I definitely don't think that I am looked down on by my professors for being Greek. I am in a class with 2 sisters, and we all broke 90 on a quiz that had a mean of 74. We also actively participate, and my professor knew our names by the second week, even in a ~75 person lecture. We've worn letters a lot (especially with this week being Greek Week) and if anything, I think professors associate our sorority with confidence and intelligence.
Unfortunately, our stereotype in the past has been the "wild party girls" but I feel like sorority girls as a whole are given that rep. I'll admit that some of my sisters can be a little crazy but there are a lot of us in my ~160 person chapter that couldn't be further from the stereotype. I'd say on campus it will always be split between the people that "hate" Greeks just because, and those who will take a little more time to get to know us and realize that we really aren't like the stereotypes.
My campus only has 6 sororities and none have houses -- and things in the midwest are a lot more laidback.
As for hazing, Wash U has really really cracked down on hazing. We aren't allowed to do scavenger hunts because that would be considered hazing. They can't even tell us to wear our pledge pins. Honestly, I think pledging would have been a little more fun if we could have done the "innocent" stuff, but I realize that too little is much better than too much.
I'll close by saying that "hazing" could go on anywhere. I know sports teams that haze the freshman, as well as certain organizations. If anything, you have a much smaller chance of being hazed in a sorority here than a different organization because everyone assumes that "all GLOs haze" and "only GLOs haze" and that's what's been regulated.
I know hazing DOES still occur at some schools, but from what I've heard, it goes on more in fraternities and more at large state schools.
Sorry for the ramble.. hope this helps.
Last edited by Wine&SilverBlue; 10-01-2004 at 09:07 PM.
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