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Originally Posted by TriDeltaSallie
On the bright side, I guess these prices will keep the riffraff out.
Oh, wait. That would have been me because even adjusting for inflation, there is no way I could have worked to pay for my sorority membership at these kinds of prices (which is what I did).
These kinds of costs will definitely make sorority membership unattainable for many wonderful women who come from average income families.
It's a bit of an apples and oranges comparison, but it makes me wonder if Alabama ends up going the way of Indiana in terms of becoming less attractive. At the height of the frustration with IU recruitment a few years ago when so many PNMs were ending up without bids, parents (including IU alums) were encouraging their daughters to go somewhere other than IU so they had a realistic chance of getting a bid. There was a huge, now-deleted discussion about it on the NPC website.
At what point does Alabama become less attractive to girls from families of more modest means who still want a Greek experience? There are many other places where they can have an excellent Greek experience at a lower price.
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Are Alabama sorority fees appreciably higher than SIMILAR schools like Arkansas, Ole Miss is the question. Yes you can have an excellent Greek experience, but not the same type of excellent Greek experience. I’m pretty sure every single sorority member at Alabama could walk onto any campus in my state and get a bid and pay a fraction of what they pay now in dues. That doesn’t mean it is the kind of experience they want.
There are a lot of schools that even with scholarships are out of the question financially for students who no doubt would flourish there. That seems to be much more of an issue to wring hands about than Alabama sorority costs.
This is a weird discussion to me. “Sorority membership at a very high profile, high octane Greek school with amazing housing is expensive” seems to be along the same lines of astonishment as “water is wet.”