I agree mostly with AchtungBaby80. It calls into question a lot a variables so the answer is not cut and dry. First, you have to look at the school itself. What is the GPA of the school's applicants? If you need at least a 3.5 to get in, chances are the women going through recruitment are going to have at least that. I haven't seen this year's enrollment figures but for 2002, the minimum GPA is a 2.8.
"09/19/2002 10:59 AM
For the second year in a row, LSU has enrolled a record number of students for the fall semester.
This year's enrollment of 31,582 students is up 180 students, or 1 percent, from the 2001 fall semester.
The number of new freshmen enrolled in degree programs is down by 230 from the 2001 number of 5,039. According to the Office of Budget and Planning, the 5 percent drop in degree-seeking new freshman is likely due to the increased admission standards implemented in the fall 2002 semester. Admission requirements rose from a 2.5 grade point average on 17 and one-half specific units in high school courses last year to a 2.8 on those same courses this year.
Undergraduates comprised 26,672 registrants; graduate students comprised 4,572; and 338 fell into the professional category, which includes students of veterinary medicine.
For more detailed information, contact Ronald Brown, LSU Media Relations, at 225/578-3867 or
rbrown@lsu.edu."
Specifically pertaining to recruitment...
At LSU, some chapters do not look at a person, first semester freshman, with less then a 3.0 and some as high as 3.2. An upperclassmen may have a point or two below that but often it is the same.
I do know that my cousin's NM class GPA going into recruitment, Stanford, was about a 3.6.