If could delete my post I would as found answer to own question- since don’t know how to delete, posting answer here in case anyone else curious- from school paper says: drinking, “ current [guides] members intentionally misled new members with a purposefully difficult quiz and a fake syllabus outlining extensive readings and travel requirements” and “were pressured to wear “potentially embarrassing” outfits and performed song remixes in public locations.” https://www.cavalierdaily.com/article/2023/01/club-gymnastics-and-university-guide-service-found-guilty-of-hazing-misconduct?fbclid=IwAR26NAiC5BPyMK4AFE4mAlC1bPrNzZfuwBAzU2wpLNVOHJx35WMN59ZjwC8 |
Here you go, straight from student affairs will all of the information. https://studentaffairs.virginia.edu/subsite/hoos-against-hazing/reports |
pp’s daughter is Millie Kentner! |
No, two kids went/go there. One graduated two years ago and one is a 3rd year. Both were/are non-greek but in certain clubs that might as well have been. College students are going to do college student things and have since the first one was created, that's why they make movies about it. |
These UVA-specific Greek threads come up periodically on this site, and there usually several alums saying, yes, the 30% dominates the social scene and is more pervasive than the numbers might indicate. And there are always one or two moms (pretty sure they’re moms) who say no, my kid is happy as a clam and has no contact whatsoever with Greek life. Which is absolutely possible, no doubt. But unless you want to direct your kids to this thread full of “hysterical people,” your secondhand experience as a parent is not really relevant. |
There is no way in hell I am going to read 34 pages on this topic. But I will say this. I had two daughters at UVA. Both decided to rush, it was not an overly stressful experience for either one of them, and they landed in spots they were happy with. Yes, everyone knows about the “tiers.” Some care, some don’t, mine didn’t. If you go into this whole thing with a fragile ego, you are more likely to be disappointed. If you don’t, you’re likely to be fine. And it seems to me that it’s always the parents with fragile egos who put down the Greek system so much. |
No, it's really not. It does not dominate the social scene, it is a part of it. I'll take the word of my extremely social kids to alums that went to school there 20 years ago or are bitter. I don't have to have graduated to know what the scene is like. I'm going on 5 years of kids attending, own property in C'Ville and have a better view of it than you. It's not as big a deal as these loons are making it. |
100% which is why my dd is fine not be "top" because she likes the guys they mix with a whole lot better than the ones considered "top". |
If your kid goes to school in the South, it's a fraternity, not a frat.
At UVa, some people will call them frats, but people in the theoretically-'top-tier' fraternities and sororities (which have a bunch of Southern UMC) will call them fraternities. It's not consciously judgmental, but it's a standard usage thing. "Frat@ sounds wrong to people in the South in the same way that bad verb conjugation sounds off. |
There's that percentage again. 30% of the student population engaged in a single activity on a college campus is a LOT. It's extremely visible and an influential part of life on (and off) grounds |
PREACH. |
They prefer to use the term ‘fraternity’ in the north also; think it may be more the non-Greek kids (and parents) who call the, frats; won’t post here the analogy they use when correcting someone to call it a ‘fraternity’ not a ‘frat’ |
LOL, it's definitely an interesting one. IYKYK |
Hmm I am from the north and also use fraternity and sorority. |
Wait to you hear what the business frat at uva got in trouble for a couple years ago…. |