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question about juniors and seniors

by: Curious   

Looking at the grade reports there are memebers, active memebers and new members reported in each House.

It varies some from house to house, but in general there are about 150 new members, 285 active members and 400 memebers in each houses

Does this mean that upperclassmen- juniors/seniors - tend to go inactive? I am thinking this since active membership is just about twice the new members numbers, suggesting that active mebership is comprised of mostly freshmen and sophomores.

What happens when you are a member but not "active"? Is there a cost? Can you attend events?

If I am wrong about juniors and seniors , can someone explain these numbers?

Posted By: Curious
Page 1 of 1
#1by: Sorry   
#1    

I see that actives members are sorta Ted from new and then add to the total membership.

But with typically about 150 new members, if retention were "perfect" there should be 600 total members.

However, membership is just over 400

What happens the the 200, is my question. Are they upperclassmen that go inactive?

By: Sorry

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by: ___   

That's pretty much the pattern for all college students. People drop out, fail and transfer.

By: ___
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#2by: Yep   
#2    

It seems like a dirty little secret. I've asked this question and it's never really answered. If you look at the senior pictures around graduation, there is never really a lot of them. I think they move off campus, can go to bars and house parties and the need to be on campus isn't as great. The cost is probably a huge factor at that point too. They get jobs or internships too. It's the sophomore's job to recruit. What happens after that? I'd love to know too!

By: Yep
by: Cur   

Curious Mom too!

My experience at a different school was that by senior year sorority life was "less important". Freshman and sophomore years certainly the peak. As you noted, other social outlets and friends from classes/major as well as internships and study abroad started to limit sorority time.

That being said, the cost of staying active was not as notable for me. I would love for my daughter to stay active, but if her upperclass experience mirrors mine, it would be very hard to justify the thousands of dollars of expense. Not a matter if we could, but does it make sense. I am sure this will upset some, but you can tell by the numbers allot of girls are thinking this way.

I also have read here that some houses claim high retention. In general, the houses are more similar than different - they all recruit about 150 memebers each year to maintain total membership at just over 400. Some may have a slight edge, but hardly notable or significant.

And relative to grad pictures, I've often thought the same thing. Very few girls and kind of sad. \n\n\n\n\n

By: Cur
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by: g   

a lot of what greek life offers caters to freshman. There's really no point in paying 10k a year for 3 date parties and a formal. people drop from every sorority.

By: g
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by: .   

A lot of girls go abroad the spring of their junior year and come back to realize they don't feel like doing the sorority thing anymore. Some night want to get involved as alums but they're over the college vibe.

Also, there are only so many positions on exec. As an upperclassman you pretty much have to be SUPER into your sorority and be a leader or there's no point in paying for it at all. Heck, I think DG's officers are 80% sophomores or something like that, which usually means no juniors or seniors wanted to be involved in that capacity.

By: .
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#3by: Active   
#3    

They just drop, it's not a big secret. My sorority doesn't have inactive status so you're either all in or not

By: Active
#4by: Fran   
#4    

But can you be an active alum if you drop? Write a rec? I thought dropping was s negative thing.

By: Fran
by: .   

There's no such thing as an "active alum", you can have inactive status which usually means you are abroad/taking a semester off or you can go "early alum" which means you become an alumnae before your four years of collegiate membership is over. Once you are an alumnae, you are always an alumnae.

Dropping is a negative thing but when the dues are this high most girls don't care.

By: .
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by: ^   

An 'alumna'. Some 'alumnae'.

By: ^
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by: ___   

Most sororities do not let you take early alumna status if you're still enrolled in the same school. It's member or no longer a member.

By: ___
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by: If   

If you drop before graduation, and can't take early alumna status, can you be an alumna member after graduation?

By: If
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#5by: Has   
#5    

Is there a reason why a lower Junior or senior rate isn't considersed without meal plans and/or elimination of some other expenses from the dues?

It wouldn't apply to girls living in the house, but seems that there may be some better retention and benefit.


By: Has
by: B   

Good idea

By: B
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#6by: IMO   
#6    

Exec really should be made up of juniors... are there many Presidents who are sophomores?

By: IMO
by: .   

No. I know my chapter doesn't let you serve as president unless you've served on council before (not sure if that's an official rule or just an unspoken one.)

I think DG is the only chapter with a sophomore as president, I believe every other one is a rising senior.

By: .
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by: Gigi   

Did not realize that about DG. Interesting. What does it say about them? Is that girl just so awesome (after all the last SGA president from XO was a sophomore, so it is not like they can't lead), or was there a lack of interest and leadership available from the rising Juniors? Is it a leadership development thing/issue?

I do have to give DG props for a good year last year and they seem to be on the rise, so things seem good there at DG.

By: Gigi
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#7by: S   
#7    

Also part of it is the pcs have gotten larger, I know my house pc 16 was 30 bigger than pc 15 and in 2013 when the girls who just graduated rushed the pcs were closer to a little over 100. Thats one part of it and like stated above a lot of girls just don't wanna pay for it anymore.

By: S
by: OOS Folks   

Most of the kids I knew last year that dropped out or flunked out were Alabama kids, not OOS. Sure, someone might get homesick, but it seemed to me that most OOS kids were here because they wanted to be here, whatever their reasoning was, and a lot of the Alabama kids were here because it's where you go in Alabama, where their parents went, etc... Also, I knew some Alabama kids that were just SHOCKINGLY unprepared for college life. I am sure there were OOS folks like that too, I just didn't know any of them.

By: OOS Folks
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by: Well   

I guess it's just who you know. I can't remember the last time a girl in my house who was from the south dropped (although we don't have a lot) but probably at least 20 girls go back to NJ/NY/Chicago at the end of first semester every year

By: Well
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#8by: Bama   
#8    

As long as the school is so easy to get into and takes anyone and everyone there is going to be this drop rate. Kids come here for the football and party culture mostly and this doesn't exactly make for good retention.

By: Bama
by: Gigi   

Enrollment at The University of Alabama reached a record high of 37,665 for fall 2016. The entering freshman class, at 7,559 students, is the largest and best qualified in UA history. More than 40 percent of UA’s 7,559-member freshman class scored 30 or higher on the ACT, up from last year’s record 36 percent.

But kids do come here for the football and party culture too, so @Bama's snarky comment is not completely unfair.

Don't appreciate those that say generally attacking Bama's education quality or the competitiveness of its admissions. It is not Ivy League but it is a quality institution.

By: Gigi
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by: Gigi   

Something like 55 percent of those freshman in 2016 were female. That translates to roughly 4,000. Of that, 2,750 or so did recruitment. So about 2/3 of all incoming female freshness did recruitment.

Don't kill me on inexact math, but that is quite a high level of participation.

Love us.

By: Gigi
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by: Gigi   

The fraternity and sorority community at The University of Alabama is one of the largest and most vibrant in the United States. With more than 11,000 students, the UA Greek community comprises over 36 percent of the undergraduate student body and is home to 62 social Greek-letter organizations. Since Fall 2011, The University of Alabama has held the coveted honor of being the largest fraternity and sorority community in the nation with regard to overall fraternity and sorority membership

This is from university web site.

By: Gigi
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by: Gigi   

So....

Just looking at these numbers, we can see an overall pattern of lower percentage participation university wide vs. sororities as percentage of incoming freshman. Not surprising but shows that people remove themselves as they spend time at the university, which is consistent with observations above.

By: Gigi
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by: Active   

The university is definitely getting smarter, more qualified students but they have also not cut off the bottom applicants, hence the huge growth in enrollment. Maybe someday they will start to raise the entrance requirements (at least for out of state students-I think state residents with decent scores deserve to attend the state university)

By: Active
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by: Bama   

There are some other statistics, especially sad being the graduation rate. 41% in 4 years (national average is 59%), 62% in 5 years, 67% in 6 years. So...1/3 of all students don't graduate within 6 years; statistics show that it is because 24% of all Bama undergrads transfer out and 8% of them drop out. Gotta keep bringin' em in as freshman because 1/3 of them won't stick around. Drink, pledge, drink, football, drink, transfer.

By: Bama
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#9by: hnng    
#9    

my sorority you can go inactive for a semester. It's really hard to get though. Only girls who have full time 40hrs a week internships, or study abroad can usually get it. I know some girls are allowed to get it for family issues where they have to move home and take online classes. If you stay in town and get the inactive status, you can't go to any sorority event. only ritual events like formal pledging, initiation, and our form of a senior send off.

By: hnng
#10by: Drop   
#10    

Part of the drop rate is girls leaving.

But I still think a large component are girls who just don't want to pay $8K or more a year for a social institution that provides little value to many upperclassmen


And this holds up for all houses - OR, NR, "wealthy", low grades, high grades, etc. Statstics seem pretty consistent across the board when you look at new members versus active memebers year over year. Some may retain a handful more, but it's a relatively minor difference.

By: Drop

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