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ohh! this is useful! this kind of seemed like a fitting place to ask this but how does it work if seniors don't count as part of the quota? Are they not counted in the pledge class or in the entire chapter?
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Yes, they count in that sense. You're treated just like any other freshman new member, you just don't count in terms of the overall number of women they are ALLOWED to take.
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oh! i take it that means recruitment might be a teeny tiny bit easier for a senior then?
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^^^^Seniors are a different animal than juniors, though.
If a school is using upperclassman quota, it's probably somewhat competitive (otherwise they really wouldn't need it.) In terms of a competitive recruitment, seniors are going to have a rough time because well, they're seniors. They are in senior level courses, interning, etc. and are assumed to be graduating within the next year. A soph or junior has in some cases 2 or 3 years (maybe a little more if they transfered from somewhere else.) They theorietically have more years to participate. If your school is competitive enough to be using upperclassman quota, then you're going to have a hard time as a senior. |
This needs a bump.
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Can we sticky it?
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They don't need to extend bids to upperclassmen if they don't want to. That's their prerogative. |
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Example: If a school has upperclassman quota, and all the upperclassmen have like 2.75 GPAs, the chapter isn't going to take them just to fill quota. Please don't think that it's something that's going to "save you" in recruitment because that's not the case. |
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This is the only reference to upperclass quota I find in the current edition of the MOI in the section on Membership:
"If a campus utilizes an upperclass quota during formal recruitment, they may pledge up to quota with candidates from this classification only." |
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Need help!!
Hello,
I am a CAP student at UT Tyler, so I will be transferring to Austin next fall and really want to join a sorority. My only dilemma is I don't know if I should rush here and affiliate with the same sorority in Austin so I don't miss out on friendships and a fun year or wait and rush at UT Austin as a sophomore. I heard it is really hard rushing as a sophomore, but getting the option of multiple sororities over just two at UT Tyler seems to make more sense to me. Is it a bad idea to rush at Tyler and try to transfer to the same sorority in Austin?:confused: |
It's not a bad idea just because you have limited options, but because chapters are often VERY different from school to school. You could feel very comfortable and at home with the XYZs at Tyler, but the XYZs at Austin may not be women that you want to hang out with at all.
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