But if your daughter isn’t in the sorority how would she really know what the selection process is? |
DP. You have NO idea how status and appearance-focused many of these groups are. It isn’t pretty. |
That may be that sorority, or Greek life in the SEC, but there are all types of people at these schools. Even at Alabama, Greek life is only 36% and with so many kids from out of state, girls don’t have to deal with certain aspects of southern culture if they don’t want to. |
| It's terrible and present at almost all southern schools. Vanderbilt, UVA, SECs are the worst offenders. Some schools like Rice do not have this problem, but most do. Extremely shallow people and rampant, deep-seated lookism. |
| Consider looking west? Stanford, Cal, Pomona, UCLA? USC has a touch of the $/looks/greek culture but much less compared to their old days. |
Wrong At Alabama you deal with the dumbest of dumb. Sending a DD to the state that gave us Tommy Tubby is truly ridiculous. Laws in Alabama if your daughter gets raped in campus oh so lovely. This goes for Ok, MO, MS, and AK absolutely dumb decisions to send a daughter to one of theses states in our current political climate which Project 2025 is coming in fast DD will not he safe. Not to mention how utterly dumb financial decision to send any kid zoOS to a red state at this point in time. Jobs will not be there. |
Not the OP, but my daughter is Asian, but very much not the Asian sorority type. I am curious about Emory in particular because it's one of the schools we are considering but she doesn't want a place where lookism culture dominates. How is Emory for culture generally? I know at every school there are different scenes, but wondering ifthere enough of an authentic and kind or intellectual scene at Emory for all types to be happy? |
To me this ties into “party/ frat culture” at the school. The shallowness intensifies the more the frat culture intensifies and the inclination for academics declines. Major gap culturally between an UT Austin/UNC vs Ole Miss |
Your last paragraph is factually incorrect. For better or worse, and for reasons having little to do with politics, red state economies have been outperforming blue states in job growth and income growth. Probably going to continue due to climate, COL, tax and regulatory burdens, etc. |
Actually...it's no comparison if you look at nominal GDP by region vs. just looking at %age growth. Blue states dominate. Hence, why the only states that actually receive less funding from the government than they provide in revenue are blue states. Also, many of the actual areas that outperform within a Red State are Blue areas. Atlanta almost singlehandedly powers GA economic growth. 67% of the highest growth regions of the US are in blue areas...again, some may be located within Red States. Finally, the top destinations for recent college graduates, even in places like the Southeast are cities like NYC, DC, San Fran, etc. NYC is by far the most popular destination for college grads from the southeast. |
+1 |
None of which demonstrates PP’s claim that it’s “an utterly dumb” financial decision to send a kid to a red state bc “jobs will not be there.” That’s just silly. |
Alabama gives merit that some of us can't turn down. Is that so hard to understand? |
Beat it, Dobbs dork. |
| There are thousands of girls at college. No they aren’t all like these stereotypes. The majority of it is limited to sororities at southern colleges. But that is a small percentage of the total girls on campus. Sure, there is less of this culture in sororities (and overall) at say, University of Chicago. But pretty much any college is going to have a variety of different types of people and your daughter will find her people wherever she ends up. |