<p>I think that one of the things a lot of that students compare to make a college decision is the Greek community at a school. Interestingly almost every school likes to downplay the Greek community. If you’re one of those people, then this thread is not for you!</p>
<p>Now that that’s out of the way, I think it would be interesting to compare schools’ Greek communities…and the overall impact on the rest of the college.</p>
<p>For instance I went to SMU and it was like…yeah so what? Everyone is in a fraternity, what’s the big deal? I guess the effect on SMU would be that everyone wore Gucci or Armani and drove beautiful cars that put my new Mustang to shame…</p>
<p>I went to OU and Greek involvement was scarce. Greeks were shunned, and you got a sense that the campus was mostly ran by independents. There were still a lot of Greeks on campus, they just weren’t involved in campus activities very much. They use their letters instead as a status symbol instead of a way to get involved on campus. OU, being ran by independents, gave me more of a liberal, political activist-type school and less of a preppy laid-back school. Freshman must live in dorms.</p>
<p>I went to TCU and they didn’t have enough room for their Greeks. TCU owns all of the Greek houses, which are on a separate campus close by. It’s a cul-de-sac of identical Greek houses surrounded by one huge parking lot. I didn’t like that at all. There was no neighborhood sense…it felt like a shopping mall or something. A lot of Greeks had to live in the dorms…or chose to live in the dorms instead. I thought that was weird. Greeks had no more opportunities to get involved than independents because the intramural sports leagues were all open to everyone regardless of independent of Greek house.</p>
<p>I went to OSU and Greek involvement was kind of a good mix. Greeks were embraced around campus, in fact the SGA pres/vice pres were Greeks, and their predecessors, and so on. My campus guide was Greek, even though he was not allowed to tell me which Greek house he belonged to (I later found out he was a Fiji at Greek Discovery Day). At OSU Greeks aren’t as upscale and use their Greek letters as a way to get involved on campus instead of as a status symbol. Ultimately that was a big factor in choosing OSU over the other 3 that were my main contenders.</p>
<p>Ultimately I found a place that had a Greek community with your typical party scene (safe environment for unsafe practices, as they say), that stressed campus involvement with its own separate intramural sports leagues, dominance over campus leadership, as well academic performance. It was a helpful comparison over the other 3 schools because I already had a good idea of what kind of campus community I would be surrounded by and what all I would be able to take advantage of. </p>
<p>Does anyone else have more colleges to add, or any comments on that?</p>