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You are at:Home » Getting to Know Michigan Fraternity & Sorority Life
Fraternities and Sororities

Getting to Know Michigan Fraternity & Sorority Life

adminBy adminAugust 30, 2023Updated:August 30, 2023No Comments20 Mins Read
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Hello, everyone. Thank you so much for taking the  time to join us for the Getting to Know Michigan   Fraternity and Sorority Life Webinar Edition.  I’m going to introduce you to my colleagues   in a moment. I just wanted to share that if you  have questions while you’re participating in the  

Session live, please feel free to use the Q&A chat  and we will get back to you as soon as possible.   We’re going to go ahead and  get started with introductions.   My name is Shannon Benson. I use  she/her pronouns and I serve as   the Associate Director of Fraternity and  Sorority Life and Panhellenic Advisor.

My name is Jordan Borchert. I  use he/him/his pronouns and I   serve as an Assistant Director and  Interfraternity Council Advisor. Good afternoon, everybody. My name is Abriana  Cardenas. I use she/her and I am the advisor   to Culturally Based Fraternal Organizations and  Community Liaison to Multicultural Initiatives.

Hi, everyone. My name is Cheyenne Chapman. I  utilize she/her pronouns and I currently serve as   a Community Standards and Leadership Development  Manager within the Fraternity Life office. These are just a handful of the colleagues  that work in our department to support the   fraternity and sorority community and  we’re really excited that they’re here  

Today to share more about our community  and what we offer. As we begin today,   we’re going to start with a little bit of  history about the community and a little   bit of an overview of our department, just so  you can see all the support structures that  

Are in place, as we work with close  to 5,000 students at the university. Fraternities and sororities have a very  long history at Michigan. The first two   organizations came to the campus in 1845  and, over the next 180 (almost) years,  

We’ve had many organizations become part of  the community. A couple of highlights: in 1879,   the first sorority was chartered on campus. That  occurred at a time when our university had just   opened to women on campus and then, in 1909, the  first traditionally African-American fraternity is  

Established a chapter here. Over the next several  decades, the fraternity and sorority has expanded   to include a variety of diverse organizations.  Today, we’re more than 50 organizations strong!   A little bit later in the presentation, you’ll  learn more about who we are and what we offer.

I mentioned that we have a department that works  collaboratively with students and other folks at   the university to lead this community: fraternity  and sorority life. Our office is located on   campus; we’re fortunate enough to be at 1443  Washtenaw, which is kind-of on the edge of campus,  

As you’re as you’re coming in. We work with lots  of folks; our office oversees four different   councils, that you’re going to learn more about,  and each council has a collection of fraternities,   sororities, or fraternities and sororities,  that work with them on various things. Within  

The council, we have chapters and the chapters  are also governed by international or national   organizations. Each have their own policies,  procedures, volunteer structures, so there’s   lots of opportunities for people to support  the community and help our students, as well. The benefits of joining: let’s  talk about that, a bit, okay?

One of the benefits: personal relationships.  You’re making lifelong friendships. You’re   receiving and giving support. You’re experiencing  different backgrounds and identities, along with   being able to share yours, and getting that  sense of belonging within the community.   These individuals will be people that  are in your most important milestones,  

Whether that’s graduation, and weddings,  and bringing new life into this world. Academic support and professional  development. That’s networking,   attending national conferences and events.  Being able to connect with other brothers,   sisters, siblings, that are in professional  fields, that can help your student move  

Forward in life. Also, being able  to travel and have that experience. Leadership development. Leading with  integrity. Gaining and sharpening skills.   Working cooperatively and effectively  with others. And understanding bystander   behavior and intervention. Those are a  few, but there’s quite more leadership  

Opportunities for students to gain and be able  to step up into their communities, as well. And then, finally, service in  philanthropy/philanthropy opportunity, so engaging   supporting in Ann Arbor, in the campus community.  You’re learning positive ways to impact others.   You’re raising awareness of… there are topics  that are very important to you… you’re able  

To bring that up. You have that support system.  You’re able to bring awareness to the communities   around you and, of course, you can fundraise  and donate and other resources that are allowed. Talking about this community, Shannon mentioned  that we have 50 organizations or more than 50  

Organizations. That number is continually growing!  We’ve had chapters that have re-entered our   governing umbrella over the past  academic year and we’re open to others   joining that process, as well. We  don’t have that specific number. We do have a couple of groups that are still  expanding, so that number does ebb and flow  

With that. I think it’s really important for  us to note that you can read all about… a   little bit more in depth… our councils and  their comprising chapters. I have all of the   carrots [directions] guiding you on how  to find that information on our website.  

This link will be shared with [you] a  couple times throughout this webinar,   so you can be sure to just type in your computer,  do your research behind/after the fact and,   then, if you have any questions, feel  free to come back and connect with us.

About our community is [that] there  the chapters that are growing,   the councils that are expanding and,  then, we also have some information   on recognition status changes. What that  means is that we are a community that has   organizations, like I said, that  do enter and leave our community,  

Under the governing umbrella, and that information  is all provided there. In terms of organizations   that might still be active but aren’t necessarily  tied to the university or getting support from our   office, we encourage folks to do that research  prior to any joining processes and we’ll go into  

That a little bit more in depth what that  process looks like in the next few slides. Academically, our organizations do very well.   We are either at or close to the  U-M [GPA] average, every semester.  

We are usually a little bit above or, like I  said, just at. We can see, in the fall, we were   just barely above and then, at the winter, we were  very, very close–within .001–to the U-M average. Philanthropy dollars. In the last year,  the community donated $339,270 philanthropy  

Dollars to the community. You can read about  that, as we have publishings coming out. We’ve   had very large philanthropic organizations  and philanthropic events on campus that,   as we can see, are raising a ton of money  and doing a ton of good in the community.

The last thing that we want to touch on, on this  slide, is that on average, every academic year,   we have about 19 hours of community service  donated per member. If we multiplied that by   5,000 we can see that astronomical impact  that our communities are making on the greater  

Ann Arbor community and some of their home  communities… local Detroit communities…   we can see that actually quantified in  the work that our students are doing. Before I start to talk about the Interfraternity  Council, I just want to remind folks who’ve just  

Joined or who joined from the beginning  that if you have any questions throughout   this presentation… you have questions now…  please go to the Q&A tab in the bottom of your   screen and you can ask questions. We have  staff members who are able to answer those  

Questions or [are] able to get that answer for  you, you know, for the question that you asked. With that being said, as Cheyenne kind-of  mentioned, our community is a large body   of humans and, so, one of those councils  is the IFC or the Intrafraternity Council.  

There are 19 affiliated fraternities that provide  opportunities for friendship, brotherhood,   and leadership development. The recruitment  looks a little bit different and we’ll talk   about each kind of recruitment process, but  they’ll start the beginning of each semester,  

Both the fall and the winter semester, with events  called the Mass Meeting in the IFC Forum. The Mass   Meeting is an opportunity for students to learn  about the process for joining an IFC fraternity,   the expectations, the requirements about what  that process looks like. The IFC Forum is  

Something where, if your student is looking  to know and learn a little bit more about   the organizations that are part of the IFC, our  IFC organizations will have a table–they’ll be   present, at this meeting, to get a better general  understanding of the IFC community, the community  

That make up it [SIC], as well as having time to  learn about each individual organization, being   able to talk to those members… learn about how  to, you know, engage with them, what events that   they’re hosting… because we want to make sure  that students have the ability to connect with  

Some of those members, being able to, at least,  attend some of those events, so that they can   kind of make a determination on, you know, is this  the organization that is best for me? Is this the   organization that aligns best with what I want out  of my college experience and lifetime experience?

The final thing is that most members, once  they join, will live in their chapter house or   their facility that is typically in the Ann Arbor  community, after they join. That’s typically your   sophomore year and most organizations might have  an expectation or a requirement; that’s something  

That a student should ask questions about–living  in that chapter house or that chapter facility. We also have MGC or Multicultural Greek Council.  That was established here at the University   in 2002. Comprised of 12 organizations, the  council specifically celebrates and promotes   multiculturalism through programming,  service, housing several racial ethnic and  

Cultural communities, a wide range of affinity  groups (Latinx, being represented, East Asian,   South Asian, Arab and multicultural). Even  though they were historically founded that way,   that does not mean no one else can join. It is  open to multicultural membership, of course,  

Across the board. Usually for recruitment,  they will do a beginning of the semester…   it’s usually a week full of events, so that  is time for interested students to come,   meet the members, learn more about the  organization and what their intake process  

Is looking like, being able to also participate  in community service and other social activities. Then, we have our third council, the  National Panhellenic Council or NPHC.   Even though it was chartered here at the  university in 2005, the earliest chapter  

That was established here was in the early  1900s, that my colleague has mentioned, in 1909.   We are comprised of seven of the Divine  Nine Organizations, right now, but working   on getting that expanded. Historically, these  black fraternities and sororities have been at  

HBCUs and, eventually, came toward predominantly  white institutions. They were created to support   that community and also promote that awareness  on their campuses and so forth. Right now,   they also are hosting their own weeks each  semester. Again, that is time for interested  

Students to come and learn more, come engage in  social interaction, learn about their brotherhood,   their sisterhood, or their siblinghood, and  understanding their intake process, as well. Our fourth council is the Panhellenic Association,  very commonly known as Panhel. We currently have   17 sororities within the Panhellenic Association  and they’re all unique, in different ways,  

But their commonalities include that they  believe in sisterhood and friendship. There’s   a lot of programming from members that focus on  leadership development and topics that are really   relevant to them. There are opportunities  for professional growth and development,   as well. All 17 of the sororities in  this council participate in community  

Service and philanthropic endeavors. Some  of them are local opportunities and, then,   they all have national organizations that they  work with, as well, to raise money and awareness. There are a couple of different ways to join  Panhellenic Association sororities. Coming   up in the fall semester and, then, in the  winter semester, after primary recruitment,  

There’s an informal recruitment process called  Continuous Open Bidding or COB. We’re going   to talk a little bit more, generally, about  the joining opportunities, in just a moment,   but for the Panhellenic Association, first-year  students will not be eligible to join this fall  

Through COB. They will have to wait until  January 2024, either for primary recruitment   or after. And, then primary recruitment,  which is the opportunity to see all of the   National Panhellenic Conference sororities,  so 16 of our 17 will be held in January of  

2024. There’s already some great information  on our website and we’ll continue to add more. Sixteen of our chapters in Panhellenic do operate  facilities or houses and they are an important   part of the experience, here. Most members live-in  the year after they join and most members join,  

Right now, in the winter semester. If you have  a student who joins in January or February,   if it’s informal recruitment of 2024, then they  would live in the house for the fall ’24/winter   ’25 year. On our website, we also have housing and  financial information from this last school year,  

So you can get an idea about what  the costs associated with membership   are. (We’ll be updating for 2023-2024  numbers in the next couple of months.) I think something that’s really important to  note is that living in the house is a part of the  

Membership experience and if you have a student  who is even the slightest bit interested in   going through recruitment, they should not sign a  lease off-campus until after recruitment is over.   We have had recruitment in January for a  few years, now, and it’s worked out really,  

Really well. If your student doesn’t finish the  recruitment process or doesn’t get a spot in   the house, we have great partnerships with Beyond  the Diag, out of the Dean of Students Office, and   other folks to help support them finding housing,  but that’s a really big part of the experience.

I also just wanted to give a shout out to our  17th member of the Panhellenic Association, our   associate member Phi Sigma Rho. They are social  engineering sorority and they do not participate   in primary recruitment, but they do hold  recruitment fall and winter that’s more informal.

The Panhellenic Association does  a lot of great things on campus   and they’ll have opportunities  throughout the fall semester   for interested students to connect  with them and their member chapters. We talked a lot about the the organizations that  make up the community, so you’re probably wanting  

To ask, “Jordan, how can my student join or how  can a student join?” There are different joining   processes for each organization and/or each  council. The time periods that they go about this   joining process and intake of membership is based  on that council and/or chapter. An update, though,  

That we can share is that at the University of  Michigan, previously if you were a first-year   student who did not have 12 credits, you were  not able to join a fraternity or sorority.   That’s no longer and, so, first-year students can  

Engage with our groups for the first five weeks  of the fall semester. And, after, they can join a   fraternity or sorority. Again, that depends on the  council and the chapters processes, but know that   for those that are seeking to bring in members in  the fall semester that are first-year students,  

They can now join and connect with our  fraternity and sorority communities. The main thing that I would share of how to  learn a little bit more about their processes,   the organizations, the council,  that makes up our community is to   be able to take some time and, you  know, look up a national website…  

Go to and, you know, look through their social  media. They do a great job, our organizations,   to tell a story or a narrative of what it looks  like to be a part of that organization, and that   council, and in our community, the benefits that  you receive, the connections that you can make.

I want to highlight, too, that if  they know a member of an organization,   being able to hear from their experiences, learn  what they’ve found beneficial or valuable in   their experience, and kind-of learning  from them, is also really helpful in,   kind-of, deciding and knowing the  organizations that are on campus.

The last thing is that we’ve been very  intentional, this summer and moving into   the academic year, about our marketing strategy.  How we are communicating to all stakeholders,   our students, our alumni, our family and  parents, on what fraternity/sororit life is,  

The benefits of fraternity and sorority life.  We’ll do that through a bunch of different   marketing initiatives, but one I want to  specifically highlight is a mailer–we’re   going to be sending a mailer–to all first-year  students in late July/early August with a lot  

Of information about our community. That’s a  great way to learn a little bit more, there,   as well as obviously our website, which  we’ll talk about and highlight one more   time in a future slide, as well as we also  share a second year postcard which, again,  

Is another way to be able to communicate the  organizations that are on campus, our community,   and to just remind folks that they can, if if they  want to join a fraternity or sorority at Michigan. The other piece about it is that we have some  requirements for joining a[n] organization.  

Any student who wants to join a fraternity or  sorority can go through these easy four steps.   Each organization… or, sorry, each student  who is interested in joining and does join goes   through these four steps. The first one is just  understanding the process and deadlines. Like I  

Mentioned, each process is different by the  organization. Where the Panhellenic and IFCU   organizations regulate their recruitment  process a little bit more and our National   Panhellenic Council and Multicultural Council  have national or regional officers who set the   timing and regulations around their their intake  or their recruitment processes. It’s just really  

Important to know the details and the deadlines  around each process, because they they’ll look   a little bit different. If you follow on our  website, you’ll be able to see the information   that you’ll need on being able to register,  the deadlines, and things of that [SIC].

The other two things that we ask students who are  going to join our community [are] to complete two   different trainings. The first one is just  a Educational Module about our community.   It’s fairly brief and it just allows students  to get a better understanding of who makes up  

The community, what are the councils that are  part of the community, what do we stand for,   what do we value? Finally, we have students do  what we call Impact Training. Impact Training   [is] for specific populations that provide  information around bystander behavior,   sexual misconduct, and hazing  education. We want to make sure that  

Students have this information and are proactive  about this, before joining our communities.   We like to say that our communities are probably  [some] of the more educated communities, with the   amount of information that we want our students to  know as they’re joining in a part of this process.

Finally is a recruitment and intake gateway. This  is where we have a student and we check to make   sure that they completed their trainings, that  they’re in good standing with their college or   their school, as well as [that] they’re enrolled  at the University of Michigan. Once they complete  

All of that, they will be given the opportunity to  move on to the next step in either registering or   completing their their process, so that they can  join a fraternity or sorority in our community.   If you do have questions (obviously, and we’ll  share this again) you can email us and or you can  

Call us and that information is on our website.  We’ll be sharing that a little in a later slide. We’ve been together for almost a half hour, now.  Let’s talk about what we learned. Our community   is comprised of more than 50 organizations. We  continue to grow. We continue to be healthy,  

In that growth mindset of welcoming  new organizations in regularly.   We encourage you to look out for these  organizations, look out for opportunities,   to join. Jordan just discussed the different  structures and opportunities for you to go   through those processes. We encourage you  to look for them; there’s a lot of them…  

You’re going to see them. There’s going to be  events and programming throughout the school   year for you to meet these organizations, for  you to learn more about the organizations and,   in a lot of them, there’s going to be structural  opportunities for you to learn how to join.

We understand that this is a half-hour, a taste  for you guys to really think about what these   have to offer, what these organizations have  to offer. There’s going to be opportunities   for you to get this, more in-depth, maybe,  from some current students or current members,  

Current leaders in the community. We really  encourage you to do that over the next four   years that you’re going to spend or your  student is going to spend at the university. The best way for you or your student or  your parents to get information on these  

Organizations–how to join, what they’re  up to–is going to be on either the website   (right? we talked about status changes,  we talked about the organization contacts)   or contacting our staff. And, then, the last way  is to follow us on socials. Our social media is  

The best way for us just tell our stories, both  us, as an office, helping tell the story of our   organizations and we also have our four council  social medias listed there, as well. That’s going   to give you that first-hand experience of  what it’s like to be a student at Michigan,  

What it’s like to be affiliated in a fraternity  or sorority at Michigan, from the students. One piece that I will also add, there, as you’re  exploring your opportunities: all of these council   pages should be following the organizations that  they represent, so feel free to dive into that,  

As well. Go through and look to see what  these organizations are up to– you can   see that one chapter raised a ridiculous amount  of money and you saw that one other chapter was   really focused on service–and you can help guide  your interests to match the organization’s best.  

But this is all of the information…  some of the information… there will   not be a quiz. We cannot give a quiz,  but we are here if you have questions. Thank you, everybody. We can hang around  for a moment, in case anybody wants to  

Enter questions in the Q&A. I haven’t seen any  thus far, otherwise we could answer them aloud,   and emphasize we’ll be around all spring and  summer and throughout the school year. If you’re   attending any of the orientation sessions,  we’ll have a table and we’re just excited  

To connect and get to meet your students  and help welcome them to the university.

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