![]() |
a new chapter of my sorority i would like to start, but i doubt i could do it alone. I know i should really talk to KSU she seems to know a lot.
I e-mailed the greek life people at the schools i applied to with my sorority to ask them about the process of accepting transfer students. and yah i just have to figure out what kind groups there are. i guess because at my school we dont really have organizations other than greek so i dont really know what else is out there.... |
Quote:
actually its crazy, i would transfer to JMU my best friend goes there and loves it, and i met a girl there in sigma, but they unfortuantly dont have my concentration for communcications. they have news writing and journalism, which isnt my concentration i ultimatly want to go to a school NC, but i didnt take 4 yrs of math in HS, so that has screwed me all up. i could only go in the spring Note: anyone who plans to transfer to a school in NC who didnt take 4 yrs of math in HS you must take before applying: 6 hrs in a social science, language, math, english, and science. |
Quote:
Starting a new chapter of your sorority involves lots of red tape. If there's no need for another NPC sorority on your campus, then there's nothing you can do about it. Even if your campus is open for another one coming on board, you still need the approval of Tri Sigma's Extension Committee. Good luck with that. Quote:
|
i would like to warn you that if you should pursue transferring to florida state, you not only have to be accepted into the university , but must also make a separate application to either the film school or the tv production school. they accept new students in the fall only, and only accept transfers as juniors. it is very difficult to be admitted into the film school or the tv production school.
talk to your sister, ksuviolet-she has volunteered to help you. now that's sisterhood! |
i never got a handbook. we were supposed to, but they never arrived..
then i guess i should contact their presidents....ha |
Quote:
And learn your damn geography. Thinking that the midwest and west are the same has made you look REALLY stupid. |
Quote:
NEW MEMBER HANDBOOKS ARE NOT THE SAME AS MEMBERSHIP HANDBOOKS! Membership handbooks are usually in the possession of the Membership Chair (or whatever Tri Sigma calls it), the President, and the Chapter Advisor. Your best bet would be to contact *YOUR* Chapter President or Chapter Advisor since they know *YOU*. I wouldn't bother contacting the people at the schools you're considering because judging from what I've seen here, they probably won't even take you seriously. |
Quote:
When did you get initiated? If you have not yet received all of your materials, I'd contact your VP. Also, if you're interested in extension (starting a new chapter of Sigma at your new school) I would contact HQ at sigma@trisigma.org More extension info: http://www.sigmasigmasigma.org/pages...ns::extensions If you have questions regarding our membership policies, please consult your chapter officers or one of your advisors. |
OK, this is driving me crazy. You are NOT looking for a "media relations" major or anything like that. I take it you don't know what media relations really is, but you need to believe me because it's a big part of what I do for a career. You are looking for a telecommunications or broadcast journalism major.
The problem is that honestly those specific majors are just not offered at a great number of schools, particularly ones that, to be blunt, accept students with un-stellar academic records. And before you jump to defend your academic record, let me just say I'm pretty shocked that you didn't take math all four years of high school; I graduated from hs in 1996 and even back then we were told that in order to get into a good college you needed four years of math. You just didn't prepare yourself well enough to go to many BIG, impressive, good-academics, school pride, residential universities. Here is what is fair: students who prepare the most usually get the most in return. Most people in broadcast fields today didn't actually major in broadcast-specific majors. A journalism major would actually prepare you very well, as would a general communications major, but you have to do more to prepare yourself outside of the classroom, too. You need to get an internship, take a job as a PA like every other scrub in the business, or volunteer at the school's TV station if they have one. The person who suggested Univ. of Southern Calif. was right on...they have a terrific film and communication arts school, as does my university nearby, but I don't think schools of that caliber will accept students with academic records that are similar to what you've implied/spoken of here. |
Mods can we lock this? The official answer has been given. I don't think there's anything more to say.:)
|
Quote:
It wasn't her thread to begin with. |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:54 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.