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Old 06-03-2009, 01:30 PM
SydneyK SydneyK is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 2,954
Quote:
Originally Posted by glm234 View Post
By credit I will be a junior this year, however I changed majors and will be spending three more years at my university (pretty much starting from scratch like a freshman). I would like to rush in fall, but I have heard that anyone who is not a freshman (or even sophomore) has a difficult time being selected in the recruitment process. I am at a state university in the south with a very large and active greek life, and we have formal recruitment. I did attend recruitment last year, but dropped out prior to bid day because of my family's financial situation. This year it is far more secure, but I am worried that I will only have a marginal chance at getting into any house at all, and that "top" houses won't even consider me. What are your thoughts? How much does class year matter (even if it's not accurate because you're starting over)?

Thanks for any advice <3
We can't tell you how much class year matters. There are all kinds of factors involved in membership selection, and different things matter to different sororities on different campuses.

If:
  1. You're at a competitive campus
  2. you dropped out of recruitment before because of finances
  3. you're a junior
Then: Yes, to answer your question, you are at a disadvantage. How much of a disadvantage is impossible to answer. Of course, you'll never know if you don't participate, but be prepared for some disappointments.

Good luck!
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