also brings local children to the Reynolda campus for a fall festival, which includes educational activities and trick-or-treating entertainment. • Rolling The Quad: Started in the 1950s, each year Wake Forest students celebrate Wake Forest athletic teams' wins by rolling and spreading
Toilet Paper all over the quad and trees, especially when those victories are against other teams in the
Tobacco Road rivalry. • Wake 'N Shake: Every spring Wake Forest student participants stay awake and on their feet for 12 hours straight to participate in the Wake 'N Shake Marathon to raise awareness of cancer. In 2022, Wake Forest students exceeded $3 million in fundraising for Wake 'N Shake.
School songs Notable among the songs commonly played and sung at events such as
commencement,
convocation, alumni reunions and athletic games is the alma mater, "Dear Old Wake Forest", and the fight song "
O Here's To Wake Forest".
Screamin' Demons Student attendance of
Wake Forest Football and
Basketball games is high, in part due to the program known as "Screamin' Demons". At the beginning of each respective athletic season students on the Reynolda Campus can sign up for the program whereby they pay $40 for each year; in addition to the best seats at the games, this gets students a football shirt in the fall and a tie-dye T-shirt in the spring along with a card that serves as an automatic pass to the sporting events. They lose this privilege if they miss two of the games. Through the planning of Sports Marketing and the Screamin' Demons program, basketball game seats in the students section are difficult to attain without participating in the Screamin' Demons program. The arena can seat only 2,250 of the 4,500 undergraduate students at Wake Forest. At least 150 seats are always set aside for non-Screamin Demons, who sit behind the 2,100 member group. ==Athletics==