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Re: Re: Re: Largest average chapter size
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What is significant for Phi Psi is not how we rank, but that we are acheiving a goal. We set out to improve our recruitment and retention rates. Our average chapter size has increased every year for the last 9 years. The last NIC stats had us at an average chapter size of 46. As of this past June, we were at 49. Is Phi Psi "better" than Pike, or other fraternities at recruitment and retention? To determine that you would have to look at the schools where we have chapters. Phi Psi is at a lot of schools that are very competitive, and with higher than normal chapter sizes. Maybe we are better, maybe we're not. Maybe the best fraternity at recruitment and retention, if you weigh its host institutions, is one that hasn't even been mentioned in this thread. Recruitment methods are an area of fraternity operations that are shared between fraternities at the staff level. What any fraternity acheives in recruitment comes from a shared base of knowledge. We are all indebted to each other for our acheivements and progress. Unfortunately the title of this thread does not facilitate any type of interfraternalism. It just encourages a pissing contest. I hope that the initial poster thinks before he starts another thread, but I doubt it. |
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I guess this is the GC Pissing Contest of the month......
remember boys, bigger isn't always better. It's how you use it ;) |
Two thoughts:
1) This thread shouldn't have said anything about how one fraternity was better than another. So awful choice of wording for the topic. 2) Some of you are petty as heck. -Rudey |
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While you're so busy fighting over who's bigger/better/badder you're all doing a great disservice to your particular GLOs by all this petty bickering. Way to represent :rolleyes: |
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Sigma Nu only has 3 chapters in my state currently. One is dormant. However, those 4 have accounted for over 5000 initiates. I'd say that's successful. Or how about my chapter that recruited 28 men to its pledge class with only 23 initiated members? Is that success? There are a lot of things that can be called success. National success is only a small part of it. Of course, what matters the most is how successful your organization is at giving you, personally a good experience. If it succeeds, that is all the success you can ask for. |
FEA Stats
I hope that the pissing contest is over, but FEA stats does have Pike with the largest average chapter size (53.)
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Honestly, if you're happy with your fraternity, then who cares about numbers. I'm proud that we're doing well, but this thread should not have turned into a "We're bigger, so you suck" type thing.
If you don't think numbers mean anything, fine. If you think they do, fine. But there is NO reason that anyone in this thread should be putting down another person's fraternity. I'll agree, the title thread wasn't what it should have been. But, we should be matrue enough to work around it. |
I hope
I hope the readers of this thread will ask some questions of their national leaders.
We all go to the Natl. convention, and we read the GLO magazines, and each tells the taxpayers (the undergrads) "we're the best", we have the most/best houses, the most/best housing/foundation/endowment funds, the best leadership programs, our sweethearts are the greatest, etc. Never - or in the most rare cases - is any problem mentioned, except as something that "our excellent staff and natl. board solved immediately", or maybe something that can be used as a fund raiser. I urge you to ask and double check - be a responsible member. Take a look at other GLO magazines (your campus GLO advisor/supervisor gets them, and maybe the library), and see what they are saying. The national leaders are going to tell you about the new colonies/chapters, but you need to ask "how many died, how many are suspended, how many are probably not going to participate in fall rush?" If the FEA collects data and surveys from many GLOs, let's publish it. Since Wilson Heller died, there is no independent source for GLO news. He's missed. |
hoosier,
Excellent post and very true. My sorority (IMO) has become much more forthcoming about admitting problems that may exist, while still being proud of what's been accomplished. It's easier to be all rah-rah but if it doesn't jibe with what the members see daily, they'll lose any trust they had in the national organization. People want honesty. |
How many times have we seen this kind of thread turn into a "My (fill in the blank) is bigger than yours," contest?
I think maybe we shoud just delete them whenever they come up. The Fraternity experience is one that is very personal to each of us. Delt is not the biggest or the smallest. Some things we do exceptionally well and some we could use some help on. In many things we are and have been leaders in the fraternal world, and we follow on others. The important thing is to constantly strive for excellence -- something which may never be totally achieved, but is always a worthy goal. |
Get back in traction...
Maybe we oughta level the playing field, perhaps quit the well-
coined "pissing contest." There is no doubt about the recent successes of Kappa Sig and Pike. Sig Ep not shabby, Sig Tau coming on and a few others... They are models we might emulate, seriously, give 'em their due. TKE has been mentioned a few times...let me fill you in a bit. I've been on the extension committee for TKE about 40 years. We need to consider the type of school entered, their size of the chapters (25 average vs 100 average), the age of the system, and several other factors. And while our pal Wilson Heller is gone, the NIC does a fair job of reporting, but does not consider many things in their bare bones issuing of fraternity statistics. TKE had 5 chapters in 1915 and only 2 during WW II. We got our 100th charter in '52. Overwhelmingly the pioneer in expanding, and not through mergers. BUT considerable risk is taken when one enters Southern Oregon versus Willamette, for example, one established, the other new. And in pioneering, if you are not joined...soon...the chapter will likely die. Examples of dead or near-dead Greek schools: Sul Ross, College of Santa Fe, Huron, Bethel, Wm. Penn, Miami-Dade, Mesa, North Adams, Northrup, Broward, NM Highlands, U Corpus, Salem-Teikyo, Northland, So. Oregon, Valley City, Minot, Dickinson State, Lakeland, Black Hills Beta, Pike, SAE, Sig, Phi Delt, Delt, Kappa Sig...et al., rarely are the pioneer, gamble little, very discretionary...not a criticism, but certainly a consideration in terms of success and future. TKE had only five chapters which were at closed institutions. But colonies, locals, interest groups...many, and some were at the "Parsons-type" TKE plans to charter/re-charter 15 in '04-'05 and we have about 27 recognized colonies and almost 50 in process of revival, varied stages. Active chapters, about 260. We have about 280,000 initiates, and only about 30,000 dead. Living initiates vs total initiates is a significant factor. Endowment amounts closely parallel type of school. Cleveland State is not going to offer the same support that a DePauw will, dollar-wise Everybody, these days, is playing musical chairs, i.e., losing a chapter, due to many things. The state of Colorado must have at least thirty currently dormant chapters, and about five are coming back, with a dozen on the approved list to return. And, a chapter without an adviser or active board is destined to fail. Housemothers may return, especially if it might cut the costs of risk management. Manners & clean houses might even resume. |
Re: Get back in traction...
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So I dont know where youre getting your info from, but the part about U Corpus is just plain wrong. Kinda makes me wonder what else from your info is wrong. BTW: From your list mentioned, Phi Delt is there. Beta is there. Sig Ep is there too. |
University of Corpus Christi
TKE chartered U of Corpus Christi in 1969. The school at a later
time declared it would become a junior-senior institution. The greeks died there. I am not sure what ever become of this one. I have always been conscientious about my reporting, but there is always a chance that even our sources are awry. We do the best we can...don't we? |
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