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Really Need Help w/ Recs! I'm confused!
Hey everyone!:)
I am planning on rushing this fall as a freshman, so I have started thinking about getting recommendations. It seems like a big deal at the school I will be going to. I don't know where to start though, because I can't figure out where my local Panhellenic Association is? Also, I don't know who I could ask for recommendations.. I am starting to get frustrated, and I really could use anyone's help! I live In Fort Smith, Arkansas.. and plan on attending the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville this fall. If anyone can help me out, I would greatly appreciate it!!!:o Thank You!! |
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Email NPCCentral@npcwomen.org to obtain the current Association President's name and mailing address. Please provide reason for requesting contact and/or information. |
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I'd be willing to bet that you know at least one or two NPC women, even if you don't realize it! |
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From personal experience, I've been able to direct a few of my friends' daughters to NPC members who were then able to help them secure recommendations. |
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Do you have older friends you can ask? I was able to get letters for tridelta and axo from some friends at other schools.
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Don't forget to ask your favorite teachers, counselors, etc. - When I taught I was able to help many of my students get recs!
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Is it just me, or....
Haven't recs really deviated a lot from their original purpose? Originally a rec was supposedly a way for an alumna who knows the PNM well to assure her GLO that the PNM would be an asset to the organization. There had to be a relationship between the alumna and the PNM, or it was meaningless.
Now recs seem to be given so casually, by friends of friends of your parents, or by an alum chapter member who meets the PNM for 15 minutes at Starbucks. How much meaning can those types of recs really provide in the membership selection process? Think of a job recommendation: would you ever provide a formal job recommendation for someone that you didn't know really well? I would not, and I think sorority recs should be treated the same way. And to the alumnae who agree to provide recs to young women they don't know or don't know well: obviously you are doing the PNMs a big favor as they scramble to check off all the GLOs on their campus, but might you be doing your sorority a disservice? |
I think most rec forms have a place where you indicate both how and how well you know the PNM. A rec from a friend of the family who has known the PNM for years is going to carry more weight than one from someone who is providing an "information only" rec.
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In a lot of cases, it's just a question of finding out the affiliations of the people that you do already know. Unless you're from an area without a lot of female college graduates, you probably know more people who are greek than you realize. |
We seem to be getting alot of posts from girls who are frustrated with getting recs.
Girls, understand that gstting recs is going to be difficult, especially if you don't live in an area with lots of greek women or you don't have many greeks in your family. It just takes persistence. You have to exhaust all of your available resources & contacts. Think of EVERY place you go regularly where there are women who know you well. Any of them could be a sorority alumna. Some of these places include: *school (teachers, counselors, coaches) *church or other place of worship ( sorority women might attend your church service or lead your bible study) *camps you attend(ed)(your camp counselors might be sorority women) *work(co-workers or their family members might be greek) *your parents(their co-workers or friends) |
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If a young woman in my community wanted to meet me for the purpose of obtaining a rec letter, I'd be happy to oblige. However, the rec letter would certainly not carry as much weight as one from someone who has known her/her family for years, and I'd make sure to let her know that. If she had no other options and felt that recs were a necessity at her school, I'd assist her. I don't feel that it would be doing a disservice to my organization, because they would be well aware of the level of my acquaintence with her. |
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Alpha Gamma Delta collegians are allowed to write them. If I'm not mistaken (and I recall reading this somewhere on GC), Kappa Delta does too. I thought I saw a list of sororities that do allow recs from collegians, but I couldn't find it. |
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