
09-27-2010, 12:01 AM
|
GreekChat Member
|
|
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: nasty and inebriated
Posts: 5,772
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by peppermint23
I recently read an interesting article by an MIT male who questioned the difference in recruitment processes.
He brought up an interesting point: Why the higher "parental" in involvement in sorority recruitment from Panhel than fraternities? What does it say about the way we view women versus men? Are women not capable of making rational, mostly unbiased decisions without a computerized algorithm process?
What do you think about this? I've always secretly longed to hold recruitment the way fraternities do, as though many girls would probably go to a few select houses over others, it would eliminate stress on both ends and the confusing "rush" feelings.
For instance, in my chapter we got more girls in the spring during informal recruitment because we were open, relaxed and girls really go to know US, not an edited-for-recruitment version of us.
|
What? Sorority recruitment was designed by a bunch of women, and it has been around since before the age of computers.
__________________
And he took a cup of coffee and gave thanks to God for it, saying, 'Each of you drink from it. This is my caffeine, which gives life.'
|