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A few questions...help please?
1. So today is the second night of rush at our school. Last night, we vistied 9 houses and narrowed them down to 7. When I got the houses who I was supposed to visit, I got two of the ones which I was iffy about and the two which I eliminated the night before. Please also note that the two I didn't want were REALLY desperate for girls to join (one is a new one and the other I just didn't feel a "connection" with). I was wondering something. I want to want until tomorrow night to see if the two I liked call me back. If they don't, should I drop it and re-rush next year? (Preferance Night and Bid Night aren't for a few more days.)
2. Exactly how do the sororities call back the girls? When I visited the houses, the RC would give us papers with our names and recruitment ID # on it. When we were paired up with a girl from the sorority we were visiting, we would give her paper and she would do something with it. What do they do with the paper? And how do they decide? 3. If you listed yourself as legacy, do they actually check it? I'm a legacy in two of the sororities. Both of which I was dropped from and I found it weird because I thought I had a connection with one of them. I appreciate all the help I can get with these questions. By the way, my school is UC Irvine (UCI). |
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Paging KSUViolet for some good answers!...
I'm gonna give condensed answers of what everyone else is going to say - 1. Re-rushing next year will likely yield similar if not the same results. Those chapters saw something in you and want you as a sister - give them a chance! 2. What the sororities do with those papers varies from chapter to chapter, and is part of membership selection - which is highly private. No one can tell you -sorry. 3. They definitely know when you're a legacy. |
I'm not a UC person but in general:
1) here's the thing ... PNMs do not "eliminate" any houses during recruitment, they simply mark their "preference". This is part of the mutual selection process ... and NO, at most schools, your best chance at obtaining the recruitment results you "prefer" will be to rush early in your academic career. Not saying that upper classmen don't have successful recruitments, but expecting a different result the 2nd, 3rd time, etc. is likely not going to happen. 2) you have no control over what is done with these papers by the chapters and as a PNM it is none of your business how individual chapters make decisions so don't worry about it. 3) yes, chapters do verify through their HQ who is a legacy. Also note that "legacy" status differs among chapters so while you may be considered a legacy through an aunt for one organzation, another may not recognize such a distant family connection. Further, your legacy would have to be in good standing with HQ for you to receive any benefit. And often times, chapters don't necessarirly have to give legacies any additional consideration, especially later in the recruitment process. |
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Hope that helps! |
Sounds to me like you won't be joining a sorority. Have a nice day. :D
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I'll make an attempt. These are serious answers - I'm not being rude.
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Here's my opinion: Stick with it. There are hundreds of women across the US who would love to have as many options as you for sorority membership. Quit thinking about the chapters that are no longer on your schedule. Look for women in the chapters you do have that might have some similar interests as you - they obviously see that there might be a chance you could fit with them. And they will be releasing too. If you go in with a bad attitude and act like you are only there because you got cut from others, they will cut you VERY fast. If you show enthusiasm for being Greek, they will react to that. And now my anecdote: I have had the opportunity to work with and observe recruitment on several campuses. One in particular has a chapter that for years would be what some call "desperate." But then one year they got 3 or 4 great new members who could have easily fit in the more popular chapters. And the next year, those 3 or 4 recruited 6 or 8 more just like them. And the year after that, those 10-12 girls turned that chapter into the most popular one on campus. If only some of these PNMs who think they are too good for some sororities would give sisterhood a chance, they could turn things around with a little hard work and determination and then THEY would be members of the "best" sorority. |
Good job jwright25
I think KSUviolet must be out of town...she is noticeably absent from these threads, and I have come to count on her! :) OP - do some reading of the other threads, and you will find the answers. Be willing to realize that you are thinking in a very narrowminded way with a very narrowminded approach. You must face each round in recruitment with a good attitude and play the cards you are dealt. Do not plan for next year, make this year work for you. |
I completely understand why you would want to know all these questions. Going through recruitment can be a mysterious process and I don't think we always do a good job at preparing our PNM's for the process. I'll attempt to answer your questions and be nice.
You don't really "eliminate" the Chapters you rank them- I think we give you the false impression that if you list them last you will not be invited back. This is not the case. I'm assuming you had a full schedule because there are 12 Chapters at UC Irvine. You went to 12 then ranked them and got 9- great! Then you ranked your 9 and you got 4 back! Still very good progress. I would bet my last dollar you have a better schedule than 1/2 the girls going through recruitment. No Chapters are "desperate" for women. Recruitment is a mutual selection process and every chapter has a different number of total women. The houses that you think are desperate will have just as big of a new member class as any other group on Campus AND they will be a group of wonderful women- trust me on this one. I would strongly suggest you go through the process and join a group. Why do you want to miss a year of sisterhood, dances, date parties and all the super fun stuff that goes on??? Membership selection is a private matter, but usually groups are all "looking" for similar things. On someones thread they gave you some really good examples of what Chapters may be looking for. My group happens to be very open about what we look for and it is listed on our National web site. If you are a legacy we know you're a legacy. Being a legacy does not mean your going to get an invitation back to any party except after the first round (I believe most if not all groups courtesy invite back legacies) If you were a legacy to a Chapter and they released you it is just a part of recruitment. Being a legacy is no guarantee for membership. Some PNM's go into parties thinking if they are a legacy they are a shoe in. That can be the kiss of death and it is a fast path to being released. My advice to you is to fully participate with the groups you have. Be nice get to know the girls in the 4 houses you have left. You might find a real connection with 1 or 2 of them. We read about that all the time on this site. Stop listening to all the gossip. In my experience this has gotten PNM's into more trouble. Good luck to you. |
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AXOrushadvisor, thank you for your input. It really helped a lot. |
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I'm a HORRIBLE recruiter. I come off as pushy and over eager, and in general am just the world's suckiest recruiter. I realize that. After my first formal recruitment I was a rho gamma because I figured out that that was the best way I could help all the chapters, including my own. I also had the opportunity during informal to take more of a behind-the-scenes role, plus I was more comfortable because less pressure on PNMs means less pressure on the chapters as well. In your situation, I guess that little anecdote is neither here nor there. I would agree with other posters that your attitude could use a little adjustment. In my opinion, it's never appropriate to just drop without exploring all the options available to you. You may be surprised. I will never understand why PNMs have it in their heads that dropping early means they'll have different results next year. |
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Dropping out does NOT = everything will be better next year and I'll get a bid from a chapter that dropped me. If a chapter drops you, it is not very likely that you will be invited back there next year. Next year, the PNM pool will be different, and the memberships of the chapters will include different women. They may not be interested in you. All this to say, just wait and see how things play out. You could potentially get invited back to every chapter you like. But should you not, keep in mind that next year doesn't always = better results. |
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