Stevenson University is a small private school in Owings Mills, Maryland, just outside Baltimore, and its Greek community reflects that smaller, more close-knit campus environment. There are no active fraternities currently operating on campus, so the Greek presence here is made up entirely of sororities.
On the sorority side, two organizations are active: Alpha Kappa Alpha and Phi Sigma Sigma. AKA is part of the National Pan-Hellenic Council tradition, one of the oldest and most historically significant sorority systems in the country. Phi Sigma Sigma is a member of the National Panhellenic Conference. Having both represented means there's some range in the type of Greek experience available, even if the overall community is on the smaller side.
Because the system is compact, recruitment tends to be a more personal process than what you'd see at a large state school. Don't expect massive open house events with hundreds of women moving through houses all week. It's more intimate than that, and the organizations tend to be selective in a way that's about fit and genuine connection rather than volume.
Stevenson doesn't have a traditional Greek Row, and chapters don't have dedicated houses on campus. Social events and chapter activities generally take place in campus common spaces or off-campus venues around the greater Baltimore area, which gives members plenty to work with given the location.
Greek life here isn't the dominant force on campus social culture the way it might be at a larger school, but the chapters that are active tend to be engaged with philanthropy work and campus involvement. For a smaller private institution, that kind of focused, community-oriented structure is pretty typical.