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It always seems like the numbers of PNMs that the sororities take are huge.........and the number of pledges the fraternities take in can be pretty small. You know, the "quota" aspect of it? |
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Sorority numbers vs. fraternity numbers
On some campuses, number are determined simply by the way rush is done. Most fraternties do not have a formal IFC-run rush, so they may invite and pledge as they wish number-wise, even if it is within a certain time period. Sororities, on the other hand, agree to split a certain percentage of those women who choose to go through rush, no matter how large (or small) that number. At some campuses, the average sorority pledge class might be 50 or 60 or even 79 or 80; the average fraternity class might be 25 or 30. The question nobody asks is this: given the opportunity to rush and pledge exactly who they wish number-wise, how many sororities would end up with 150-200 total members? Nobody will ever know, nor will they know how many guys would sign up for a mass rush where each fraternity ended up with a certain percentage of those remaining in rush, no matter how large that final number might be.
It is true, though, that more women are entering college than men number-wise, so that is certainly part of the equation. It's easy to say that men are less social or less gregarious, but the current system does not allow for that argument to be played out. I think fraternities are happy being smaller and--therefore--closer and able to be more selective. But there are fraternites who take huge classes, too. |
Fraternities haze. Not everyone wants to do that.
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Only one of my girlfriends was hazed. |
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Greek Life extends beyond your circle of friends, and hazing incidents have occurred with members of both fraternities and sororities. |
Fraternities are much more likely to haze, at least here. I couldn't tell you why less men join GLOs than women honestly.
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I think that some men have more of a tendency than women do to join an organization for a specific reason or purpose, such as a club sport team or ROTC, rather than a general-purpose organization such as a sorority or fraternity.
I've also heard that there's been a marked decline in men's post-college fraternal and community organizations, ("Bowling Alone", anyone?) so this might be a broader societal issue, rather than a social fraternity-specific one. |
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Then again, you make time for what's important to you. |
Greek life is more popular with women cuz' y'all know y'all iz MESSY!! And most of the time it's the grad chapter sorors keeping up mess. I'm not going to call out any GLOs but some of these sorors kick mess all the way up to their prospective national representative. Brothers can be messy too but most of the time they try to squash it if it gets too out of hand. On the other hand, with sisters, I know of sorors on the same line that haven't spoken to each other in over 30 years over petty mess. Many sorors take running for particular positions in their chapters too seriously. And they will spend a half million dollars and sleepless nights putting those scrap books together.
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