Students
SkillsUSA Delegates
Delegates represent Tennessee students in the official business of SkillsUSA. They learn parliamentary procedure, evaluate national issues, meet national officer candidates, serve on committees, participate in the House of Delegates, and vote on behalf of the students they represent.
Student Voice in Action
Delegates Help Govern SkillsUSA
SkillsUSA is a student-led organization. Delegates are state-identified student representatives who participate in the official decision-making process of the national organization. They introduce, debate, modify, and vote on business items while representing the views of their state association.
The House of Delegates is not an observation experience. Delegates are expected to understand the issues, listen carefully, ask informed questions, work with students from across the nation, and make decisions that support the mission and future of SkillsUSA.
Core Responsibilities
What Delegates Do
Delegates carry out responsibilities that are essential to the operation of SkillsUSA.
Conduct Organizational Business
Consider bylaws, rules, regulations, operating policies, and other business needed to carry out the work of SkillsUSA.
Elect National Officers
Meet candidates, listen to speeches and responses, evaluate leadership readiness, and cast an informed vote in the national officer election.
Represent Tennessee Students
Bring the perspectives, needs, and priorities of Tennessee members into national discussions and decision-making.
Work With Delegates Nationwide
Collaborate with peers to analyze issues, discuss solutions, and shape recommendations that support SkillsUSA students across the country.
Practice Parliamentary Procedure
Use meeting procedure, motions, debate, voting, and committee work in a formal business setting.
Connect National, State, and Local Work
Carry ideas and priorities between the national Program of Work, Tennessee initiatives, and local chapter activities.
Who Can Serve
Delegate Eligibility
A delegate must be a paid, registered SkillsUSA student member by the national membership deadline and must also be registered to attend the National Leadership & Skills Conference.
The Delegate Experience
More Than a Meeting
Delegates participate in a structured leadership experience that combines governance, elections, training, committee work, professional networking, and national engagement.
Learn the Process
Complete delegate and parliamentary procedure training so you understand meeting expectations, motions, debate, and voting.
Meet the Candidates
Speak directly with national officer candidates and evaluate who is best prepared to represent College/Postsecondary members.
Attend the House of Delegates
Participate in formal business sessions, hear speeches and reports, consider new business, and prepare to vote.
Serve on a Committee
Work with peers to discuss strategic issues and develop recommendations for national leaders.
Cast an Informed Vote
Use what you learned through interviews, speeches, discussion, and candidate responses to vote for national officers.
Bring Leadership Home
Return to Tennessee with stronger decision-making, communication, governance, and chapter leadership skills.
National Delegate Committees
Help Shape the Future of SkillsUSA
Delegate committees give students a voice in national strategic issues and help shape the incoming national officer team’s Program of Work. Committees elect a speaker, discuss key topics, develop solutions, and prepare recommendations for national leadership.
Advocacy and Marketing
Strengthen awareness, communication, advocacy, and public understanding of SkillsUSA.
Community Engagement
Explore how members and chapters can serve communities and build meaningful connections.
Financial Management
Consider financial awareness, responsible stewardship, and resources that support members.
Leadership Development
Recommend ways to strengthen student leadership experiences at every organizational level.
Partner and Alumni Engagement
Develop ideas for stronger relationships with alumni, employers, and organizational partners.
Workplace Experiences
Explore work-based learning, employer access, career preparation, and workplace readiness.
Tennessee Delegate Selection
A Destination Leadership Experience
Tennessee seeks students who will take the delegate role seriously and represent the state with preparation, professionalism, and sound judgment. State officers who are not competing may serve as delegates, and local chapters may also identify students whose primary NLSC experience will be service in the House of Delegates.
This creates an additional path to NLSC for students who want a national leadership experience beyond competition.
Before You Serve
How to Prepare as a Delegate
Review SkillsUSA Governance
Become familiar with the College/Postsecondary bylaws, standing rules, meeting procedures, and any business scheduled for consideration.
Study Parliamentary Procedure
Understand motions, debate, voting, amendments, points of order, and the responsibilities of participants in a formal meeting.
Learn About the Candidates
Prepare questions, listen carefully, evaluate answers, and consider which candidates can represent members effectively.
Know Tennessee’s Priorities
Talk with students, officers, and advisors so you understand the needs and perspectives you are responsible for representing.
Follow the Schedule
Attend every required training, committee meeting, candidate session, and House of Delegates meeting. Late arrival can affect voting access.
Communicate During NLSC
Join the designated Tennessee delegate communication group and monitor official updates, reminders, room changes, and announcements.
Delegate Resources
Prepare for the Delegate Experience
Use the Tennessee guide for state-specific expectations, preparation, communication, and conference details. Visit the national Delegate Program page for official SkillsUSA resources, forms, delegate counts, bylaws, and current national updates.
Why Serve
Your Voice Can Shape the Organization
Serving as a delegate builds confidence, decision-making, communication, governance, teamwork, and professional leadership. It also gives students a direct role in choosing national leaders and influencing the future of SkillsUSA.