Anonymous wrote:Any mention of going Greek on this forum is always a trigger. Why is that? Why do people care so much? I mean, if it's not your thing, great, but why judge so harshly when somebody else does it?
Anonymous wrote:NP here. My kids were in college to prepare for the adult world. Greek life seems juvenile, delaying adulthood. As a parent we looked closely at stats of Greek life on various campuses and were ok, with the college as a choice, if Greek participation didn't exceed 20%.
Anonymous wrote:Any mention of going Greek on this forum is always a trigger. Why is that? Why do people care so much? I mean, if it's not your thing, great, but why judge so harshly when somebody else does it?
Anonymous wrote:Both my kids are in frats for primarily what I would call practical reasons.
Kid 1 is at a city school where you have to live off campus jr and sr year and the frat is much cheaper (and well located) than any other housing option by like 50%.
Kid 2 for fairly similar reasons but mainly that the frat house is equivalent price but so much nicer and with much better food than normal on campus housing.
They like the friends they are making and for one it is a “top” house which hopefully provides strong networking. They are at schools where the parties aren’t really exclusive for anyone or any house…literally anyone at the school can attend (except for their own formals) and do.
Anonymous wrote:Both my kids are in frats for primarily what I would call practical reasons.
Kid 1 is at a city school where you have to live off campus jr and sr year and the frat is much cheaper (and well located) than any other housing option by like 50%.
Kid 2 for fairly similar reasons but mainly that the frat house is equivalent price but so much nicer and with much better food than normal on campus housing.
They like the friends they are making and for one it is a “top” house which hopefully provides strong networking. They are at schools where the parties aren’t really exclusive for anyone or any house…literally anyone at the school can attend (except for their own formals) and do.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I went to a medium-sized public college and were both involved in Greek life. However, I feel like a lot has changed with addition of social media, especially when it comes to sororities. There just seems to be a lot more pressure to have a certain image to publicize that to the world on social media. My sorority in college was very low-key and we did our thing without concern about broadcasting it widely. That has been a huge shift and reason I am much more skeptical of these organizations in their current state.