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Anyone with really high grades, say 3.8 unweighted and above, high ACT score, Honors College, etc. pledge a house not known for having good grades? And if so, how has your experience been?

Posted By: pnm
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#1by:    
#1    

I pledged an OR House not known for grades with pres scholarship and living in honors dorm (ridgecrest), it was fine. I got a 3.8 both semesters, and I have the highest gpa of my friends but most still study with me and focus on school. I went out a surprising amount considering my gpa but my major isn't the most difficult lol

By: ----
by: Truth   

Bumping this too

By: Truth
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#2by:    
#2    

I pledged a NR sorority that's usually somewhere near the bottom for grades. In high school I was full IB with a 3.7 and got the 2/3 scholarship from Alabama. I feel like my sorority really encourages me to get good grades and honestly out of my friends I'm probably one of the least academic (and I take my grades pretty seriously). No sorority wants you to get bad grades, and in every house there are a lot of girls who put in the work to do really well.

By: X
#3by:    
#3    

I am an in-state PC15 honors college, presidential scholarship, etc. I pledged a new row house that is in the lower part of the grade report and is generally described on greekrank as being an OOS house with a lot of hot partiers.

My experience has been awesome but I do get annoyed that there are a percentage of members, maybe like a quarter of them, that just do not care at all about academics until the last minute. They end up doing poorly and they drag the whole house's gpa down with them. The other majority part of the house has great grades and care a lot about academics. So in my view the houses with the low gpa just have a higher percentage of those girls that just don't care. Those girls are often the hot partiers, but not necessarily. They tend to stay away from the house and do their own thing but never miss a good photo op or darty.

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by: T   

I'm in a house that's in the bottom for grades and I 100% agree! In the low GPA houses it's not like everyone is dumb, the majority of girls I know are very smart and involved but we get pulled down by girls who get 0.0 GPAs because they came here to party and that's about it. It can be frustrating because I know a lot of girls who can work hard and play hard and it's easier to find a balance than people make it out to be

By: T
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by: Ikr   

"They tend to stay away from the house and do their own thing but never miss a good photo op or darty".... That really nails it. Then half of them transfer and the cycle repeats itself.

By: Ikr
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by: Ikr   

This is why grade risk is a thing.

By: Ikr
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by: pnm   

Why do you think you were dropped from the houses with high grades? Or is this what you chose for pref? Did you have recs?

By: pnm
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#4by:    
#4    

If I had all of those things, I wouldn't be in Alabama. My gpa isn't bad, but I don't pretend that college is hard and needs a lot of work like my friends from top colleges. Even liberal arts majors are harder at those schools. But good for sororities for pushing academics. That's definitely nice for students who want to go to grad school

By: Eh
by: Smartie   

Alabama offers awesome scholarships for high achievers. It's worth coming here and not being in debt graduating!

By: Smartie
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by: ?   

Lots of top schools have great financial aid. Unless you're really rich, they're pretty affordable

By: ?
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by: Haha   

People are in denial here. No one is saying that people at U Alabama are dumb, but this school isn't competitive outside of Alabama. I have a few friends who go to schools like Northwestern, Vanderbilt, Cornell, Brown, U Chicago, WUSTL, Grinell, and Pepperdine. They may not have gotten full rides, but they received tons of money as well as donor scholarships. If a school wants you, they will try to make it work. By the way, none of my friends are rich, minorities, or athletes. Just hard working smart people.

By: Haha
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#5by:    
#5    

I'm in-state, 4.0 GPA, 30 ACT. Didn't really want to stay in-state but decided to because of my scholarship/the honors college. I'm in a new row house that's usually around the all-female average so not bad but definitely not up to my standard (I still have a 4.0 in college.)

To be honest Alabama is not the most ~intellectual~ school out there to begin with... If you're nerdy like me it's just something you need to adjust for. I picked Bama over more "studious" schools and I just have to live with that decision!

I think my sorority has given me a much better work/life balance because I am encouraged to go out of my comfort zone and I have more social opportunities than I did in high school. I'm so much more outgoing now and it's really changed me for the better. I was still able to find academically-focused people but I don't spend all my time in the library and I no longer feel like my self-worth is completely tied to my grades. I love love love my sisters, even the ones that don't care about their grades as much as I do, because they've shown me how to live a meaningful life in a way I wasn't living it before.

By: hi
by: Smartie   

Thank you so much for saying this!

By: Smartie
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by: 99   

That is really good think about it. It takes all kinds.

By: 99
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by: 99   

What I really love about post 6 is that it makes an important point about a benefit of being in a sorority -- it is getting exposure to different kinds of people from different parts of the country that you might not otherwise interact with if you stay in your comfort zone. Just as the poster 6 benefitted from expanding socially, the girls that are more party oriented and not very studious also build relationships with others that are focused on academics and may actually see a way to balance their own life better.

By: 99
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by: Ex-nerd   

I think consciously working at being social and outgoing is as important as being smart and driven. It makes you a better person by expanding your horizons, it enriches you by helping you develop friendships, and it prepares you for real life by helping you learn how to interact with different kinds of people. In the business world, "cultural fit" is a huge thing, and unless you're Bill Gates or Mark Zuckerberg, if you're socially awkward, it's going to hold you back, no matter how talented you are.

By: Ex-nerd
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#6by:    
#6    

Reminder

By: Ghfjdkl
#7by:    
#7    

Bumping now that grades are out

By: T
#8by:    
#8    

Bump

By: Bumpity bump
#9by:    
#9    

3.8 was the average GPA for a pnm going through Rush at Bama for the past 2 years. This isn’t considered high anymore. Had a huge influx of OOS and OOR pulled here by automatic merit scholarships. We also do well for in-state top academic students, there’s a focus on retaining our best from in state. But 3.8 isn’t “high”…. It’s average. Many who don’t go here probably don’t realize this.

By: Active
#10by:    
#10    

I just want to add that no house has really bad grades. Yes, some are higher, but are we going to put down a house because their average is a 3.25? My advice to you is to go through recruitment and see what house you love based on the connections/conversations you are having. Forget all the ridiculousness and see how you feel you may fit in each house. This will be your college family and friendships you make for years to come. I just can't imagine going in a house for the short amount of time I have and be concerned about how many premeds there are or who has a high gpa average. You have 400 young women in a house and you will find many studious women in each house.

By: bella

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