Quote:
Originally Posted by BAckbOwlsgIrl
Okay, Debbie Downer in the house here.
I know that these greek communities are bursting at the seems. It has been going on for a few years if not more. However, I cannot stress the importance of letting these two organizations succeed first prior to bringing on more organizations. I think that one or two at time is enough. Then wait 4 or 5 years. I know of one campus that had 5 orgs come on in 4 years. It might have been 4 in 4 years. They had the numbers to back it, until the numbers took a drop and downward they went. It was brutal. Stupid. Absolutely reckless beyond belief with little forethought.
Of those that came on, only one or two remain. The rest went off campus as well as two other organizations previously on campus. Trust me, you DON'T want to go there/that route. It SUCKS REALLY BAD.
What happens when numbers go down?
What is the plan for the worst case scenario? Have everyone live in like they do at Indiana?
Might work, might not.
Everyone thinks that it won't happen until it does.
And no, we are not talking the 70's.
|
I agree with this post so much. Just because Greek life is hot right now, doesn't mean that growth will continue forever. Let's not go too crazy with expansion that can't be sustained when trends turn downward, which they will. Ebbs and flows are inevitable.
Also, at some of these ultra-competitive campuses, it can take a long time to become established. In my book that takes a lot more than mere numbers. There are still chapters at Ole Miss that are perceived as "new" by many, and the most recent colonization was 1979.