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I was a first gen/ URM student who knew nothing about Greek Life, and also went to a small regional university. Movies were my only point of reference when it came to sororities.
My daughter is in a sorority at a large/medium-to-large (prestigious?) state univ that rushes in January. She made a lot of friends in the fall who were also going to rush, and got a bid from a house she liked. I did not encourage, but supported her decision. Greek life is not the main focus of her campus life, but she has gained some experience and is learning a lot from older sisters. They share academic and professional advice. She will live in the house next year, and it will be much cheaper than living off campus. No need to pay rent for summer months! She was glad to see that although her sorority is mostly white, she noticed through social media, that there was also a good racial mix. So far, it has been a positive experience for her. |
| Nothing gets DCUM more worked up than Greek talk. It really does feed into women’s insecurities and stereotypes. I can’t understand why women can’t trust their young adult daughters to make their own decisions about something like this and support that decision regardless — without judging and tearing apart young women who make a different decision. |
Talk about lame. |
| Seems to be trend among certain group of posters no red state schools including all sec schools, no frats/sororities and no school named Elon. My guess is that most of them don’t drive a Suburban, Navigator or Ford pickup. |
Why such a judgmental whore? |
| I hate the term frat. It is fraternity. |
Oh Jesus lighten up. I vote nay. Use college as a time to figure out who you are as a person, without social crutches. I was in a frat in college and wish I wouldn’t have been. Too much time on partying and missed a lot of opportunities for personal growth, both academically and personally. |
| Did not grow up here, so admit, I just don't understand the value of regular fraternities. All the hazing and drinking stories, I just don't get it. However, there are also some academic/professional fraternities for business, prelaw, etc. Are those different? |
| I would neither encourage nor discourage. Your kids make their own choices and don’t need permission from parents. Let them do what they’re inclined to do. |
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Let the kid decide.
Given that OP was never in a sorority, not sure why they have such an opinion about something they never experienced. |
Are the kids paying for it? Sorry money bags but cost is absolutely illegitimate consideration. |
| A legitimate consideration. |
Yep. End of story. The "buying friends" thing is such BS newbie thing said by anyone never in a Fraternity of Sorority. |
Agree, and I was super anti-sorority/fraternity at one point, but I generally let me kids make their own choices. DH was in a fraternity, but it was not his everything, and the kids know that. And they know I was not. I was a college athlete and my team was my support system in school. |
Then make it about your budget plan, not an uninformed opinion. |