why do sororities have to have a quota?
by: Yes I'm an alum
On hearing the news that Theta is closing, I can't help but think that they would have been better off if they had been allowed (and encouraged) to take smaller pledge classes of girls. The current situation of 150-plus pledge classes is not the historical norm at all, and a sorority can do just fine financially with 50 to 70 pledges.
Some sororities are less popular, call it lower tier if you wish. Allowing these groups to choose to have smaller pledge classes would allow them to be more selective in who they take in, so after all is said and done the girls who join would be happy to be there and likely to stick around and the sorority might be able to improve in quality if not in numbers by being more selective.
Would it be a terrible thing if Ole Miss had some smaller sororities just as it has some mid-sized and smaller fraternities?
#1 by: NPC
All sororities agree to NPC rules regarding sorority recruitment. Read up on the benefits of RFM because what you suggest would be the kiss of death for so many sororities, and the reason RFM was implemented. I'm thinking you are a pretty uninformed alumna on a lot of different levels.
#5 by: Rebel girl
Sororities here do support the other chapters. With delayed rush girls meet and become friends with girls in their dorms and in their classes. After rush they are still friends. I have friends in almost every chapter. The only people that have to rank sororities are people that live on greek rank and we all know that is Moms that want to keep their sorority on top. I think the greek community at Ole Miss is great. For 1 week every year we compete against each other, after that we are friends.
#6 by: ?
Maybe I’m confused but I didn’t think of quota as the MAX we could take because there are ALWAYS quota additions....quota was more like just a evening of the playing field for all sororities. So that when sorority A and sorority B were the 2 on a girls pref list, there couldn’t be an instance of like 200 girls going to A and 25 going to B (not including drama queens who drop out of school when they don’t get the house they wanted)....quota just makes sure through the bid mathhing process that everyone FOR THE MOST PART gets a similar amount of new members.
#7 by: The truth
There are a lot of messages here talking about how good Variable Quota is and how RFM helps sororities but I think that if you ask any Theta what they think about it they would tell you how much it hurt the chapter. Maybe RFM helps you when you’re Kappa and you’re trying to compete with Tri Delt and KD for the same girls but when you’re ranked lower to the bottom, it hurts you because it gives you a reputation for taking every girl. A lot of girls don’t want to join a house that is forced to take everyone. Actives also don’t like having a girl return for bid day that they didn’t like but were forced to take.
This year, my friends in the chapter told me that Theta was incredibly satisfied with their new PC and was really looking up. It’s tragic their Nationals cared more about the money than the experiences of the members and the good they did with Theta Encore.
Yes, quota is a “maximum” but it’s like the speed limit. If the speed limit is 65, you’re not supposed to be trucking along at 40. Unfortunately, we’ve gotten to a point where chapters are too big and unsustainable unless you’re at the top.
#9 by: IMO
I've always thought that Ole Miss would benefit greatly from sophomore rush. I know it would never happen here (culture, financial impact, etc.) but given the preconceived notions about greek life as well as individual houses, combined with the toxic climate on this campus, I personally think it would be good for students to have a year at old miss before making any membership decisions. JMO though and I know it's an unpopular one.
As for the OP argument about quality vs. quantity, it's a valid one. But hat type of a decision is a strategic one and should happen as soon as a house doesn't reach quota, and if done well, means you only miss quote a year or 2 max. Otherwise the slide down the rabbit hole goes too deep, too fast. \n\n\n\n\n
#10 by: RFM
RFM can also be a major drag on new colonies who get pigeonholed as “taking all the leftovers” since they don’t have historical return rates to inform RFM, so they basically can’t cut PNMs except for GPA. RFM isn’t a perfect system but it is far, far superior to what they had before. And for the LAST TIME, no campus (especially not one as Greek-centric as Ole Miss) is going to go to the Indiana method. NPC would sooner disband then let chapters bed rush.
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by: Facts StraightNov 11, 2018 8:27:38 PM
A lot of people don't seem to understand Quota. Quota is not an amount of New Members that a sorority MUST take, it is the MAXIMUM allowable number that a chapter may take. This keeps the better recruiting chapters from taking all the PNM's and allows for equity among the chapter membership numbers. Theta continued to not take as many New Members as they were allowed because PNM's dropped out when all they had left was Theta, or they got a bid and did not accept, and even then several who did accept would drop out before initiation. So get your facts straight and you'll see that Theta was given every advantage to turn things around through RFM, Variable Quota (giving them a chance to pledge MORE than other houses), and years and years on campus taking much smaller classes than the other chapters. Nothing helped them get better after all that. Could they have survived on campus? Maybe, but just surviving is not at the level that Theta's national HQ wanted/required for them at Ole Miss after so long and so much trying.