The majority of America’s Greek life population exists on campuses with large student bodies. Sometimes it’s easy to forget that Greek life is also flourishing on campuses with under 5,000 undergrad. At many of these smaller universities participation in fraternities and sororities far exceed that of SEC or Big Ten schools....
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You have made one of the biggest decisions of your life to go to college. Congratulations! However, that’s not the only decision that you’ll have to make when it comes to college life. Another important decision that you’ll probably make is the decision to go Greek in college.
Greek life has lots of benefits to offer to its members – opportunities to build a network, social/community activities to participate in, a strong brotherhood bond to maintain, and many more! However, one of the biggest challenges college guys face at the beginning of their Greek life is choosing the right fraternity for themselves....
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Nobody walks into a chapter meeting fired up about GPA plaques. I get it. You've got ritual, you've got brotherhood, you've got a hundred other things competing for your attention. But I've watched chapters let their academic standing slide for years running, brush it off as a non-issue, and then act surprised when the university starts breathing down their necks. The award thing isn't just a plaque. It's a signal - and right now, a lot of chapters are sending the wrong one.
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Eastern Michigan University is gearing up for Greek Week, and honestly, my first reaction was something like relief. Not because Greek Week is some perfectly run machine - it never is - but because it still exists. Because chapters are still showing up for it. Because someone over in Fraternity and Sorority Life at EMU is still doing the work to make it happen.
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Homecoming week is the one time a year when the whole Greek community collectively decides sleep is optional and chapter points are everything. And honestly? I don't regret a single exhausted Tuesday morning because of it. Four years of homecoming with my fraternity gave me some of my clearest, loudest, most chaotic memories from college - and I think that's kind of the point.
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Every recruitment cycle, I watched the same argument play out in Panhellenic meetings. Someone would push for tighter values-based criteria - structured conversations, consistent evaluation rubrics, documented reasoning for cuts - and at least two chapter presidents would roll their eyes like we'd just proposed banning bid day entirely. And every single time, those same chapters were the ones filing grade appeals or showing up to standards hearings six months later. That pattern is not a coincidence.
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There's an opinion piece floating around from The Tiger at Clemson that's been making the rounds in Greek circles this week. The author, DeVincens, takes aim at sorority recruitment - arguing that sororities are overrated and that women should think twice before rushing. I read the whole thing. And honestly, it rubbed me the wrong way, and not just because I'm an IFC guy who thinks Greek life gets unfairly torched in the press.
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Every fraternity recruiter will tell you the same thing during rush: join us, and you'll have brothers opening doors for you for the rest of your life. It's practically in the script at this point. But I've spent enough time around Greek life - and talked to enough guys a few years out - to know that the honest answer is way more complicated than that pitch suggests.
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When I first heard about the fatal hazing case out of Northern Arizona University, my gut reaction wasn't shock. It was something closer to exhaustion. Another headline, another fraternity, another family that lost someone. And here's the thing I keep coming back to - I joined a fraternity. I'm still in one. So when these stories break, they don't feel abstract to me anymore.
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A recent piece out of Signal Cleveland asked Ohio college students to describe campus life in their own words - no filters, no PR spin, just actual students saying what's on their minds in 2025. And honestly, reading through it as a guy who just graduated last year, it hit different than I expected. Not because it was shocking. Because it wasn't.
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