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Old 08-01-2015, 11:13 AM
Hartofsec Hartofsec is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 705
Quote:
Originally Posted by tcsparky View Post
I was looking at the table above, and thinking about all of the times we have PNMs coming here worried about being from out of state, and if that affects their chances of getting a bid when competing against In State girls. According to the table, there were 599 In State PNMs (with 94% placement rate) and 1677 Out of State PNMs (with 89% placement rate).

While certain sororities may have greater percentages of In State students, I would guess that if an OOS PNM keeps an open mind, that status will not significantly affect getting a bid.
I think that should be the takeaway -- the numbers look VERY favorable to freshmen OOS PNMs. Withdrawing with plans to rush later looks very UNfavorable for any PNM.

Even sororities that have historically been in-state strongholds have a majority of OOS new members. Here is a thread on the topic from 2 years ago with the numbers by chapter (and a good piece of advice for OOS PNMs):

Out of State? You CAN have a successful recruitment at Alabama

Quote:
Originally Posted by tcsparky View Post
Also, it looks as if a larger percentage of the Out of State females sign up for Recruitment than In State females. I wonder why more of the In State girls are not signing up?
Just a guess -- cost, among other factors. The in-state enrollment has not really been increasing. Many in-state females may be attending because they need or want to attend an in-state school, while many OOS females may be drawn to Greek life as part of the big SEC campus atmosphere, especially if attending a school in their state with a similar atmosphere doesn't look promising. Not to mention that many of the OOS students are arriving with scholarships.

Article from last September:

Alabamians now a minority at UA

Quote:
Rachel Adkins, a sophomore from San Francisco majoring in economics and international relations, said she came to Alabama because she wanted to experience the South.

“I think a lot of girls I know are looking at sorority life, and everybody looks at Alabama as this crazy, amazing sorority place,” she said. “I think that’s why a lot of girls are interested.”

While many of her friends decided to stay in California and go to school in the UC System, the steep price tag – a year at UC-Berkeley can cost $32,168, according to their admissions website – pushed her towards The University of Alabama and its scholarship offer.
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