Quote:
Originally Posted by Fratlete
Would you care to go into some detail about being both an athlete and a fraternity member and any difficulties about overlapping commitments? Any opinion/experiences of an athlete-fraternity member would be a big help
|
Well, I have a different situation--so I'm not sure how much my experience could help you. Although I was a D-I athlete, it was in a conference where there are no athletic scholarships--while people were recruited, they were ultimately there to be students. As a result, you could drop the team and not worry about having to leave school.
So, the campus culture was much more accepting of athletes having lives outside of the sport. There were fraternities known for being the "track," "wrestling," and "football" fraternities. The fraternity leaderships worked around the sports schedules. They tended to recruit from their sports. The sororities had a mix of women from different sports. I will admit, however, that some sports did not have any Greek representation, in part because of the close-knit nature of the sports (rowing comes to mind).
It really, really, really has more to do with your campus's culture than anyone's general experience. Good luck!