St. Norbert College is a small, Catholic liberal arts school in De Pere, Wisconsin, just outside of Green Bay, and its Greek system reflects that intimate campus feel. The community is made up of a handful of IFC fraternities and Panhellenic sororities, keeping things on a smaller, more close-knit scale compared to what you'd find at a large state school.
On the fraternity side, the IFC chapters include Delta Upsilon, Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Theta, and Tau Kappa Epsilon. Panhellenic is represented by Alpha Xi Delta, Delta Phi Epsilon, and Theta Phi Alpha. That covers the full picture — there's no NPHC or MGC presence at SNC as of now.
Recruitment here tends to be pretty accessible given the size of the school. It's not the overwhelming, week-long production you'd see at a Big Ten campus. Because SNC's total undergraduate enrollment is relatively small, the Greek chapters themselves tend to be smaller too, which means members often know each other well across different organizations.
Don't expect a traditional Greek Row. St. Norbert doesn't really have chapter houses in the way that bigger universities do, so a lot of Greek social life happens through campus events, philanthropy efforts, and community programming rather than house parties on a dedicated strip.
Philanthropy is genuinely a part of the culture here, which fits with the college's Norbertine mission and its emphasis on community and service. Chapters tend to be involved in fundraising events and volunteer work throughout the year. Greek life exists alongside, not above, the broader campus social scene — it's one piece of what SNC students do, not the defining feature of the whole experience.