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Sorority Recruitment Recruitment event and bid day ideas, membership retention, publicity, recruitment policies, etc.

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  #1  
Old 10-05-2021, 06:58 AM
Titchou Titchou is offline
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If you are still enrolled in your current school, virtual - in person or some hybrid thereof - you are still considered a pledge of your sorority as it's an allowed enrollment at your institution. Now, if you drop out of that school and are not in school that has NPC chapters, that's a different situation - but you wouldn't be pledging anyway. Most NPC groups require some college credits for alumnae initiates but not all.

And I agree that maybe what you should do is terminate your pledgeship and focus on your family situation. You appear to be a freshman so Greek life has not passed you by yet...many women pledge as upperclassmen.
  #2  
Old 10-05-2021, 09:03 AM
KD4Me KD4Me is offline
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Are there sororities that are offering all-virtual New Member programs this fall? I was unaware of that.
  #3  
Old 10-05-2021, 11:33 AM
newtotheu newtotheu is offline
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Originally Posted by KD4Me View Post
Are there sororities that are offering all-virtual New Member programs this fall? I was unaware of that.
All of my school's organizations are offering a virtual or in-person option this fall. I didn't know it was rare or non-existent at other schools.
  #4  
Old 10-05-2021, 11:39 AM
thetalady thetalady is offline
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Originally Posted by Titchou View Post
You appear to be a freshman so Greek life has not passed you by yet...many women pledge as upperclassmen.
Titchou- she posted "I'm a non-traditional student, so I would fit in at an alumnae group age-wise and lifestyle-wise I think."

Although she may be a freshman, it sounds like she is a good bit older than 18-19. Another bid at a later date from a collegiate chapter doesn't sound like a possibility.
  #5  
Old 10-05-2021, 12:22 PM
Cheerio Cheerio is offline
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Originally Posted by newtotheu View Post
I had inquired about alumnae initiation of ABC Sorority before rushing/starting at my college. They e-mailed me today with an application. I know alumnae initiation can be a long-shot. It's a local alumnae group of a different sorority than the on-campus sorority that offered me a bid.

I'm torn on what to do.I'm a non-traditional student, so I would fit in at an alumnae group age-wise and lifestyle-wise I think.
Quote:
Originally Posted by thetalady View Post
Titchou- she posted "I'm a non-traditional student, so I would fit in at an alumnae group age-wise and lifestyle-wise I think."

Although she may be a freshman, it sounds like she is a good bit older than 18-19. Another bid at a later date from a collegiate chapter doesn't sound like a possibility.
Additionally, not many 18-20 year-old students attempt to apply for AI BEFORE attending a normal NPC recruitment.
  #6  
Old 10-05-2021, 04:13 PM
newtotheu newtotheu is offline
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...Another bid at a later date from a collegiate chapter doesn't sound like a possibility.
I don't think I would have a chance at a collegiate bid again. Partly for my age/life stage and partly since, if I give up my current college's bid, I doubt they would offer me a bid next year.

My local colleges are SEC and I would have no real chance of bids there. Even 18 year olds with 4.0 high school GPAs, perfect personalities, and that look like they just got out of a beauty contest at my local colleges don't all get bids.
  #7  
Old 10-05-2021, 06:36 PM
NYCMS NYCMS is offline
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Originally Posted by newtotheu View Post
My local colleges are SEC and I would have no real chance of bids there. Even 18 year olds with 4.0 high school GPAs, perfect personalities, and that look like they just got out of a beauty contest at my local colleges don't all get bids.
That's not true. The system is now designed that every girl who goes through rush and maximizes their opportunity (ranks the final two houses they attend instead of ranking only one house and refusing to take a bid from the other house), they will get a bid.

Many girls at colleges, especially super competitive SEC colleges, will drop out but claim otherwise to avoid telling the truth....they usually drop out because they didn't like the houses that invited them back, they thought the houses weren't good enough or that they are better than those houses.

Edited: PNM's do get dropped - reputation, grades, social media issues - and the first round of drops are usually grades, so if they don't have the grades needed, then they will be dropped. But many PNM's do drop out because they don't like their remaining options and then they claim to have been dropped. Bottom line: If you have poor grades, problematic social media and poor reputation, don't be surprised if all houses drop you.
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Last edited by NYCMS; 10-05-2021 at 07:27 PM. Reason: To clarify a statement about the rarity of PNM's being dropped
  #8  
Old 10-05-2021, 07:10 PM
thetalady thetalady is offline
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Originally Posted by NYCMS View Post
It is rare for a PNM to be outright dropped by all houses.
I have to disagree with you. There are plenty of girls who are dropped from recruitment altogether due to issues like grades, reputation, problematic social media, etc.
  #9  
Old 10-06-2021, 12:15 PM
newtotheu newtotheu is offline
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Originally Posted by NYCMS View Post
That's not true. The system is now designed that every girl who goes through rush and maximizes their opportunity (ranks the final two houses they attend instead of ranking only one house and refusing to take a bid from the other house), they will get a bid.

Many girls at colleges, especially super competitive SEC colleges, will drop out but claim otherwise to avoid telling the truth....they usually drop out because they didn't like the houses that invited them back, they thought the houses weren't good enough or that they are better than those houses.

Edited: PNM's do get dropped - reputation, grades, social media issues - and the first round of drops are usually grades, so if they don't have the grades needed, then they will be dropped. But many PNM's do drop out because they don't like their remaining options and then they claim to have been dropped. Bottom line: If you have poor grades, problematic social media and poor reputation, don't be surprised if all houses drop you.
That's good to know. At my local college, only 62% of those participating in sorority recruitment last year got bids. It didn't break down who dropped on their own vs. didn't get a bid, so maybe it really is that so many dropped on their own accord.
  #10  
Old 10-05-2021, 07:18 PM
navane navane is offline
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Originally Posted by newtotheu View Post
I don't think I would have a chance at a collegiate bid again. Partly for my age/life stage and partly since, if I give up my current college's bid, I doubt they would offer me a bid next year.

My local colleges are SEC and I would have no real chance of bids there. Even 18 year olds with 4.0 high school GPAs, perfect personalities, and that look like they just got out of a beauty contest at my local colleges don't all get bids.
Would you mind telling us more specifically about your situation? Not the family emergency part, but your demographics. For example, does "non-traditional student" mean that you are married, 40 years old, with two children? I understand if you might hesitate to share additional details, but I think we'd be able to help you a little more if we understood where you are at currently.
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  #11  
Old 10-06-2021, 12:20 PM
newtotheu newtotheu is offline
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Originally Posted by navane View Post
Would you mind telling us more specifically about your situation? Not the family emergency part, but your demographics. For example, does "non-traditional student" mean that you are married, 40 years old, with two children? I understand if you might hesitate to share additional details, but I think we'd be able to help you a little more if we understood where you are at currently.
I will likely lose my parent soon. I wouldn't let sorority interfere with time with family, but I also want something to look forward to/social support of some level during a hellish time.

For non-traditional demographics, I'm 23- almost 24 but look older, single, no kids, autistic, work full-time, had a job since I was 14, plus size, have MS, currently a virtual student across the country, part of the LGBTQ crowd, returning to college but have few credits that will transfer in since my new school doesn't have equivalent classes so I've got 3.5-4 years left of college, childhood family is low-income, off-campus commuter student usually, first generation college student, mixed ethnic family, etc. I know I'm "old" for a sorority and was afraid to post my age out of getting slammed for it, but I still do have a student-focused lifestyle. I've had depression/anxiety and eating disorders, and also didn't know I was autistic until I was an adult. Those things kind of set me back academically for a long time until now. I've lost 2 older brothers already (cancer and heart failure). They were way older than me. My grandma raised me most of the time, so I feel like I'm non-traditional or a bit different in a few ways. I've got 3.5-4 years of college left so I still have plenty of time to experience greek life. Being autistic I've always been kind of socially/developmentally behind so I think I will still fit in to a college crowd in 4 years. I never pursued it before because I couldn't afford greek life and was a commuter student before.

Last edited by newtotheu; 10-06-2021 at 12:28 PM.
  #12  
Old 10-05-2021, 05:08 PM
Titchou Titchou is offline
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I think maybe she's mixing terminology. Virtual is "traditional" now since the pandemic. And even SEC schools get 20-21 year olds going thru recruitment and getting placed.

I guess my question is - what is it you are looking for in a sorority? If it weren't for Covid and your family situation, where would you be right now?

If you truly believe you won't be in person next semester, you need to sign your papers and move on. Don't drag them along thinking you'll be there and all will be normal...I get the feeling you don't really want to go anyway....just my gut feeling.
  #13  
Old 10-06-2021, 04:18 PM
newtotheu newtotheu is offline
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Originally Posted by Titchou View Post
I think maybe she's mixing terminology. Virtual is "traditional" now since the pandemic. And even SEC schools get 20-21 year olds going thru recruitment and getting placed.

I guess my question is - what is it you are looking for in a sorority? If it weren't for Covid and your family situation, where would you be right now?

If you truly believe you won't be in person next semester, you need to sign your papers and move on. Don't drag them along thinking you'll be there and all will be normal...I get the feeling you don't really want to go anyway....just my gut feeling.
I 100% want to move across the country and live on campus, be active in my collegiate sorority, and have a traditional college experience. I'm not sure I can do that unless/until my family's situation settles down and I don't know what will happen with my parent's health.

I want the friendships and memories of a sorority... study nights, charity drives, tailgating, and the usual. I opted for Greek over a random on-campus club because I want to develop lifelong or at least longer, deeper friendships and have more of a close-knit 'family' group on campus. I don't know of other groups that connect a person with both their college and also have the lifelong relationships with the combo of academics/charity/social events.
  #14  
Old 10-06-2021, 05:01 PM
thetalady thetalady is offline
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Originally Posted by newtotheu View Post
I 100% want to move across the country and live on campus, be active in my collegiate sorority, and have a traditional college experience. I'm not sure I can do that unless/until my family's situation settles down and I don't know what will happen with my parent's health.

I want the friendships and memories of a sorority... study nights, charity drives, tailgating, and the usual. I opted for Greek over a random on-campus club because I want to develop lifelong or at least longer, deeper friendships and have more of a close-knit 'family' group on campus. I don't know of other groups that connect a person with both their college and also have the lifelong relationships with the combo of academics/charity/social events.
I will not apologize for saying this. Not one bit of this makes any sense at all to me. I don't believe any of this for a minute. I think the OP is a troll, having a grand time laughing and pulling all of our legs. Autistic, plus size, depression problems, LGBTQ, eating disorder, MS, several years older than most pledges and looks older than that, lives across the country... are there any intersectional boxes that didn't get checked off?
  #15  
Old 10-06-2021, 05:13 PM
carnation carnation is offline
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Originally Posted by thetalady View Post
I will not apologize for saying this. Not one bit of this makes any sense at all to me. I don't believe any of this for a minute. I think the OP is a troll, having a grand time laughing and pulling all of our legs. Autistic, plus size, depression problems, LGBTQ, eating disorder, MS, several years older than most pledges and looks older than that, lives across the country... are there any intersectional boxes that didn't get checked off?

Only that she has newborn triplets.
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