British student coming to UCLA - fraternity?

I have been accepted by UCLA for my year abroad starting this September

In a couple weeks I’ll have to sort some kind of accommodation out, and I’ve tried doing some research but I’m still very confused. I’m very interested in joining a fraternity as the year doesn’t count towards my degree, so I’ll have a lot of time spare.

Is it possible for someone doing study abroad for a year to join a fraternity? Also, do people generally live in the fraternity or not? I think I have the choice to apply for campus dorms or sort it out myself

Many thanks

Since no current students have answered, I’ll chime in as an alumni who wasn’t in a fraternity, but has some knowledge from my day of how things work.

I would say it’s not likely you’ll have the fraternity option open to you. While there is no rule set in stone that I’m aware of, they are usually looking for someone who will add to the fraternity over the course of years rather than the months you would have left as an “active” member after going through the pledge process.

Even if you were able to get in one, there are only so many rooms available in each house, and which active members get to live in those rooms is usually determined by the end of the previous school year. It would be very rare to have an opening mid-year and then priority would probably go to a more senior member first.

That said, you’ll still be able to attend fraternity rush parties if you want. They are open to anyone, and if you end up meeting friends who are in fraternities or sororities, you may still be invited to other parties and events they have. I had several friends in fraternities and sororities who invited me to various parties and events.

My suggestion would be to make arrangements to live in a dorm if possible where you will have the best opportunity to meet and make friends with other students. There’s a large neighborhood of apartments behind fraternity row where students live when they move off campus (look on google maps for the area between Gayley and Veteran Ave.). That neighborhood is virtually all students and is basically considered an extension of campus housing. There’s another area on the other side of Wilshire Blvd. from Westwood Village where students live, but this is a little further out and while still walkable, it’s not all students and you have to think a lot more about whether you have time to run home between classes, etc. and plan accordingly.

But moving into an apartment is normally something students do sometime after living in a dorm where they meet friends to move out with. I’m afraid you’d be robbing yourself of a lot of the “college experience” available at UCLA by not living in a dorm or living in an apartment further away, so I would try to live in campus housing - or as close to campus as you can in the event you can’t get campus housing.

Hope that helps, and hoping you have a great experience!

Many thanks, this is a great help!

One more thing if you wouldn’t mind, for when I have to apply for accommodation. Do you know if there are any ‘reputations’ associated with specific dorms so to speak? I know that here in the UK, certain residences are renowned for parties, others for awful food, etc.

Do the dorms at UCLA have any individual reputations or are they all pretty similar?

@hertac1325 you can not join if you are only at ucla for a year studying abroad. ucla is technically not your home school so you can rush but when they try to process your initiation with the ucla greek office it won’t go through and you will be removed. also people who rush are not allowed to live in their first year

If you haven’t rushed or pledged fall quarter, winter rush is happening during week 1 of winter quarter.