Tom Earp. Because another GLO can, as they were not initiated but only recruited to be a possible Full member. Finding out what happens after pleding is probally why you can pledge one but as long as your not initiated join another. It is once your initiated you learn all the secrets of the said fraternity. Where as a pledge you are only learning what you need to know to be initiated such as the history of the fraternity and some minor details.
Find all posts by noobishactz. I'd highly suggest waiting until you find out for sure where you're going to be. If your new school doesn't have a chapter of X your kind of stuck of course you could always work on starting one. You'll be learning about the tradition, history, etc of a chapter your not going to be part of. Plus some fraternities may have requirements that you need to be a brother for y semesters after your inducted or you cant pledge.
Originally Posted by gruber. Hey man Yeah, sorry my bad. Mind must have been some place else. Pledging and being initiated are two totally different things. I'd assume given your situation there's not much they could do. Plus you'd have a small leg up - you'd already know the greek alphabet, etc things that are "generic" to any fraternity I def' wouldnt do it too often, as brothers might begin to question if you are really committed to the idea of joining a fraternity or if you just plan on keep bouncing around.
But we have accepted a couple ex-pledges from another fraternity into our group this semester, so it is possible to do If you are not so sure then why try to pledge. I was an interest for my sorority for almost a year before i went to the next "process".
I imagine that this happens in extremely rare situations. The person asking for the release better have pretty solid reasoning for the request. That could be a reasonable request. Regardless, if you are granted your release, then you will be able to join another fraternity. Second, you can get expelled from your fraternity. In essence, this will mean the fraternity has disassociated themselves from you, and then you will be free join another fraternity. This is often a long, typically arduous process, and there are no guarantees the fraternity you want to join will accept you.
What makes both of these options especially challenging is the timeline. You are only in college for four years typically. Brothers who decide to quit do so in years two or three. The problem now becomes that the brother will need the National HQ to expel them or grant them their release. From my understanding, this is an extremely common policy across institutions and chapters. If you do transfer, of course you can opt to omit the fact that were a brother in another chapter.
However this will only work if you delete evidence of it on social media and no one at your new school who might influence whether you get a bid knows about it. We were proud to have members of Phi Theta Kappa in our chapter. The 26 members of National Panhell Council do not allow someone who has initiated to one house to then resign and join another. Our editorial content is not influenced by any commissions we receive. With colleges across the country back in session now, millions of freshman are figuring out how to navigate a new world.
Fraternities are organizations plagued by racism, misogyny, homophobia, and hypermasculinity that put on a good enough front and maintain a wall of secrecy to continue without addressing these issues. Seeing and hearing what happens on a daily basis opened my eyes and made me realize that this was no different than most other fraternities.
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