I think this is a good point that expands to other areas as well. If a student is inclined to care about social stratification, it should be something on the radar when looking the culture of a schools. Students will create social strata around college (High Ivy, Low Ivy, T20 or not), within a school at the college (Business vs Liberal Arts vs Engineering, etc), majors within a school (CS vs Gender Studies), Greek and specific frats/sororities within Greek, Clubs, internships etc) The systems are what they are. Its up to the student reflect on what is important to them and how they want to navigate them. |
This is kind of a hilarious post. So yeah, all the kids I know partied hard in high school, which is totally normal bruh. And of course that's what they're doing in college because what else is there to do?! Oh and yeah not any loser majors. Don't know what those nerds are doing. Sounds rough out there to be a partying rich kid. Real stressful to get those invites. |
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Greek life can seem like a bigger deal than it really is only because the people in it tend to make it their entire identity and personality (see: the Greek God poster who shows up to every one of these threads and posts about his fraternity years like they were the pinnacle of his life). This isn't usually the case with students who occupy their time with non-Greek clubs and campus activities. Even varsity athletes aren't as loud and obnoxious about their team affiliation as so-called "top tier" frat bros are about their letters.
Once you learn to tune it all out, you'll quickly realize that going Greek is not required to have a social life on a campus of 20,000+ students when 16,000 of them aren't in frats or sororities. The very idea is ridiculous. You're literally living within a few hundred yards of more people your age than you ever will be for the rest of your life. There's no reason you shouldn't be able to find friends and have a memorable experience. |
There's this new thing called "social media." Google it. |
Same for me! Back when I attended rush was during new student week--so think 3 days after you arrive on campus. Before you could really even make friends yet. Everyone on my floor rushed except 2 of us (yes I lived in Bob/Mc when it was "the" place to live) it was crazy to watch it but yes I wasn't going o be friends with those who rushed anyhow. Once classes started I easily found my friends |
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