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Originally Posted by kstar
OU does not consider weighted GPAs, since not all schools weigh GPAs, nor do all schools that do so use the same scale or criteria.
As to what chapters consider, again, that is membership selection.
Though I can say that my pledge class was mostly 4.00 GPAs in high school. There were a few (5) that were above a 3.75 and had excellent extra-curriculars.
As to what I would consider a grade risk (personally, not my chapter) is anything below a 3.85. If you can't get a 4.0 in a normal high school, how are you going to get one in college where more is expected of you and you have more outside activities (especially when you are pledging a house.)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gee_ess
I totally agree! I don't think any chapter at a state school is going to think a 3.8 is a grade risk.
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Originally Posted by UGAalum94
That's what I thought, and re-reading that I'm being more of a jerk than I certainly needed to be (sorry, Kstar).
But I find the original claim that a girl with a 3.8 is going to have grade problems pretty outlandish.
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Kstar did say that it was her personal opinion that lower than a 3.85 is risky. Further, she is correct that Panhellenic only distributes the unweighted GPAs of PNMs to the chapters.
Although I have only advised at OU (I attended graduate school there), Kstar’s representation of the high school grade point averages is fairly accurate. I know simply from seeing the unweighted GPAs and the final bid lists of some chapters that there are many pledge classes in which you can count the number of “Bs” received by the entire pledge class on your hands. However, I feel that this is more representative of the caliber of PNMs (and OU students in general) than it is an indication that a PNM cannot receive a bid with less than a 4.0. It’s been a few years but I seem to remember that well over half of the PNMs had 4.0 GPAs. In my experience, I would not be concerned about going through recruitment at OU with a 3.8 GPA.
As has been discussed, OU is definitely a campus that requires recommendations and preparation.