Originally Posted by Sciencewoman
Looking at this from all angles, your chances of joining as a junior at a SEC school will probably not be good as a transfer student if you don't know anyone. They would be better if you have good friends/connections in chapters at the new school. Most groups want freshmen because they'll be around for 4 years, and even if there is a separate upperclassmen quota (this is often less than 10 women), you're competing against women the members know and like from clubs and other activities, and transfers they know from home. Chances will also be improved if you have recs, excellent college grades, have been participating in campus activities at your current school, etc.
If you join now and transfer to a school that has a chapter of the sorority, as FSUZeta asked, you could possibly join that chapter as an affiliate (transfer) member. Each sorority has different policies for how this is handled...some chapters vote, some may automatically affiliate you. You'd still be a member for life, but if for some reason the transfer chapter doesn't affiliate you (or any transfer members), you could not be an actively participating member of that undergraduate chapter. You'd be an alumna member.
On the other hand, if the COBing chapter finds out you're transferring in the fall, they would probably not use of of their available bids to offer you membership, because they will want members who will staying. Each group is capped at the campus total number set by Panhellenic each year/semester, and each group will want to reach that number through COB. They won't want a revolving door of add one, lose one, try to add another to get to total, etc. This is nothing personal, but groups want members who will be participating for several years.
So, there is a lot to consider and your question is a good one to ask. If you're offered a bid and accept it, do some investigating before you actually initiate...is there a chapter at your potential new school? What is the affiliation process?
I transferred and affiliated, and the new chapter had to vote on my affiliation. I didn't know I'd be transferring when I joined...I joined as a freshman and transferred at the beginning of my junior year. I communicated ahead of time with the new chapter and moved right into the house when I transferred.
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