Indiana Institute of Technology is a smaller private engineering and business school in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and its Greek system reflects that scale. The campus has a focused, career-oriented student culture, and the Greek presence here is more intimate compared to what you'd find at a large Big Ten school a few hours away.
The only active chapter on campus right now is Sigma Phi Epsilon, operating under an IFC framework. There's no active Panhellenic council at the moment, which means sorority recruitment isn't a current part of the picture. With just the one fraternity present, this isn't the kind of school where Greek life dominates the social scene or where you're going to find a traditional row of chapter houses on a main strip.
Indiana Tech draws a lot of students focused on engineering, business, and athletics — it's an NAIA school with a solid sports culture — so a good chunk of the social life on campus revolves around those communities. Greek life exists here as one option among several, not as the central hub of the undergraduate experience.
Sig Ep is a nationally recognized fraternity known for its "Balanced Man" programming, which emphasizes personal development alongside the traditional brotherhood aspects. For a smaller chapter at a smaller school, that kind of structured national support tends to matter more than it would at a flagship university with dozens of competing chapters.
Recruitment at a school this size tends to be pretty low-key — more conversations and hangouts than the large-scale formal rush events you'd see at Indiana University or Purdue. Chapter housing situations at smaller private schools like this can vary, and the footprint here is modest overall.