Anonymous wrote:Surprised no one has mentioned Reed; it has neither frats nor varsity sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every time my introverted DD finds a school she is interested in in terms of location, campus, major, etc. she then reads some review like, “If you aren’t going Greek or on a team, you have nothing to do on the weekend.” Schools like Lafayette seem to have a jock or Greek divide with the rest of the students who then have a hard time socially.
It would be great to hear which schools have this issue so she can not waste her time on them.
(And - we’ve learned that relatively lower percentages in fraternities/sororities doesn’t mean that Greek life doesn’t dominate because often all of the parties on weekends are at frats.)
Duke can be lonely if not Greeky or sporty or party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. I know this is over-simplifying but my daughter is looking a tier lower than from what maybe she could have a shot at because we can’t afford $70-80 thousand. This sounds whiney but it feels like this makes it hard to avoid party-schools, which she would like to do. The big state schools seem so Greek and overwhelming to her — we visited some.)
Though I went to an Ivy and frats ruled the weekends because the school was so isolated.)
The big state schools that have 15,000+ students might have large greek systems, but if 15% is greek, that means 85% isn't...that translates to thousands of non-greek kids for your kid to find her tribe.
Anonymous wrote:So, this thread was from the High school class of '22 -- if you are around OP, where is your daughter now in her Sophomore year and how does she like it, reflecting back on this issue?
Anonymous wrote:NYU, BU, NEU
I think these schools are completely fine without greek or sports.
Anonymous wrote:Every time my introverted DD finds a school she is interested in in terms of location, campus, major, etc. she then reads some review like, “If you aren’t going Greek or on a team, you have nothing to do on the weekend.” Schools like Lafayette seem to have a jock or Greek divide with the rest of the students who then have a hard time socially.
It would be great to hear which schools have this issue so she can not waste her time on them.
(And - we’ve learned that relatively lower percentages in fraternities/sororities doesn’t mean that Greek life doesn’t dominate because often all of the parties on weekends are at frats.)
Anonymous wrote:Every time my introverted DD finds a school she is interested in in terms of location, campus, major, etc. she then reads some review like, “If you aren’t going Greek or on a team, you have nothing to do on the weekend.” Schools like Lafayette seem to have a jock or Greek divide with the rest of the students who then have a hard time socially.
It would be great to hear which schools have this issue so she can not waste her time on them.
(And - we’ve learned that relatively lower percentages in fraternities/sororities doesn’t mean that Greek life doesn’t dominate because often all of the parties on weekends are at frats.)
Anonymous wrote:There are a whole bunch of "fratty" SLAC/Universities in Ohop, Pennsylvania and Indiana that fits this - Miami of Ohio/Dennison type places, and then the entire SEC (alabama, Vandy, Auburn) - and actually most southern schools, with Rice being the exception.