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Out Out Damn Spot!:) |
What, because I implied that a fraternity might mean more than what grades you get?
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Not at all. Being in a Greek Organization is a lot of things, and evidently You dont understand that!:rolleyes:
You really get boring with Your Tripe!:eek: |
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Putting an "s" at the end is fine, putting an apostrophe "s" is not fine. The final correction is a preposition, not an article. As such, it should not be placed in that position in your sentence. (It is the same premise that sentences should not end with prepositions.) Once again though, I was just messing with you. |
You are 100% correct, being in a fraternity is a lot more than just having letters. Your house says who your friends are, what you do during the course of a week, where you are going to come back to once you leave, what you did when you were a pledge, even to some extent what kind of person you are.
None of that is academic. I see grade requirements and treating rushees like they're applying for a job as something thats detrimental to the fun of the fraternity. If I like to hang out with a kid, and they're well liked by the brothers, it shouldn't matter if they never go to class and just get by as long as they stay in school and are fun to be around. |
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I agree with you. Some of the most fun people I knew in both high school and college had the lowest GPAs. |
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If you don't want to post your fraternity, why do you post in the Pike forum? Are you claiming to be a Pike? I asked you a question in the Pike forum and you chose to ignore it. If you aren't claiming to be a Pike, why are you attempting to mislead people to think you are a Pike? |
Shoot me a PM.
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Don't most schools have some sort of policy that if any student were to fall below a 2.0 for more than two semesters in a row, they can ask you to leave? It happened to a few people I knew. They were on academic probation for more than 2 semesters in a row and they were asked by the university to try one of the local J.Cs to get their grades up. And in our bylaws, if you don't go to our school, you aren't an active member.
While we do foster academic success and attempt to help those in need, if they are failing their classes, there is only so much you can do and the university takes over. And you'd be an inactive member of our group. So that's why grades matter to us. If you have crappy grades, you need to realign your focus. |
measuring stick
issued grades are a kind of measuring stick from the instructor
as to how he/she feel you, the student, grasped the message, and put out the effort. As an erstwhile scholar at the end, I do think a modicum of paper trails, grade-wise, will assist in a career climb. Additional effort may enhance this upon entering the field, and this is where the so-called "gpa" is of little value. Fraternity membership in many cases, like with the Betas and FarmHouse, will be there to assist the seeker of success. There is more to college than pissing on the Pike porch or the efforts to deflower Minerva. But all that aside, a combination of efforts will yield a mighty fine product. But, politically correct or not, there are lots of folks who simply do not belong in the higher education halls. |
Re: Why does GPA matter?
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You clearly just stated that those with the same qualities are also capable of obtaining a substantially higher GPA. |
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Fraternities and sororities ARE businesses. Anyway, how do you think your founders would take your comments? Then again, I believe in progressing the original vision of the founders (of any organization). |
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Academic standards are detrimental to the fun of the fraternity? Don't you mean they are detrimental to the perpetuation of immaturity? If you go to college and piss on that opportunity (which NOT everyone has a shot at) by not giving a damn about your grades or success then I'm sorry but you are too immature to take on the personal responsibility that all adults have. I'm not sure about you but my fraternity, as I assume most do, recruits young adult men...not little adolescent boys. I'm sorry but having pride in your academics, (or involvement, leadership) etc. and sharing that pride and focus with your brothers who also wish to do well doesn't diminish the fun we had. You don't have to have a 4.0 or even a 3.0, but you do have to show that you care and that you are trying to make the best of the college opportunity. It's called BALANCE work hard/play hard. And we did plenty of both. |
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