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Fraternities and sororities

Fraternities and sororities are social organizations at North American colleges and universities.

Generally, membership in a fraternity or sorority is obtained as an undergraduate student, but continues thereafter for life. Some accept graduate students as well.[1][2]

Individual fraternities and sororities vary in organization and purpose, but most share five common elements:

  1. Secrecy
  2. Single-sex membership
  3. Selection of new members on the basis of a two-part vetting and probationary process known as rushing and pledging
  4. Ownership and occupancy of a residential property where undergraduate members live
  5. A set of complex identification symbols that may include Greek letters, armorial achievements, ciphers, badges, grips, hand signs, passwords, flowers, and colors

Fraternities and sororities engage in philanthropic activities, host parties, provide "finishing" training for new members such as instruction on etiquette, dress and manners, and create networking opportunities for their newly graduated members.

Fraternities and sororities can be tax-exempt 501(c)(7) organizations in the United States.

Fraternities and sororities have been widely criticized for practicing elitism and favoritism, discriminating against non-white students and other marginalized groups, conducting dangerous hazing rituals, and facilitating alcohol abuse. Fraternities specifically have been further criticized for encouraging misogynistic behavior and perpetrating sexual violence. Many colleges and universities have sought to reform or eliminate them due to these concerns, but these efforts have typically been met with intense controversy.[3][4][5][6]

History

Establishment and early history

 
The fraternity system in North America began at the College of William and Mary in 1755.

The first fraternity in North America to incorporate most of the elements of modern fraternities was Phi Beta Kappa, founded at the College of William and Mary in 1775. The founding of Phi Beta Kappa followed the earlier establishment of two other secret student societies that had existed at that campus as early as 1750. In 1779 Phi Beta Kappa expanded to include chapters at Harvard and Yale. By the early 19th century, the organization transformed itself into a scholastic honor society and abandoned secrecy.[7]

In 1825, Kappa Alpha Society, the first fraternity to retain its social characteristic, was established at Union College. In 1827, Sigma Phi and Delta Phi were also founded at the same institution,[8] creating the Union Triad. The further birthing of Psi Upsilon (1833), Chi Psi (1841) and Theta Delta Chi (1847) collectively established Union College as the Mother of Fraternities. The social fraternity Chi Phi, officially formed in 1854, traces its roots to a short-lived organization founded at Princeton in 1824 bearing the same name.[9]

Fraternities represented the intersection between dining clubs, literary societies and secret initiatory orders such as Freemasonry. Their early growth was widely opposed by university administrators, though the increasing influence of fraternity alumni, as well as several high-profile court cases, succeeded in largely muting opposition by the 1880s.[8] The first fraternity meeting hall, or lodge, seems to have been that of the Alpha Epsilon chapter of Chi Psi at the University of Michigan in 1845, leading to a tradition in that fraternity to name its buildings "lodges". As fraternity membership was punishable by expulsion at many colleges at this time, the house was located deep in the woods.[10] The first residential chapter home, built by a fraternity, is believed to have been Alpha Delta Phi's chapter at Cornell University, with groundbreaking dated to 1878.[11] Alpha Tau Omega became the first fraternity to own a residential house in the South when, in 1880, its chapter at the University of the South acquired one.[12] Chapters of many fraternities followed suit, purchasing and, less often, building them with support of alumni. Phi Sigma Kappa's chapter home at Cornell, completed in 1902, is the oldest such house still occupied by its fraternal builders.[13]

Sororities

 
Wesleyan College, a women's college in Macon, Georgia, was the birthplace of Alpha Delta Pi and Phi Mu sororities. Image circa 1877.

Sororities (originally termed "women's fraternities") began to develop in 1851 with the formation of the Adelphean Society Alpha Delta Pi,[14] though fraternity-like organizations for women didn't take their current form until the establishment of Pi Beta Phi in 1867 and Kappa Alpha Theta in 1870. The term "sorority" was used by a professor of Latin at Syracuse University, Dr. Frank Smalley, who felt the word "fraternity" was inappropriate for a group of ladies.[15] The word comes from Latin soror, meaning "sister," "cousin, daughter of a father's brother," or "female friend."[16] The first organization to use the term "sorority" was Gamma Phi Beta, established in 1874.[17]

The development of "fraternities for women" during this time was a major accomplishment in the way of women's rights and equality. By mere existence, these organizations were defying the odds; the founding women were able to advance their organizations despite many factors working against them. The first "Women's Fraternities" not only had to overcome "restrictive social customs, unequal status under the law and the underlying presumption that they were less able than men,"[18] but at the same time had to deal with the same challenges as fraternities with college administrations. Today, both social and multicultural sororities are present on more than 650 college campuses across the United States and Canada. The National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) serves as the "umbrella organization" for 26 (inter)national sororities. Founded in 1902, the NPC is one of the oldest and largest women's membership organizations, representing more than 4 million women at 655 college/university campuses and 4,500 local alumnae chapters in the U.S. and Canada.[19]

Internationalization

In 1867, the Chi Phi fraternity established its Theta chapter at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, marking the first foray of the American social fraternity outside the borders of the United States. At the time, many students from the American south were moving to Europe to study because of the disrepair southern universities fell into during the American Civil War. One such group of Americans organized Chi Phi at Edinburgh; however, during the Theta chapter's existence, it initiated no non-American members. With declining American enrollment at European universities, Chi Phi at Edinburgh closed in 1870.[17]

 
U.S. Air Force, Airmen, presumably members of Sigma Phi Epsilon, display that fraternity's flag in Iraq in 2009.

Nine years following Chi Phi's abortive colonization of the University of Edinburgh, a second attempt was made to transplant the fraternity system outside the United States. In 1879, Zeta Psi established a chapter at the University of Toronto. Zeta Psi's success at Toronto prompted it to open a second Canadian chapter at McGill University, which it chartered in 1883. Other early foundations were Kappa Alpha Society at Toronto in 1892 and at McGill in 1899, and Alpha Delta Phi at Toronto in 1893 and at McGill in 1897. The first sorority, Kappa Alpha Theta, was established at Toronto in 1887. By 1927 there were 42 fraternity and sorority chapters at the University of Toronto and of 23 at McGill University. A few chapters were also reported at the University of British Columbia, Carleton University, Dalhousie University, University of Manitoba, Queen's University, University of Western Ontario, Wilfrid Laurier University, University of Waterloo and Brock University.[20]

The arrival of the fraternity system in Asia accompanied the introduction of the American educational system in the Philippines. The first fraternities were established in the University of the Philippines. The now defunct Patriotic and Progressive Rizal Center Academic Brotherhood (Rizal Center Fraternity), a brotherhood of Jose Rizal followers, was founded in 1913.[21] This was followed by the Rizal Center Sorority. The first Greek-letter organization and fraternity in Asia, the Upsilon Sigma Phi, was founded in 1918.[22] The first Greek-letter sorority, UP Sigma Beta Sorority, was recognized in 1932.[22]

Religion

Many early fraternities made reference to Christian principles or to a Supreme Being in general, as is characteristic of fraternal orders.[23] Some, such as Alpha Chi Rho (1895) and Alpha Kappa Lambda (1907), only admitted Christians,[23] while others, such as Beta Sigma Psi (1925) and Phi Kappa Theta (1959), catered to students belonging with certain denominations of Christianity, such as Lutheranism and Catholicism.[23]

Due to their exclusion from Christian fraternities in the United States, Jewish students began to establish their own fraternities in the period of 1895 and 1920, with the first one being Zeta Beta Tau (1898).[23]

Although many of the religion-specific requirements for many fraternities and sororities have been relaxed or removed, there are some today that continue to rally around their faith as a focal point, such as Beta Upsilon Chi (1985) and Sigma Alpha Omega (1998).[23][24]

Multiculturalism

 
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity members with Georgia Air National Guard Col. Ato Crumbly at a protest in Atlanta, June 2020

Numerous Greek organizations in the past have enacted formal and informal prohibitions on pledging individuals of different races and cultural backgrounds. This began with White fraternities and sororities excluding African-Americans due to racism. All-black fraternities and sororities were spearheaded thereafter in response.

While racist policies have since been abolished by the North American Interfraternity Conference, students of various ethnicities have come together to form a council of multicultural Greek organizations. The National Multicultural Greek Council, officially formed in 1998, is a coordinating body of 19 Greek organizations, including nine fraternities, and ten sororities with cultural affiliations.[25]

The first multicultural sorority, Mu Sigma Upsilon, was established in November 1981 at Rutgers University.[26] The formation of this Greek organization allowed for the emergence of a multicultural fraternity and sorority movement, giving birth to a multicultural movement.

Structure and organization

Common elements

Gender exclusivity

Fraternities and sororities traditionally have been single-sex organizations, with fraternities consisting exclusively of men and sororities consisting exclusively of women. In the United States, fraternities and sororities have a statutory exemption from Title IX legislation prohibiting this type of gender exclusion within student groups, and organizations such as the Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee lobby to maintain it.[27][28]

Since the mid-20th century a small number of fraternities, such as Alpha Theta, Lambda Lambda Lambda, and Alpha Phi Omega have opted to become co-educational and admit female members; however, these generally represent a minority of Greek-letter organizations and no such fraternity is currently a member of the North American Interfraternity Conference, the largest international association of fraternities.[27][28] The first coed fraternity was Pi Alpha Tau (1963–1991) at the University of Illinois at Chicago.[29]

Much more commonly, coed fraternities exist in the form of "service" fraternities such as Alpha Phi Omega, Epsilon Sigma Alpha, Alpha Tau Mu and others. These organizations are similar to "social" fraternities and sororities, with the exception of being coed and non-residential.

In 2014, Sigma Phi Epsilon became the first fraternity in the North American Interfraternity Conference to accept transgender members, or those identifying as male, to join the social fraternity.[30] Several sororities have adjusted their policies to confirm that transgender prospective members are allowable.

Importantly, all these variants have stemmed from a process of self-determination, without challenge by other Greeks. But in a bellwether case, in 2016 Harvard University changed its student conduct code to bar members of single-sex groups from leading campus groups, serving as captains of sports teams or participating in valuable academic fellowships. This is being contested vigorously in U.S. Federal Court by several affected fraternities and sororities.[31][32]

Governance

Individual chapters of fraternities and sororities are largely self-governed by their active (student) members; however, alumni members may retain legal ownership of the fraternity or sorority's property through an alumni chapter or alumni corporation. All of a single fraternity or sorority's chapters are generally grouped together in a national or international organization that sets standards, regulates insignia and ritual, publishes a journal or magazine for all of the chapters of the organization, and has the power to grant and revoke charters to chapters. These federal structures are largely governed by alumni members of the fraternity, though with some input from the active (student) members.[33][34][35]

Rushing and pledging (recruitment and new member periods)

 
The chapter house of Alpha Delta Phi at Cornell University

Most Greek letter organizations select potential members through a two-part process of vetting and probation, called rushing and pledging, respectively. During rush (recruitment), students attend designated social events, and sometimes formal interviews, hosted by the chapters of fraternities and sororities in which they have particular interest. Usually, after a potential new member has attended several such events, officers or current members meet privately to vote on whether or not to extend an invitation (known as a "bid") to the prospective applicant. Those applicants who receive a bid, and choose to accept it, are considered to have "pledged" the fraternity or sorority, thus beginning the pledge period (new member period). Students participating in rush are known as "rushees" (Potential New Members "PNMs") while students who have accepted a bid to a specific fraternity or sorority are known as "new members" or in some cases "pledges".[36]

A new member period may last anywhere from one weekend to several months. During this time, new members might participate in almost all aspects of the life of the fraternity or sorority, but most likely not be permitted to hold office in the organization. At the conclusion of the new member period, a second vote of members may sometimes be taken, often, but not always, using a blackball system. New members who pass this second vote are invited to a formal and secret ritual of initiation into the organization, advancing them to full membership.[8]

Many Greek-letter organizations give preferential consideration for pledging to candidates whose parent or sibling was a member of the same fraternity or sorority. Such prospective candidates are known as "legacies".[37][38]

Membership in more than one fraternity or sorority is almost always prohibited. Recently, some Greek-letter organizations have replaced the term "pledge" with that of "associate member" or "new member". Sigma Alpha Epsilon, in 2014, abolished pledging altogether. Potential members are now immediately initiated into the fraternity upon accepting a bid.[36][39]

Residency

Unique among most campus organizations, members of social Greek letter organizations usually congregate and sometimes live together in large houses generally privately owned by the organization itself (or by the organization alumni association). Often fraternities and sorority houses (called lodges or chapter houses) are located on the same street or in close quarters within the same neighborhood, which may be colloquially known as "Greek row", "frat row", or "sorority row". Often times, chapter houses are uniquely designed, highly elaborate, and very expensive to operate and maintain. Usually, the more expensive the house the higher the annual organization dues. The features and size of Greek houses play a major role in chapters remaining competitive in recruiting and retaining members on many campuses.[40] At some, often small colleges, fraternities and sororities occupy a specific section of university-owned housing provided to them. Some fraternities and sororities are un-housed, with members providing for their own accommodations. In many of these cases, the fraternity or sorority owns or rents a non-residential clubhouse on or off campus to use for meetings and other activities.

Secrecy and ritual

 
A dramatized depiction of a fraternity initiation ritual
 
A "model chapter room" of Kappa Sigma

With a few exceptions, most fraternities and sororities are secret societies. While the identity of members or officers is rarely concealed, fraternities and sororities initiate members following the pledge period through sometimes elaborate private rituals, frequently drawn or adopted from Masonic ritual practice or that of the Greek mysteries.[8]

At the conclusion of an initiation ritual, the organization's secret motto, secret purpose and secret identification signs, such as handshakes and passwords, are usually revealed to its new members. Some fraternities also teach initiates an identity search device used to confirm fellow fraternity members.[41]

Julian Hawthorne, the son of Nathaniel Hawthorne, wrote (in his posthumously published Memoirs)[42] of his initiation into Delta Kappa Epsilon:[43]

I was initiated into a college secret society—a couple of hours of grotesque and good-humored rodomontade and horseplay, in which I cooperated as in a kind of pleasant nightmare, confident, even when branded with a red-hot iron or doused head-over heels in boiling oil,[44] that it would come out all right. The neophyte is effectively blindfolded during the proceedings, and at last, still sightless, I was led down flights of steps into a silent crypt, and helped into a coffin, where I was to stay until the Resurrection...Thus it was that just as my father passed from this earth, I was lying in a coffin during my initiation into Delta Kappa Epsilon.

Meetings and rituals are sometimes conducted in what is known as a "chapter room" located inside the fraternity's house. Entry into chapter rooms is often prohibited to all but the initiated. In one extreme case, the response of firefighters to a blaze signaled by an automated alarm at the Sigma Phi chapter house at the University of Wisconsin in 2003 was hampered in part because fraternity members refused to disclose the location of the hidden chapter room, where the conflagration had erupted, to emergency responders.[45]

According to Assistant Professor Caroline Rolland-Diamond of the Paris West University Nanterre La Défense, in one ritual popular in the 1960s, born out of frustration to the ubiquitous nascent counterculture, "The men were stripped to their underpants, tied up to a tree, and covered in a nasty mix of food and leaves, remaining there until their fiancées came to free them with a kiss."[46]

Symbols and naming conventions

The fraternity or sorority badge is an enduring symbol of membership in a Greek letter organization. Most fraternities also have assumed heraldic achievements. Members of fraternities and sororities address members of the same organization as "brother" (in the case of fraternities) or "sister" (in the case of sororities). The names of almost all fraternities and sororities consist of a sequence of two or three Greek letters, for instance, Delta Delta Delta, Sigma Chi, Chi Omega, or Psi Upsilon. There are a few exceptions to this general rule, as in the case of the fraternities Triangle, Acacia, and Seal and Serpent.[8]

Membership profile

Demographics

There are approximately 9 million student and alumni members of fraternities and sororities in North America, or about 3 percent of the total population.[47][48] Roughly 750,000 of the current fraternity and sorority members are students who belong to an undergraduate chapter.[citation needed]

A 2007 survey conducted at Princeton University showed that white and higher income Princeton students are much more likely than other Princeton students to be in fraternities and sororities.[49] Senior surveys from the classes of 2009 and 2010 showed that 77 percent of sorority members and 73 percent of fraternity members were white.[49]

 
Ronald Reagan was initiated into Tau Kappa Epsilon at Eureka College. George H.W. Bush joined Delta Kappa Epsilon at Yale University.

Notable fraternity and sorority members

Since 1900, 63 percent of members of the United States cabinet have been members of fraternities and sororities, and the current chief executive officers of five of the ten largest Fortune 500 companies are members of fraternities and sororities. In addition, 85 percent of all justices of the U.S. Supreme Court since 1910 have been members of fraternities. U.S. presidents since World War II who have been initiated into fraternities are George W. Bush, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, and Franklin Roosevelt. Three Prime Ministers of Canada have been members of fraternities.[50][51][52][53][54]

In 2013, about 25 percent of members of the U.S. House of Representatives and 40 percent of members of the U.S. Senate were members of Greek-letter organizations.[55]

Actress Sophia Bush was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma at the University of Southern California and has since gone on to further her career in television and receive the Human Rights Campaign's Ally for Equality Award. Other notable sorority women include Mariska Hargitay, who is an actress and founder of the Joyful Heart Foundation.[56][57][58]

Academic performance

Studies have found that university graduation rates are 20 percent higher among members of Greek-letter organizations than among non-members, and students who are members of fraternities and sororities typically have higher-than-average grade point averages. One reason for this is many chapters require their members to maintain a certain academic standard.[59][dubious ]

Each organization requires its members to maintain a minimum GPA in order to continue their membership. Greek members who maintain high GPA's are invited to join notable Greek honor societies. The two most notable Greek honor societies include: Gamma Sigma Alpha and Order of Omega. Gamma Sigma Alpha acknowledges Greek members who hold a 3.5 GPA in upper division classes.[60] Order of Omega recognizes the top 3% of Greek members who exemplify leadership qualities.[60] Greek honor societies provide life-time membership with opportunities such as scholarships and networking.

Professional advancement

There is a high representation of former Greek life members among certain elites in the United States. Greek members "are more likely to be thriving in their well-being and engaged at work than college graduates who did not go Greek," according to a study done by Gallup and Purdue University.[61]

Personal fulfillment

A 2014 Gallup survey of 30,000 university alumni found that persons who said they had been members of Greek-letter organizations while undergraduates reported having a greater sense of purpose, as well as better social and physical well-being, than those who had not.[62]

Criticism

Homogeneous membership and elitism

Greek letter organizations have often been characterized as elitist or exclusionary associations, organized for the benefit of a largely white, upper-class membership base. Members of fraternities and sororities disproportionately come from certain socio-economic demographics.[49] Fraternities specifically have been criticized for what is perceived as their promotion of an excessively alcohol-fueled, party-focused lifestyle.

New York Times columnist Frank Bruni questioned the existence of exclusive clubs on campuses that are meant to facilitate independence, writing: "[Colleges] should be cultivating the kind of sensibility that makes you a better citizen of a diverse and distressingly fractious society. How is that served by retreating into an exclusionary clique of people just like you?"[63]

Some colleges and universities have banned Greek letter organizations on the grounds that they are, by their very nature and structure, elitist and exclusionary. The oldest ban was at Princeton, though Princeton has now had fraternities since the 1980s.[64] Oberlin College banned "secret societies" (fraternities and sororities) in 1847,[65] and the prohibition continues to the present.[66] Quaker universities, such as Guilford College and Earlham College, often ban fraternities and sororities because they are seen as a violation of the Quaker principle of equality.[67][68] Brandeis University has never permitted fraternities or sororities as it maintains a policy that all student organizations have membership open to all.[69]

Alcoholism

One Harvard University study found that "4 out of 5 fraternity and sorority members are binge drinkers. In comparison, other research suggests 2 out of 5 college students overall are regular binge drinkers."[70] There is also a high rate of alcohol-related death among fraternities, which has recently resulted in several lawsuits against various GLOs.[71][72]

Hazing

Fraternities, and to a lesser extent sororities, have been criticized for hazing, sometimes committed by active undergraduate members against their chapter's pledges. Hazing during the pledge period can sometimes culminate in an event commonly known as "Hell Week" in which a week-long series of physical and mental torments are inflicted on pledges. Common hazing practices include sleep deprivation, sensory deprivation, paddling and other types of spanking, use of stress positions, forced runs, busy work, forced drinking and mind games. Rarer incidents involving branding, enemas, urination on pledges and the forced consumption of spoiled food have been reported. Hazing, in many cases, has been reported and has led to the permanent disposal of particular chapters of fraternities and sororities across the country.

 
A depiction of fraternity hazing from the early 20th century

Supporters of fraternities note that hazing is almost universally prohibited by national fraternity organizations, and the occurrence of hazing in undergraduate fraternity chapters goes against official policy. Supporters of fraternities also note that hazing is not unique to Greek-letter organizations and is often reported in other student organizations, such as athletic teams.

In 2007, an anti-hazing hotline was set up to report incidents of hazing on college campuses. Currently, 46 national fraternity and sorority organizations support the toll-free number, which generates automatic email messages regarding hazing and sends them to the national headquarters directly from the National Anti-Hazing Hotline.[73] Every year, the last week of September is considered to be National Hazing Prevention Week (NHPW).[74]

There were several hazing incidents that resulted in deaths in 2017 including the death of Tim Piazza in which three members of Beta Theta Pi were sentenced to prison after pleading guilty in charges related to the hazing. Other incidents included the death of Maxwell Gruver, Andrew Coffey and Matthew Ellis.[75]

Nepotism and networking

Critics of Greek-letter organizations assert that they create a culture of nepotism in later life, while supporters have applauded them for creating networking opportunities for members after graduation. A 2013 report by Bloomberg found that fraternity connections are influential in obtaining lucrative employment positions at top Wall Street brokerages. According to the report, recent graduates have been known to exchange the secret handshakes of their fraternities with executives whom they know are also members to obtain access to competitive appointments.[76][77]

Sexism and sexual violence

Studies show that fraternity men are three times more likely to commit rape than other men on college campuses.[78][79][80] Fraternity pledges are at a higher likelihood to commit rape or sexual assault because of the pressure to meet the hyper-masculine standards that fraternities expect of their members.[81] Overall, fraternity men are shown to have more rape-supportive attitudes than non-fraternity men.[82]

Fraternities have often been accused of fostering rape-supportive attitudes by promoting male dominance and brotherhood, and fraternity affiliation has been found to be a significant predictor of sexually predatory behavior in retrospective research.[80][83] Sexual assault is such a common occurrence among fraternity organizations that one fraternity, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, is commonly referred to by the nickname, "Sexual Assault Expected".[84] Attitudes towards women learned in fraternity life can perpetuate fraternity men's lifelong attitudes, leading to the potential to commit sexual assault and rape after college life.[85] Furthermore, studies show that women in sororities are almost twice as likely to experience rape than other college women.[86][87] A research article studied campus demographics and reported rapes and found that campuses that report more rapes have more fraternity men, athletes and liquor violations.[88]

Researchers have found that in predominantly-male environments, such as fraternities, athletics and military groups, men feel pressure to meet the group's standard of ‘masculinity’, which may contribute to the reason that in these settings, men are more accepting of sexual violence.[89] Nicholas Syrett, a professor of history at the University of Northern Colorado, has been a vocal critic of the evolution of fraternities in the 20th century. Syrett has stated that, "fraternal masculinity has, for at least 80 years, valorized athletics, alcohol abuse and sex with women."[90] Time magazine columnist Jessica Bennett has denounced fraternities as breeding "sexism and misogyny that lasts long after college". In her column, Bennett recounts that, while she was an undergraduate student at the University of Southern California, doormen at fraternity parties "often ranked women on a scale of 1 to 10, with only 'sixes' and up granted entry to a party".[77]

To protect the "brotherhood", fraternity men and athletes may not confront or report sexual assault when it happens.[88] Perpetrators have often received little to no consequences for their actions.[91]

Test and homework banks

It is common for members of Greek-letter organizations to have higher-than-average GPAs due to test and homework banks filled over the years by members of their organization. There is much backlash condemning the test and homework banks as academic dishonesty.[92][93][94][95][96][97][98][99]

Racism and minority discrimination

Researchers, such as Matthew W. Hughey, have linked racism in Greek life to persons experiencing microaggressions, fewer opportunities to use the networking system built into Greek life and the use of harmful stereotypes.[100] In response to experiencing racism and exclusion from solely or predominantly white GLOs, black and multicultural GLOs were founded.[100]

Additionally, homophobia, transphobia, antisemitism, and xenophobia are notable reoccurring issues with many college Greek systems across the nation.[101][102][103][104][105][106][107][108][109][110]

Glossary

 
Members of the Miami University chapter of Sigma Chi, including founders Benjamin Piatt Runkle and Daniel William Cooper plus an unidentified woman, pose for a photograph at a 1909 reunion.
  • Active – an initiated, undergraduate student member of a fraternity or sorority.[111]
  • Alumna/alumnus – a member of a sorority or fraternity who is no longer an undergraduate student and no longer resides in the house.[112]
  • An auxiliary group (also "sweetheart" or "little brother/sister" group) is an unofficial, unsanctioned partner organization to a fraternity or sorority, usually for members of the opposite sex. The two largest Greek umbrella organizations for social fraternities and sororities, the North American Interfraternity Conference and the National Panhellenic Conference, ban the formation of or discourage membership in auxiliary groups.[113][114] Some fraternities and sororities outside of these conferences also ban auxiliaries, including Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia[115] and Sigma Alpha Iota.[116] Part of the rationale behind banning auxiliary groups is that such groups could jeopardize the host organizations' Title IX exemptions, citing the United States Supreme Court's ruling in Roberts v. United States Jaycees.[114][116]
  • Bid – an offer to become a pledge (see below) of a fraternity or sorority.[111]
  • Blacklist – an official or unofficial list of people not allowed inside the house or to any events of the fraternity or sorority.
  • Blackballed – in this context used as a definition of expelling from a community or group. This means that a person may not be accepted by any fraternity or sorority because of the negative reputation they gained at a particular group. This is usually an informal discussion made by the presidents or rush chairs of the fraternities or sororities.
  • Chapter room – a room inside a fraternity house, often secret or hidden, where meetings of actives occur and where rituals are performed.[112]
  • Colony – a newly established chapter of a national/international fraternity or sorority in the process of organization.[112]
  • Frat Boy – a member of a fraternity characterized by a way of dressing[117] and a homogeneous behavior as other members of that fraternity.
  • Legacy – a rushee who is related to a member of the same fraternity or sorority they are rushing is almost always offered a bid. Traditionally a legacy has a parent or sibling that is a member, but some organizations have expanded on their definition of a legacy's relation to members.
  • Local – a fraternity or sorority with only one chapter.[112]
  • National/international – a fraternity or sorority with two or more chapters, both of which are in the same nation (in the case of a national), or at least one of which is in a different nation from the others (in the case of an international).[112]
  • Pledge – a probationary member of a fraternity or sorority, sometimes also called "associate member."[111]
  • Pledge pin – a pin worn by pledges for the duration of the pledging period, usually during all times not considered dangerous to do so (during sports, etc.). It is usually given to a pledge following a ceremony when they are first offered membership in the organization and can be worn until their initiation. In some Greek systems, pledge pins may be the target of informal 'theft' from other groups as a means of promoting interaction between each other on campus. In some fraternities, especially those who no longer have a pledge process, it may be called a new member pin. Women's sororities usually only require new members to wear pins when active members must wear theirs, usually for formal meetings and ritual ceremonies.
  • Potential new member – Abbreviated PNM, one who is in the process of seeking a bid.[111]
  • Rush – the process of recruitment to a fraternity or sorority.[111]
  • Rushee – one who is in the process of seeking a bid.[111]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Caitlin Flanagan, "The Dark Power of Fraternities," The Atlantic, March, 2014, pp. 72–91.
  • John Hechinger (2017). True Gentlemen: The Broken Pledge of America's Fraternities. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1610396820.

fraternities, sororities, this, article, about, student, social, organizations, other, types, professional, fraternities, sororities, honor, society, other, uses, fraternity, disambiguation, social, organizations, north, american, colleges, universities, gener. This article is about the student social organizations For other types see Professional fraternities and sororities and Honor society For other uses see Fraternity disambiguation Fraternities and sororities are social organizations at North American colleges and universities Generally membership in a fraternity or sorority is obtained as an undergraduate student but continues thereafter for life Some accept graduate students as well 1 2 Individual fraternities and sororities vary in organization and purpose but most share five common elements Secrecy Single sex membership Selection of new members on the basis of a two part vetting and probationary process known as rushing and pledging Ownership and occupancy of a residential property where undergraduate members live A set of complex identification symbols that may include Greek letters armorial achievements ciphers badges grips hand signs passwords flowers and colorsFraternities and sororities engage in philanthropic activities host parties provide finishing training for new members such as instruction on etiquette dress and manners and create networking opportunities for their newly graduated members Fraternities and sororities can be tax exempt 501 c 7 organizations in the United States Fraternities and sororities have been widely criticized for practicing elitism and favoritism discriminating against non white students and other marginalized groups conducting dangerous hazing rituals and facilitating alcohol abuse Fraternities specifically have been further criticized for encouraging misogynistic behavior and perpetrating sexual violence Many colleges and universities have sought to reform or eliminate them due to these concerns but these efforts have typically been met with intense controversy 3 4 5 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Establishment and early history 1 2 Sororities 1 3 Internationalization 1 4 Religion 1 5 Multiculturalism 2 Structure and organization 2 1 Common elements 2 1 1 Gender exclusivity 2 1 2 Governance 2 1 3 Rushing and pledging recruitment and new member periods 2 1 4 Residency 2 1 5 Secrecy and ritual 2 1 6 Symbols and naming conventions 2 2 Membership profile 2 2 1 Demographics 2 2 2 Notable fraternity and sorority members 2 3 Academic performance 2 4 Professional advancement 2 5 Personal fulfillment 3 Criticism 3 1 Homogeneous membership and elitism 3 2 Alcoholism 3 3 Hazing 3 4 Nepotism and networking 3 5 Sexism and sexual violence 3 6 Test and homework banks 3 7 Racism and minority discrimination 4 Glossary 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingHistory EditFurther information Fraternity History Establishment and early history Edit The fraternity system in North America began at the College of William and Mary in 1755 The first fraternity in North America to incorporate most of the elements of modern fraternities was Phi Beta Kappa founded at the College of William and Mary in 1775 The founding of Phi Beta Kappa followed the earlier establishment of two other secret student societies that had existed at that campus as early as 1750 In 1779 Phi Beta Kappa expanded to include chapters at Harvard and Yale By the early 19th century the organization transformed itself into a scholastic honor society and abandoned secrecy 7 In 1825 Kappa Alpha Society the first fraternity to retain its social characteristic was established at Union College In 1827 Sigma Phi and Delta Phi were also founded at the same institution 8 creating the Union Triad The further birthing of Psi Upsilon 1833 Chi Psi 1841 and Theta Delta Chi 1847 collectively established Union College as the Mother of Fraternities The social fraternity Chi Phi officially formed in 1854 traces its roots to a short lived organization founded at Princeton in 1824 bearing the same name 9 Fraternities represented the intersection between dining clubs literary societies and secret initiatory orders such as Freemasonry Their early growth was widely opposed by university administrators though the increasing influence of fraternity alumni as well as several high profile court cases succeeded in largely muting opposition by the 1880s 8 The first fraternity meeting hall or lodge seems to have been that of the Alpha Epsilon chapter of Chi Psi at the University of Michigan in 1845 leading to a tradition in that fraternity to name its buildings lodges As fraternity membership was punishable by expulsion at many colleges at this time the house was located deep in the woods 10 The first residential chapter home built by a fraternity is believed to have been Alpha Delta Phi s chapter at Cornell University with groundbreaking dated to 1878 11 Alpha Tau Omega became the first fraternity to own a residential house in the South when in 1880 its chapter at the University of the South acquired one 12 Chapters of many fraternities followed suit purchasing and less often building them with support of alumni Phi Sigma Kappa s chapter home at Cornell completed in 1902 is the oldest such house still occupied by its fraternal builders 13 Sororities Edit The Kappa Kappa Gamma chapter house at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Wesleyan College a women s college in Macon Georgia was the birthplace of Alpha Delta Pi and Phi Mu sororities Image circa 1877 Sororities originally termed women s fraternities began to develop in 1851 with the formation of the Adelphean Society Alpha Delta Pi 14 though fraternity like organizations for women didn t take their current form until the establishment of Pi Beta Phi in 1867 and Kappa Alpha Theta in 1870 The term sorority was used by a professor of Latin at Syracuse University Dr Frank Smalley who felt the word fraternity was inappropriate for a group of ladies 15 The word comes from Latin soror meaning sister cousin daughter of a father s brother or female friend 16 The first organization to use the term sorority was Gamma Phi Beta established in 1874 17 The development of fraternities for women during this time was a major accomplishment in the way of women s rights and equality By mere existence these organizations were defying the odds the founding women were able to advance their organizations despite many factors working against them The first Women s Fraternities not only had to overcome restrictive social customs unequal status under the law and the underlying presumption that they were less able than men 18 but at the same time had to deal with the same challenges as fraternities with college administrations Today both social and multicultural sororities are present on more than 650 college campuses across the United States and Canada The National Panhellenic Conference NPC serves as the umbrella organization for 26 inter national sororities Founded in 1902 the NPC is one of the oldest and largest women s membership organizations representing more than 4 million women at 655 college university campuses and 4 500 local alumnae chapters in the U S and Canada 19 Internationalization Edit In 1867 the Chi Phi fraternity established its Theta chapter at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland marking the first foray of the American social fraternity outside the borders of the United States At the time many students from the American south were moving to Europe to study because of the disrepair southern universities fell into during the American Civil War One such group of Americans organized Chi Phi at Edinburgh however during the Theta chapter s existence it initiated no non American members With declining American enrollment at European universities Chi Phi at Edinburgh closed in 1870 17 U S Air Force Airmen presumably members of Sigma Phi Epsilon display that fraternity s flag in Iraq in 2009 Nine years following Chi Phi s abortive colonization of the University of Edinburgh a second attempt was made to transplant the fraternity system outside the United States In 1879 Zeta Psi established a chapter at the University of Toronto Zeta Psi s success at Toronto prompted it to open a second Canadian chapter at McGill University which it chartered in 1883 Other early foundations were Kappa Alpha Society at Toronto in 1892 and at McGill in 1899 and Alpha Delta Phi at Toronto in 1893 and at McGill in 1897 The first sorority Kappa Alpha Theta was established at Toronto in 1887 By 1927 there were 42 fraternity and sorority chapters at the University of Toronto and of 23 at McGill University A few chapters were also reported at the University of British Columbia Carleton University Dalhousie University University of Manitoba Queen s University University of Western Ontario Wilfrid Laurier University University of Waterloo and Brock University 20 The arrival of the fraternity system in Asia accompanied the introduction of the American educational system in the Philippines The first fraternities were established in the University of the Philippines The now defunct Patriotic and Progressive Rizal Center Academic Brotherhood Rizal Center Fraternity a brotherhood of Jose Rizal followers was founded in 1913 21 This was followed by the Rizal Center Sorority The first Greek letter organization and fraternity in Asia the Upsilon Sigma Phi was founded in 1918 22 The first Greek letter sorority UP Sigma Beta Sorority was recognized in 1932 22 Religion Edit Main articles Christian fraternity fraternities and sororities Christian sorority and List of Jewish fraternities and sororities Many early fraternities made reference to Christian principles or to a Supreme Being in general as is characteristic of fraternal orders 23 Some such as Alpha Chi Rho 1895 and Alpha Kappa Lambda 1907 only admitted Christians 23 while others such as Beta Sigma Psi 1925 and Phi Kappa Theta 1959 catered to students belonging with certain denominations of Christianity such as Lutheranism and Catholicism 23 Due to their exclusion from Christian fraternities in the United States Jewish students began to establish their own fraternities in the period of 1895 and 1920 with the first one being Zeta Beta Tau 1898 23 Although many of the religion specific requirements for many fraternities and sororities have been relaxed or removed there are some today that continue to rally around their faith as a focal point such as Beta Upsilon Chi 1985 and Sigma Alpha Omega 1998 23 24 Multiculturalism Edit Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity members with Georgia Air National Guard Col Ato Crumbly at a protest in Atlanta June 2020 Numerous Greek organizations in the past have enacted formal and informal prohibitions on pledging individuals of different races and cultural backgrounds This began with White fraternities and sororities excluding African Americans due to racism All black fraternities and sororities were spearheaded thereafter in response While racist policies have since been abolished by the North American Interfraternity Conference students of various ethnicities have come together to form a council of multicultural Greek organizations The National Multicultural Greek Council officially formed in 1998 is a coordinating body of 19 Greek organizations including nine fraternities and ten sororities with cultural affiliations 25 The first multicultural sorority Mu Sigma Upsilon was established in November 1981 at Rutgers University 26 The formation of this Greek organization allowed for the emergence of a multicultural fraternity and sorority movement giving birth to a multicultural movement Structure and organization EditCommon elements Edit Gender exclusivity Edit Fraternities and sororities traditionally have been single sex organizations with fraternities consisting exclusively of men and sororities consisting exclusively of women In the United States fraternities and sororities have a statutory exemption from Title IX legislation prohibiting this type of gender exclusion within student groups and organizations such as the Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee lobby to maintain it 27 28 Since the mid 20th century a small number of fraternities such as Alpha Theta Lambda Lambda Lambda and Alpha Phi Omega have opted to become co educational and admit female members however these generally represent a minority of Greek letter organizations and no such fraternity is currently a member of the North American Interfraternity Conference the largest international association of fraternities 27 28 The first coed fraternity was Pi Alpha Tau 1963 1991 at the University of Illinois at Chicago 29 Much more commonly coed fraternities exist in the form of service fraternities such as Alpha Phi Omega Epsilon Sigma Alpha Alpha Tau Mu and others These organizations are similar to social fraternities and sororities with the exception of being coed and non residential In 2014 Sigma Phi Epsilon became the first fraternity in the North American Interfraternity Conference to accept transgender members or those identifying as male to join the social fraternity 30 Several sororities have adjusted their policies to confirm that transgender prospective members are allowable Importantly all these variants have stemmed from a process of self determination without challenge by other Greeks But in a bellwether case in 2016 Harvard University changed its student conduct code to bar members of single sex groups from leading campus groups serving as captains of sports teams or participating in valuable academic fellowships This is being contested vigorously in U S Federal Court by several affected fraternities and sororities 31 32 Governance Edit Individual chapters of fraternities and sororities are largely self governed by their active student members however alumni members may retain legal ownership of the fraternity or sorority s property through an alumni chapter or alumni corporation All of a single fraternity or sorority s chapters are generally grouped together in a national or international organization that sets standards regulates insignia and ritual publishes a journal or magazine for all of the chapters of the organization and has the power to grant and revoke charters to chapters These federal structures are largely governed by alumni members of the fraternity though with some input from the active student members 33 34 35 Rushing and pledging recruitment and new member periods Edit See also Sorority recruitment The chapter house of Alpha Delta Phi at Cornell University The Alpha Sigma Phi chapter house at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Most Greek letter organizations select potential members through a two part process of vetting and probation called rushing and pledging respectively During rush recruitment students attend designated social events and sometimes formal interviews hosted by the chapters of fraternities and sororities in which they have particular interest Usually after a potential new member has attended several such events officers or current members meet privately to vote on whether or not to extend an invitation known as a bid to the prospective applicant Those applicants who receive a bid and choose to accept it are considered to have pledged the fraternity or sorority thus beginning the pledge period new member period Students participating in rush are known as rushees Potential New Members PNMs while students who have accepted a bid to a specific fraternity or sorority are known as new members or in some cases pledges 36 A new member period may last anywhere from one weekend to several months During this time new members might participate in almost all aspects of the life of the fraternity or sorority but most likely not be permitted to hold office in the organization At the conclusion of the new member period a second vote of members may sometimes be taken often but not always using a blackball system New members who pass this second vote are invited to a formal and secret ritual of initiation into the organization advancing them to full membership 8 Many Greek letter organizations give preferential consideration for pledging to candidates whose parent or sibling was a member of the same fraternity or sorority Such prospective candidates are known as legacies 37 38 Membership in more than one fraternity or sorority is almost always prohibited Recently some Greek letter organizations have replaced the term pledge with that of associate member or new member Sigma Alpha Epsilon in 2014 abolished pledging altogether Potential members are now immediately initiated into the fraternity upon accepting a bid 36 39 Residency Edit Main article North American fraternity and sorority housing Unique among most campus organizations members of social Greek letter organizations usually congregate and sometimes live together in large houses generally privately owned by the organization itself or by the organization alumni association Often fraternities and sorority houses called lodges or chapter houses are located on the same street or in close quarters within the same neighborhood which may be colloquially known as Greek row frat row or sorority row Often times chapter houses are uniquely designed highly elaborate and very expensive to operate and maintain Usually the more expensive the house the higher the annual organization dues The features and size of Greek houses play a major role in chapters remaining competitive in recruiting and retaining members on many campuses 40 At some often small colleges fraternities and sororities occupy a specific section of university owned housing provided to them Some fraternities and sororities are un housed with members providing for their own accommodations In many of these cases the fraternity or sorority owns or rents a non residential clubhouse on or off campus to use for meetings and other activities Secrecy and ritual Edit Members of Phi Kappa Sigma at Washington amp Jefferson College in 1872 A dramatized depiction of a fraternity initiation ritual A model chapter room of Kappa Sigma With a few exceptions most fraternities and sororities are secret societies While the identity of members or officers is rarely concealed fraternities and sororities initiate members following the pledge period through sometimes elaborate private rituals frequently drawn or adopted from Masonic ritual practice or that of the Greek mysteries 8 At the conclusion of an initiation ritual the organization s secret motto secret purpose and secret identification signs such as handshakes and passwords are usually revealed to its new members Some fraternities also teach initiates an identity search device used to confirm fellow fraternity members 41 Julian Hawthorne the son of Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote in his posthumously published Memoirs 42 of his initiation into Delta Kappa Epsilon 43 I was initiated into a college secret society a couple of hours of grotesque and good humored rodomontade and horseplay in which I cooperated as in a kind of pleasant nightmare confident even when branded with a red hot iron or doused head over heels in boiling oil 44 that it would come out all right The neophyte is effectively blindfolded during the proceedings and at last still sightless I was led down flights of steps into a silent crypt and helped into a coffin where I was to stay until the Resurrection Thus it was that just as my father passed from this earth I was lying in a coffin during my initiation into Delta Kappa Epsilon Meetings and rituals are sometimes conducted in what is known as a chapter room located inside the fraternity s house Entry into chapter rooms is often prohibited to all but the initiated In one extreme case the response of firefighters to a blaze signaled by an automated alarm at the Sigma Phi chapter house at the University of Wisconsin in 2003 was hampered in part because fraternity members refused to disclose the location of the hidden chapter room where the conflagration had erupted to emergency responders 45 According to Assistant Professor Caroline Rolland Diamond of the Paris West University Nanterre La Defense in one ritual popular in the 1960s born out of frustration to the ubiquitous nascent counterculture The men were stripped to their underpants tied up to a tree and covered in a nasty mix of food and leaves remaining there until their fiancees came to free them with a kiss 46 Symbols and naming conventions Edit The fraternity or sorority badge is an enduring symbol of membership in a Greek letter organization Most fraternities also have assumed heraldic achievements Members of fraternities and sororities address members of the same organization as brother in the case of fraternities or sister in the case of sororities The names of almost all fraternities and sororities consist of a sequence of two or three Greek letters for instance Delta Delta Delta Sigma Chi Chi Omega or Psi Upsilon There are a few exceptions to this general rule as in the case of the fraternities Triangle Acacia and Seal and Serpent 8 Membership profile Edit Demographics Edit There are approximately 9 million student and alumni members of fraternities and sororities in North America or about 3 percent of the total population 47 48 Roughly 750 000 of the current fraternity and sorority members are students who belong to an undergraduate chapter citation needed A 2007 survey conducted at Princeton University showed that white and higher income Princeton students are much more likely than other Princeton students to be in fraternities and sororities 49 Senior surveys from the classes of 2009 and 2010 showed that 77 percent of sorority members and 73 percent of fraternity members were white 49 Ronald Reagan was initiated into Tau Kappa Epsilon at Eureka College George H W Bush joined Delta Kappa Epsilon at Yale University Notable fraternity and sorority members Edit Since 1900 63 percent of members of the United States cabinet have been members of fraternities and sororities and the current chief executive officers of five of the ten largest Fortune 500 companies are members of fraternities and sororities In addition 85 percent of all justices of the U S Supreme Court since 1910 have been members of fraternities U S presidents since World War II who have been initiated into fraternities are George W Bush George H W Bush Bill Clinton Ronald Reagan Gerald Ford and Franklin Roosevelt Three Prime Ministers of Canada have been members of fraternities 50 51 52 53 54 In 2013 about 25 percent of members of the U S House of Representatives and 40 percent of members of the U S Senate were members of Greek letter organizations 55 Actress Sophia Bush was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma at the University of Southern California and has since gone on to further her career in television and receive the Human Rights Campaign s Ally for Equality Award Other notable sorority women include Mariska Hargitay who is an actress and founder of the Joyful Heart Foundation 56 57 58 Academic performance Edit Studies have found that university graduation rates are 20 percent higher among members of Greek letter organizations than among non members and students who are members of fraternities and sororities typically have higher than average grade point averages One reason for this is many chapters require their members to maintain a certain academic standard 59 dubious discuss Each organization requires its members to maintain a minimum GPA in order to continue their membership Greek members who maintain high GPA s are invited to join notable Greek honor societies The two most notable Greek honor societies include Gamma Sigma Alpha and Order of Omega Gamma Sigma Alpha acknowledges Greek members who hold a 3 5 GPA in upper division classes 60 Order of Omega recognizes the top 3 of Greek members who exemplify leadership qualities 60 Greek honor societies provide life time membership with opportunities such as scholarships and networking Professional advancement Edit There is a high representation of former Greek life members among certain elites in the United States Greek members are more likely to be thriving in their well being and engaged at work than college graduates who did not go Greek according to a study done by Gallup and Purdue University 61 Personal fulfillment Edit A 2014 Gallup survey of 30 000 university alumni found that persons who said they had been members of Greek letter organizations while undergraduates reported having a greater sense of purpose as well as better social and physical well being than those who had not 62 Criticism EditHomogeneous membership and elitism Edit Greek letter organizations have often been characterized as elitist or exclusionary associations organized for the benefit of a largely white upper class membership base Members of fraternities and sororities disproportionately come from certain socio economic demographics 49 Fraternities specifically have been criticized for what is perceived as their promotion of an excessively alcohol fueled party focused lifestyle New York Times columnist Frank Bruni questioned the existence of exclusive clubs on campuses that are meant to facilitate independence writing Colleges should be cultivating the kind of sensibility that makes you a better citizen of a diverse and distressingly fractious society How is that served by retreating into an exclusionary clique of people just like you 63 Some colleges and universities have banned Greek letter organizations on the grounds that they are by their very nature and structure elitist and exclusionary The oldest ban was at Princeton though Princeton has now had fraternities since the 1980s 64 Oberlin College banned secret societies fraternities and sororities in 1847 65 and the prohibition continues to the present 66 Quaker universities such as Guilford College and Earlham College often ban fraternities and sororities because they are seen as a violation of the Quaker principle of equality 67 68 Brandeis University has never permitted fraternities or sororities as it maintains a policy that all student organizations have membership open to all 69 Alcoholism Edit One Harvard University study found that 4 out of 5 fraternity and sorority members are binge drinkers In comparison other research suggests 2 out of 5 college students overall are regular binge drinkers 70 There is also a high rate of alcohol related death among fraternities which has recently resulted in several lawsuits against various GLOs 71 72 Hazing Edit See also Hazing in Greek letter organizations Fraternities and to a lesser extent sororities have been criticized for hazing sometimes committed by active undergraduate members against their chapter s pledges Hazing during the pledge period can sometimes culminate in an event commonly known as Hell Week in which a week long series of physical and mental torments are inflicted on pledges Common hazing practices include sleep deprivation sensory deprivation paddling and other types of spanking use of stress positions forced runs busy work forced drinking and mind games Rarer incidents involving branding enemas urination on pledges and the forced consumption of spoiled food have been reported Hazing in many cases has been reported and has led to the permanent disposal of particular chapters of fraternities and sororities across the country A depiction of fraternity hazing from the early 20th century Supporters of fraternities note that hazing is almost universally prohibited by national fraternity organizations and the occurrence of hazing in undergraduate fraternity chapters goes against official policy Supporters of fraternities also note that hazing is not unique to Greek letter organizations and is often reported in other student organizations such as athletic teams In 2007 an anti hazing hotline was set up to report incidents of hazing on college campuses Currently 46 national fraternity and sorority organizations support the toll free number which generates automatic email messages regarding hazing and sends them to the national headquarters directly from the National Anti Hazing Hotline 73 Every year the last week of September is considered to be National Hazing Prevention Week NHPW 74 There were several hazing incidents that resulted in deaths in 2017 including the death of Tim Piazza in which three members of Beta Theta Pi were sentenced to prison after pleading guilty in charges related to the hazing Other incidents included the death of Maxwell Gruver Andrew Coffey and Matthew Ellis 75 Nepotism and networking Edit Critics of Greek letter organizations assert that they create a culture of nepotism in later life while supporters have applauded them for creating networking opportunities for members after graduation A 2013 report by Bloomberg found that fraternity connections are influential in obtaining lucrative employment positions at top Wall Street brokerages According to the report recent graduates have been known to exchange the secret handshakes of their fraternities with executives whom they know are also members to obtain access to competitive appointments 76 77 Sexism and sexual violence Edit Studies show that fraternity men are three times more likely to commit rape than other men on college campuses 78 79 80 Fraternity pledges are at a higher likelihood to commit rape or sexual assault because of the pressure to meet the hyper masculine standards that fraternities expect of their members 81 Overall fraternity men are shown to have more rape supportive attitudes than non fraternity men 82 Fraternities have often been accused of fostering rape supportive attitudes by promoting male dominance and brotherhood and fraternity affiliation has been found to be a significant predictor of sexually predatory behavior in retrospective research 80 83 Sexual assault is such a common occurrence among fraternity organizations that one fraternity Sigma Alpha Epsilon is commonly referred to by the nickname Sexual Assault Expected 84 Attitudes towards women learned in fraternity life can perpetuate fraternity men s lifelong attitudes leading to the potential to commit sexual assault and rape after college life 85 Furthermore studies show that women in sororities are almost twice as likely to experience rape than other college women 86 87 A research article studied campus demographics and reported rapes and found that campuses that report more rapes have more fraternity men athletes and liquor violations 88 Researchers have found that in predominantly male environments such as fraternities athletics and military groups men feel pressure to meet the group s standard of masculinity which may contribute to the reason that in these settings men are more accepting of sexual violence 89 Nicholas Syrett a professor of history at the University of Northern Colorado has been a vocal critic of the evolution of fraternities in the 20th century Syrett has stated that fraternal masculinity has for at least 80 years valorized athletics alcohol abuse and sex with women 90 Time magazine columnist Jessica Bennett has denounced fraternities as breeding sexism and misogyny that lasts long after college In her column Bennett recounts that while she was an undergraduate student at the University of Southern California doormen at fraternity parties often ranked women on a scale of 1 to 10 with only sixes and up granted entry to a party 77 To protect the brotherhood fraternity men and athletes may not confront or report sexual assault when it happens 88 Perpetrators have often received little to no consequences for their actions 91 Test and homework banks Edit It is common for members of Greek letter organizations to have higher than average GPAs due to test and homework banks filled over the years by members of their organization There is much backlash condemning the test and homework banks as academic dishonesty 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 Racism and minority discrimination Edit Further information Racism in United States college fraternities and sororities Researchers such as Matthew W Hughey have linked racism in Greek life to persons experiencing microaggressions fewer opportunities to use the networking system built into Greek life and the use of harmful stereotypes 100 In response to experiencing racism and exclusion from solely or predominantly white GLOs black and multicultural GLOs were founded 100 Additionally homophobia transphobia antisemitism and xenophobia are notable reoccurring issues with many college Greek systems across the nation 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 Glossary Edit Members of the Miami University chapter of Sigma Chi including founders Benjamin Piatt Runkle and Daniel William Cooper plus an unidentified woman pose for a photograph at a 1909 reunion Active an initiated undergraduate student member of a fraternity or sorority 111 Alumna alumnus a member of a sorority or fraternity who is no longer an undergraduate student and no longer resides in the house 112 An auxiliary group also sweetheart or little brother sister group is an unofficial unsanctioned partner organization to a fraternity or sorority usually for members of the opposite sex The two largest Greek umbrella organizations for social fraternities and sororities the North American Interfraternity Conference and the National Panhellenic Conference ban the formation of or discourage membership in auxiliary groups 113 114 Some fraternities and sororities outside of these conferences also ban auxiliaries including Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia 115 and Sigma Alpha Iota 116 Part of the rationale behind banning auxiliary groups is that such groups could jeopardize the host organizations Title IX exemptions citing the United States Supreme Court s ruling in Roberts v United States Jaycees 114 116 Bid an offer to become a pledge see below of a fraternity or sorority 111 Blacklist an official or unofficial list of people not allowed inside the house or to any events of the fraternity or sorority Blackballed in this context used as a definition of expelling from a community or group This means that a person may not be accepted by any fraternity or sorority because of the negative reputation they gained at a particular group This is usually an informal discussion made by the presidents or rush chairs of the fraternities or sororities Chapter room a room inside a fraternity house often secret or hidden where meetings of actives occur and where rituals are performed 112 Colony a newly established chapter of a national international fraternity or sorority in the process of organization 112 Frat Boy a member of a fraternity characterized by a way of dressing 117 and a homogeneous behavior as other members of that fraternity Legacy a rushee who is related to a member of the same fraternity or sorority they are rushing is almost always offered a bid Traditionally a legacy has a parent or sibling that is a member but some organizations have expanded on their definition of a legacy s relation to members Local a fraternity or sorority with only one chapter 112 National international a fraternity or sorority with two or more chapters both of which are in the same nation in the case of a national or at least one of which is in a different nation from the others in the case of an international 112 Pledge a probationary member of a fraternity or sorority sometimes also called associate member 111 Pledge pin a pin worn by pledges for the duration of the pledging period usually during all times not considered dangerous to do so during sports etc It is usually given to a pledge following a ceremony when they are first offered membership in the organization and can be worn until their initiation In some Greek systems pledge pins may be the target of informal theft from other groups as a means of promoting interaction between each other on campus In some fraternities especially those who no longer have a pledge process it may be called a new member pin Women s sororities usually only require new members to wear pins when active members must wear theirs usually for formal meetings and ritual ceremonies Potential new member Abbreviated PNM one who is in the process of seeking a bid 111 Rush the process of recruitment to a fraternity or sorority 111 Rushee one who is in the process of seeking a bid 111 See also EditAcademic dress Defunct North American collegiate sororities Faluche Hazing in Greek letter organizations List of Jewish fraternities and sororities List of social fraternities and sororities North American fraternity and sorority housing Students unionReferences Edit For example Phi Kappa Tau and Alpha Xi Delta both have provisions in their respective Constitutions that they can accept graduate students as well as undergraduates Archived from the original on 2016 03 06 Retrieved 2015 11 16 Alpha Xi Delta PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 07 03 Retrieved 2015 11 16 Fraternities amp Sororities at Queen s Your Thoughts Alma Mater Society Queen s University Student Government 5 October 2012 Fraternities and Sororities Queen s Encyclopedia The pledge against fraternities How Queen s rejected the rise of fraternities Anson Jack L Marchenasi Robert F eds 1991 1879 Baird s Manual of American Fraternities 20th ed Indianapolis IN Baird s Manual Foundation Inc p I 10 I 13 I 20 VI 128 132 ISBN 978 0963715906 Baird s Manual is also available online here The Baird s Manual Online Archive homepage a b c d e Whalen Richard 1967 Handbook of Secret Organizations Milwaukee Bruce Publishing Company pp 43 45 History of Chi Phi www chiphi org Retrieved 14 March 2019 Birdseye Clarence Frank 1907 Individual Training in Our Colleges New York The MacMillan Company p 211 retrieved 2008 06 20 Chapter History Archived 2016 08 26 at the Wayback Machine accessed 16 October 2015 The chapter has since moved to larger quarters ATO Facts amp Firsts Retrieved 21 August 2012 Gamma Chapter history accessed 16 October 2015 Wesleyan Female College originally Georgia Female College and now simply Wesleyan College was the origin of the first two sororities both the Adelphean Society and the Philomathean Society The Adelphean founded in 1851 eventually became Alpha Delta Pi while The Philomathean begun in 1852 eventually became Phi Mu Together these sororities are known as the Macon Magnolias Several other unrelated Philomathean Societies emerged during the 19th Century most notably a literary society at UPenn and another unrelated at NYU Becque Fran 12 August 2013 Women s Fraternities Sororities and Dr Frank Smalley Fraternity History amp More Retrieved 17 May 2020 Soror Wiktionary 25 December 2021 a b Anson Jack 1991 Baird s Manual of American College Fraternities 20th ed Baird s Manual Foundation p III 32 ISBN 978 0963715906 Baird s Manual is also available online here The Baird s Manual Online Archive homepage Adventure in Friendship A History of The National Panhellenic Conference PDF National Panhellenic Conference National Panhellenic Conference Archived from the original PDF on June 28 2013 Retrieved October 12 2015 National Panhellenic Conference National Panhellenic Conference Archived from the original on 2009 01 26 Retrieved 2010 01 01 Fraternities in Canada The Encyclopedia of Canada Vol II University Associates of Canada 1948 Retrieved 2010 08 19 XIAO TIME 18 June 2013 Ika 105 na Anibersaryo ng Unibersidad ng Pilipinas 2013 06 19 Retrieved 2018 08 09 a b History of Philippine Fraternities 2017 11 04 Archived from the original on 2018 08 10 Retrieved 2018 08 09 a b c d e Brown Tamara L Parks Gregory S Phillips Clarenda M 1 January 2012 African American Fraternities and Sororities The Legacy and the Vision University Press of Kentucky p 53 ISBN 9780813136622 Barnett George A 8 September 2011 Encyclopedia of Social Networks SAGE p 298 ISBN 9781412979115 History of MGC Multicultural Greek Council Multicultural Greek Council Retrieved 12 October 2015 EMERGENCE OF MULTICULTURAL FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS National Multicultural Greek Council National Multicultural Greek Council Retrieved 12 October 2015 a b Why One School Decided To Make All Of Its Fraternities And Sororities Co Ed Business Insider 9 October 2014 a b Fraternities Lobby Against Campus Rape Investigations Bloomberg 24 March 2015 Pi Alpha Tau Papers 1963 1991 UIC Archives PDF uic edu Archived from the original PDF on 13 August 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2012 PDF 2015 09 24 https web archive org web 20150924101725 http www sigep org resourcedocs about resources 2014 December Minutes of the Meeting Final pdf Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2021 03 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Harvard s policy against single sex clubs was meant to protect women The Economist 2019 01 17 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 2019 01 28 Harvard sued by fraternities and sororities in an NBC news report dated 3 Dec 2018 accessed 2 Aug 2019 GOVERNANCE OF UNDERGRADUATE SOCIAL FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES upenn edu University of Pennsylvania Archived from the original on 27 July 2017 Retrieved 4 September 2015 ERM ORSA and Corporate Governance The Small Company Challenges firstconsulting com First Consulting Biggest Fraternities studentsorted com StudentSorted 25 June 2022 a b Rush and Pledging Problems The Fraternity Advisor Retrieved 2 September 2015 Glossary of Greek Life Terms gmu edu George Mason University Interfraternity Council Archived from the original on 25 March 2015 Retrieved 28 December 2014 Fraternity Legacies thefraternityadvisor com The Fraternity Advisor Retrieved 28 December 2014 Deadliest U S Fraternity Abolishes Pledging for New Members Bloomberg No 7 March 2014 https www pennlive com nation world 2021 08 tiktok user shares experience managing millions of dollars for her alabama sorority html Dundes Allan 1993 Folklore Matters University of Tennessee Press p 31 ISBN 978 0870497766 Books Hawthorne s Line Time April 25 1938 Archived from the original on February 4 2013 Retrieved 2010 08 17 Matthews Jack August 15 2010 Nathaniel Hawthorne s Untold Tale Excerpts from Julian Hawthorne s Memoirs The Chronicle Review Retrieved 2010 08 17 Matthews Jack August 15 2010 Nathaniel Hawthorne s Untold Tale The Chronicle of Higher Education Retrieved 2010 08 17 This was of course all very collegiate for that long ago time and with the exception of the red hot iron and boiling oil references if taken too literally quite typical Bizarre fire burns frat house blaze startedin secret room Journal Times 27 September 2003 Retrieved 2 September 2015 Rolland Diamond Caroline 2016 Another Side of the Sixties Festive Practices on College Campuses and the Making of a Conservative Youth Movement Revue Francaise d Etudes Americaines 1 146 39 53 doi 10 3917 rfea 146 0039 Retrieved October 24 2016 via Cairn info Fraternities amp Sororities New York Institute of Technology Fact Sheet The University of New Mexico a b c Fraternities amp Sororities Princeton University Reports Retrieved 25 July 2016 Borislow Jared 20 February 2017 Here s A List Of Every U S President Who Was In A Fraternity Total Frat Move Retrieved 27 March 2018 Fraternity Statistics nicindy org North American Interfraternity Conference Archived from the original on 7 August 2016 Retrieved 28 December 2014 Prominent Pi Gamma Mu Members Pi Gamma Mu Retrieved 27 March 2018 Famous Betas of Achievement Beta Theta Pi Retrieved 27 March 2018 Kerr Peter August 1 2009 Paul Martin life after politics The Montrealer Retrieved October 21 2014 Kingkade Tyler 25 July 2013 FratPAC Lobbies Congress For Tax Breaks To Stop Anti Hazing Law Huffington Post Retrieved 9 December 2014 Kappa Kappa Gamma Famous Fraternity Brothers amp Sorority Sisters XFINITY my xfinity com Retrieved 2015 10 12 Sophia Bush x Joe Fresh Exclusively for HRC Human Rights Campaign Retrieved 2015 10 12 Our Story Joyful Heart Foundation Retrieved 2015 10 12 Jacobs Peter 8 January 2014 Don t Ban Fraternities Business Insider Retrieved 28 December 2014 a b Student honor society promotes Greek unity go gale com 4 March 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2019 Fraternity and Sorority Membership Linked to Higher Well Being for College Grads Gallup com 27 May 2014 Retrieved 2015 10 12 Nelson Libby 28 May 2014 Sorry nerds Fraternity brothers have more fulfilling lives later on Vox Retrieved 28 December 2014 Bruni Frank 2 December 2014 A Pox on Campus Life New York Times Retrieved 23 July 2016 Princeton s Fraternities Growing The New York Times November 28 1993 pp Section 1 Page 56 Retrieved May 31 2009 Fletcher Robert Samuel 1943 A History of Oberlin College from Its Foundation Through the Civil War Oberlin College Revised codes were issued every few years but not many important changes were made in them Provisions with regard to the hours of athletic exercises and sport were added in 1847 In the same revision there appeared for the first time the peculiar Oberlin rule against secret societies No student it runs is permitted to join any secret society or military company Student Regulations Policies and Procedures Oberlin College 2011 2012 PDF Oberlin College 2011 p 34 D Secret Societies No secret society is allowed at Oberlin and no other societies or self perpetuating organizations are allowed among students except by permission of the faculty This is to be understood to include social and rooming house clubs Equality Guilford College Archived from the original on 2012 05 15 Retrieved 2012 05 19 Community Life earlham edu Archived from the original on 2018 10 21 Retrieved 2012 05 19 2007 2008 Rights amp Responsibilities Handbook Appendix B University Policy on Fraternities and Sororities Brandeis University Retrieved 2008 03 17 Binge Drinking in Greek Organizations addictioncenter com Addiction Center Retrieved 2 September 2015 Hazing deaths on American college campuses remain far too common The Economist Retrieved 2018 08 09 Why Colleges Should Get Rid of Fraternities for Good Time Retrieved 2018 08 09 Fraternal Law Anti Hazing Hotline fraternallaw com Archived from the original on 2015 10 27 Retrieved 2015 10 04 National Hazing Prevention Week Hazing Prevention hazingprevention org Retrieved 2015 10 04 9 Louisiana State frat members arrested and chapter closed over alleged hazing incidents NBC News February 14 2019 Retrieved 17 September 2019 Abelson Max Faux Zeke 22 December 2013 Secret Handshakes Greet Frat Brothers on Wall Street Bloomberg Retrieved 28 December 2014 a b Bennett Jessica 3 December 2014 The Problem With Frats Isn t Just Rape It s Power Time Retrieved 30 December 2014 Foubert John 9 October 2013 Rapebait e mail reveals dark side of frat culture CNN com Retrieved 23 July 2016 Foubert John Newberry Johnathan Tatum Jerry 2007 Behavior differences seven months later Effects of a rape prevention program on first year men who join fraternities NASPA Journal 44 4 728 749 doi 10 2202 1949 6605 1866 S2CID 219289954 Retrieved 23 July 2016 a b Loh Catherine Gidycz Christine Lobo Tracy Luthra Rohini 2005 A Prospective Analysis of Sexual Assault Perpetration Risk Factors Related to Perpetrator Characteristics PDF Journal of Interpersonal Violence 20 10 1325 1348 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 208 7187 doi 10 1177 0886260505278528 PMID 16162492 S2CID 30121860 Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2017 Retrieved 23 July 2016 Bohmer Carol Parrot Andrea 1993 Sexual assault on campus The problem and the solution New York Lexington Books ISBN 978 0029037157 Bleecker Timothy E Murnen Sarah K Oct 2005 Fraternity Membership the Display of Degrading Sexual Images of Women and Rape Myth Acceptance Sex Roles 53 7 8 487 493 doi 10 1007 s11199 005 7136 6 S2CID 144874772 Lackie Leandra de Man Anton 1997 Correlates of Sexual Aggression Among Male University Students Sex Roles 37 5 6 451 457 doi 10 1023 A 1025613725757 S2CID 142047025 Legal view with Ashleigh Banfield CNN March 10 2015 Auster Carol J Leone Janel M 2001 Late adolescents perspectives on marital rape The impact of gender and fraternity sorority membership Adolescence 36 141 141 152 PMID 11407630 Minow Jacqueline Einolf Christopher 2009 Sorority Participation and Sexual Assault Risk Violence Against Women 15 7 835 851 doi 10 1177 1077801209334472 PMID 19458092 S2CID 21877160 Retrieved 13 August 2016 Mohler Kuo Meichun Dowdall George Koss Mary Wechsler Henry 2004 Correlates of rape while intoxicated in a national sample of college women PDF Journal of Studies on Alcohol 65 1 37 45 doi 10 15288 jsa 2004 65 37 PMID 15000502 Retrieved 13 August 2016 a b Wiersma Mosley Jacquelyn D Jozkowski Kristen N Martinez Taylor 2017 06 22 An empirical investigation of campus demographics and reported rapes Journal of American College Health 65 7 482 491 doi 10 1080 07448481 2017 1343829 ISSN 0744 8481 PMID 28641039 S2CID 26691712 Seabrook Rita C Ward L Monique Giaccardi Soraya January 2018 Why is fraternity membership associated with sexual assault Exploring the roles of conformity to masculine norms pressure to uphold masculinity and objectification of women Psychology of Men amp Masculinity 19 1 3 13 doi 10 1037 men0000076 ISSN 1939 151X S2CID 151332972 Syrett Nicholas 6 May 2011 Colleges Condone Fraternities Sexist Behavior The New York Times Retrieved 30 December 2014 Jozkowski Kristen N Wiersma Mosley Jacquelyn D February 2017 The Greek System How Gender Inequality and Class Privilege Perpetuate Rape Culture Family Relations 66 1 89 103 doi 10 1111 fare 12229 ISSN 0197 6664 Burkholder Sophie November 13 2019 Access Denied A Closer Look at Test Banks 34th Street Magazine Butler Matt April 18 2014 Ttest bank use prompts ethical concerns The Review Handel Sarah September 16 2008 Breaking The Test Bank Wide Open NPR List of ways students cheat on exams using scantrons Gradehub McKenzie Lindsay May 14 2018 Professors warned about popular learning tool used by students to cheat Inside Higher Ed McManigal Christine April 24 2017 Test files The no no word The Daily of the University of Washington Postal Leslie November 21 2010 Test banks are at the center of UCF s cheating scandal Orlando Sentinel Test banks are at the center of UCF s cheating scandal a b W Hughey Matthew 2010 A Paradox of Participation Nonwhites in White Sororities and Fraternities PDF Social Problems 57 4 653 679 doi 10 1525 sp 2010 57 4 653 JSTOR 10 1525 sp 2010 57 4 653 S2CID 145206339 Boros Zach March 9 2017 Your fraternity brother is gay The Crimson White University of Alabama Johnson Elin December 17 2019 IU Bloomington Suspends Frat for Anti Semitism Inside Higher Ed Noel Gabrielle April 27 2018 Greek Life Needs To Take Racism As Seriously As It Takes Hazing HuffPost Ruiz Michelle October 17 2016 Can Trans Girls Be Sorority Girls Cosmopolitan Sherbet Maddy November 13 2019 My Sorority Was Supposed to be Interfaith It Wasn t Alma Spinelli Dan September 20 2015 Transgender students underrepresented in Greek Life The Daily Pennsylvanian Stewart Mariah September 15 2020 The Abolish Greek Life Movement Calls for an End to Toxic Fraternity Sorority Culture INSIGHT Into Diversity Tingley Anna August 25 2020 Greek Life s History of Racism Is Catching Up to It Teen Vogue Van Syckle Katie September 25 2016 Pledging change the transgender college students integrating Greek life The Guardian Windmeyer Shane L Freeman Pamela W 1998 How Homophobia Hurts the College Fraternity PDF Saint Louis University a b c d e f Greek Terminology fit edu Florida Institute of Technology Retrieved 4 September 2015 a b c d e Fraternity Sorority Terms elon edu Elon University Retrieved 4 September 2015 Constitution and Bylaws North American Interfraternity Conference April 23 2012 Archived from the original on July 9 2018 Retrieved January 4 2013 a b National Panhellenic Conference 2012 Protecting the Right of NPC Members to Remain Women Only Organizations PDF Unanimous Agreements 17th ed pp 37 8 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2018 06 12 Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia 2011 Policy on Sweethearts Little Sisters Auxiliary Groups PDF Risk Management Policies p 7 a b Sigma Alpha Iota International Music Fraternity 2010 Current Policies and Position Statements In Nieburg Janet T ed Chapter Procedures Manual 3rd ed p A 3 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 02 24 Retrieved 2018 06 12 The frat boy look Education in USA a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Further reading EditCaitlin Flanagan The Dark Power of Fraternities The Atlantic March 2014 pp 72 91 John Hechinger 2017 True Gentlemen The Broken Pledge of America s Fraternities PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1610396820 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fraternities and sororities amp oldid 1132220570, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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