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At Baylor and it has been this way for many many years. You can't join a GLO, be a cheerleader, songleader or many other things until you have 12 hours at the school and a 2.5 GPA--- no transfer hours or grades count. You can however play in the Band, be members of the BSU, Student Gov. etc.
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I pledged as a first semester freshman. I went to a small high school where I knew everyone and ended enrolling at a university with over 30,000 students. I am so glad I decided to pledge my first semester. My big and my sisters have helped make the transition to college so much easier.
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I always find myself torn when this topic comes up. I personally did not pursue greek life when i was a freshman nor did I want to. I was new to the university and still trying to find my way. While I can understand why some schools do not have or enforce the whole "wait a semester" policy, I would not suggest pledging when you are fresh in college. I would say wait at elast until you get a feel for college life (ie the workload, being away from home and having to take care of yourself, etc) before you decide to join an organization that for most if not all orgs is a LIFETIME commitment.
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I'm not sure if I'm reading this right .... you pledged one group, depleged (and did not initiate?), pledged SAE, and then were dropped because you had pledged another org previously? If you didn't initiate into that first GLO, why would SAE drop you? Or is this some NIC thing that I'm just not aware of? I've heard of guys actually initating into GLO-A, disaffiliating, and initiating into another NIC GLO. I know the rules are different for each org, but if you never actually initiated, I'm not sure why SAE dropped you? |
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I'm guessing the SAE chapter on his campus just wasn't comfortable with the whole thing. Which is within their rights. |
Western Carolina
Western Carolina University has deferred recruitment, with the major recruitment in the Spring because 1st Semester Freshman cannot pledge.
I am now the Recruitment Advisor for my chapter and I would pay to have this done away with. The University is placed in a small town area, with the largest town with malls, dining, activities 45 miles away. I worked in various student affairs departments while a student there and I strong feel that if students were allowed to join Greek letter organizations then the retention rate of the university would increase. Many students leave the university by December of their first year. There is not a lot to do and very little to jump in and get involved in as freshman...within a few years I would love to state this case to the university since I will be working with my chapters recruitment for a while. |
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But anyway - my answer was addressing SPAGD's grousing about the "malls, dining, activities" being far away. If those are the things that the students are citing as a reason for leaving the school, changing when you can become involved with Greek life isn't going to help that. Students who do not like a small town atmosphere are not going to instantly love it just because they join a GLO. |
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The groups offer a lot more than that, of course, but if the problem is a lack of fun stuff to do, then emphasizing the fun stuff is probably the way to go. |
Well, look at a place like DePauw. It's heavily Greek and from what I understand, the non-Greek students as well are involved in other activities. But no matter how fun that is, there are STILL going to be students who do not like being in the middle of a tiny town in Indiana where they have to drive half an hour to get to a Victoria's Secret.
My point is - someone who hates a small town atmosphere that much isn't going to stay at the school just because they can pledge a Greek org a semester earlier. And if Greek life is that much of an incentive to stay around, won't the students still stay even if they know they have to wait a semester to join? "Going Greek first semester makes a tiny campus more fun" is the flip side of "Going Greek first semester makes a big campus smaller." The campus is what it is. You can't (and shouldn't) live in a Greek bubble. |
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I think it's one of the big reasons that a lot of school previously thought of as commuter schools in Georgia look to expanding their greek system and/or it's amenities as a method to change the campus experience for students. ETA: I don't know how much any of this is affected by changing recruitment from second to first semester, but I would think it would help. GLO membership probably does help students feel attached to the campus, and it'd be better to establish it earlier. |
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