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SiKes, I dont think anyone is side stepping the issue that you are asking about. I think that many of us are not aware of how some schools do pre-rush.
Okay, lets get back to your original question! 1. Going away from Home for the first time can be tramatic. You have to study or not pass a class. Not help unless you ask for help when in need. 2. Joining a any social group can be over whelming unless their Prioritys are to make sure you get your grades to become Active and a Viable Member of that Organization. YOU will learn, that you are a Member with Brothers who Will Interact or you will be gone. You will find, that alone, but with others who you can turn to. a. there will be times that you will be not your own, for things that must be done for "The Group'! 3. Set Your Priorities, you are there to go to College First, Graduate and go out into the Big World. Second, truthfully, joining a Greek Organization is secondary! But, the one that in the over all and long run picture is the one that you actually learn the most from! 4. You will have Hopefully Brothers or Actives who are there to guide you. If they have their Heads on straight, the main thing again is to get you active, a member of the Fraternity, the Greek Community, and the School. This is where you will learn how to interact with people when you graduate. Example: When I graduated from College, I was hired by R.H. Macys and was told OKAY, now, WE are oing to teach you about the Retail Business Trade. You just learned in college how to study, We are going to teach you how to be proffesional! Being in a Greek Organization will help you do that! Example: A member of GreekChat has a son who was a 4 Fraternity Legacy. Because of some GCers, she nudged him toward a certain one. Today, she has said, He has come out of his shell, not only a different person, but growing from the fact of what he has been through to become a Active Member, but is a totally different Young Man! I hope, that you stay on long enough to keep us updated to your travels into Greek Life!:) |
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Thanks for the info, russell and alphagam :)
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Double thanks to you both!!!!!:cool: I am 30 Min. for KU and did not know how their Rush Worked!
Guess it makes sense with Schools that have that many Greek Organizations!:) Hard for a small school Grad to understand all of this!:( |
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What I meant by the napkin comment was that it didn't matter to me whether or not it was official YET... If there is a certain date in which they must wait, they would take care of it and make sure they follow regulations, I'd think. This is one of the strongest fraternities on campus (of 30) so I'm fairly comfortable with trusting them. Plus, I've got a couple friends within the fraternity who are looking after me, giving me advice and encouraging me to make the right decisions. The point I was trying to make was that I was happy that they showed interest enough to take me out and invite me to be a part of their organization. :) Quote:
Tom --- Awesome. I appreciate your advice and taking the time to address my questions... Thanks! -Matt |
Pre-Rush is very common
I have two friends that have "weird" bid sotries. One guy was a highschool senior but he was dual enrolled at the local college. LOTS of seniors around here do that. So the fraternity rushed, pledged and initatied him while he was in highschool because he was technically an enrolled student.
By other friend Bill was at the local community college and joined Sigma Nu at the big State School next door while still at community college. I guess they were assuming he'd eventually go to the big state school, but he never did. Neither did two of his pledge buddies. All of them were at the community college. I guess every school is different and every organization is different. |
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-- Another thing I found out the other night about the campus/fraternity... I'm not sure if its the individual fraternity's rule or the IFC but I found out that it is possible to live in the dorms and still rush, pledge, join this fraternity... This sort of surprised me because I figured all fraternities would require you to live in-house... I guess since this is a larger one that really isn't hurting for #s, they can do that... Learn something new everyday :confused: |
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And SikeS--Tom gave you some good advice--- can't think of much I would add to that. -wendi |
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My advice falls in line with my comments. Even if something is permitted, I would wait until I wasn't still a high school student. Beyond that, Tom's advice is similar to mine. |
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heh, at my college you DO pledge when you live in the dorm (or off campus, depending on your living situation)- you dont live in the house, usually, when you pledge. (However, in my pledge class, one of the girls lived in the house as a subletter, then decided to join. she was the exception). And most fraternities and sororities here dont require you to live in the house at all. Some may require to live there a year, but not the entire time you're at school. I cant give you advice since I pledged as a sophomore in college, thus my situation was drastically different than yours. |
The Delt chapter at Nebraska will generally recruit 30-35 new members during freshman orientation(s) during the summer.
While technically not high school students anymore, neither are they officially college freshmen the way I see it. I've been invited to one of their summer rush events -- which are very nice and fairly casual. I like it, and it takes a lot of stress off of everyone during formal rush. |
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