Usual age of Sorority Girls???

<p>Hi guys im really thinking about joining a Sorority but I have a question
Im going to a Community College right now and ill be 22 when I graduate from the c.c.
I plan on transferring to a University and participate in Rush, but I am wondering is 22 too old to rush?
How old do the girls who rush usually be?</p>

<p>Thanks.</p>

<p>There is no age limit in a sorority or fraternity, if you want to rush than go ahead and try it out. You will be older than most of the girls but that isn’t necessarily a bad thing, most girls that rush are freshman-sophomores, however it’s not totally uncommon to see an older girl rush… People are given bids based on their personality and who they are, not by their age.</p>

<p>I would recommend giving it a shot</p>

<p>Entirely depends on the university. Without knowing that, I can’t give you any firm advice</p>

<p>Hi thanks for willing to help
But the universities I am interested in transferring to are Texas State, university of texas at austin, university of michigan ann arbor, and michigan state.</p>

<p>UT Austin is almost completely out of the picture. They are a highly competitive recruitment, and you absolutely 100% without a doubt would need to secure 1-2 recs per chapter at Texas. UMich is a possibility, although it’s harder if you don’t know girls in chapters already. MSU is also a possibility. Texas State I don’t know much about, but it is Texas so I’m inclined to say no. </p>

<p>As a side note, you posted this exact same question essentially on another message board, a much more informed one than this one. I’d suggest you take that board’s advice. You will be the oldest member of your pledge class, and your options will be extremely limited. That being said, if Greek life is something you want to pursue, then go through recruitment and see what happens</p>

<p>Populations of people are the same anywhere: some will be nice and accepting, some will be b1tchy about it, some will be jealous of your added life experience, some will love learning from your experience, some will feel their seniority (earned through 3+ years in the sorority…) is being threatened.</p>

<p>Probably most will be fine with it, but some will be a bit testy. For the latter, embrace the prospect of winning them over with your personality and loyalty/devotion.</p>