WVU Tech is a smaller technical university in Beckley, West Virginia, and the Greek system there reflects the scale of the school itself. It's an intimate community with two fraternities — Phi Kappa Tau and Sigma Pi — operating under IFC, and two sororities — Alpha Sigma Tau and Delta Zeta — under Panhellenic. That's four chapters total, which makes this one of the smaller Greek systems you'll find at any four-year school in the state.
Because the overall student population at Tech isn't large, Greek life here occupies a different kind of space than it would at, say, the main WVU campus in Morgantown. It's not the dominant social force on campus, but the chapters that are here tend to be tight-knit. Members often know each other well across organizations, and there's less of the large-school anonymity you'd find somewhere bigger.
Recruitment at a school this size is generally pretty low-key compared to the big formal rush processes you'd see at larger universities. Expect more casual, get-to-know-you events rather than massive structured recruitment weeks with hundreds of potential new members moving through. Philanthropy and community service tend to be core parts of how these smaller chapters stay active and connected to campus life.
As for housing, dedicated Greek houses are not a defining feature of the Tech campus the way they might be at larger institutions — chapters here tend to operate without the traditional fraternity or sorority house setup. Social events and chapter activities happen through other campus spaces and off-campus venues. The community is small, but the chapters that exist here are consistently present and engaged with the school.