National data boasts that members of fraternities and sororities have higher GPAs than the average non-affiliated student.
But Greek Life coordinator Kevin Bazner said at MSU that is not necessarily the case.
Last semester, over half of the reconginzed Greek chapters on campus saw its grade point average drop. Some chapters dipped below national standards.
Six out of 12 Greek organizations even have a 2.5 or below.
Last fall, one posted a 1.64 chapter GPA and another acquired a 1.44 grade point average.
No Greek chapter earned an average GPA of a 3.0 or above.
As of fall 2011 the average GPA for a Greek chapter at MSU is a 2.53.
All Greek chapters GPAs are below the overrall undergraduate GPA of 2.79.
Bazner said he has not seen an academic issue with fraternity and sorority life. He believes they are advancing.
āYou look at the different numbers, whether it be academics or impressions of the community, for the most part they are good,ā Bazner said. āNumbers will sway up and down, but you see a general trend of improvement. I think that is best thing that anyone can hope for is improvement.ā
According to the fall 2011 grade report, the average sorority GPA is 2.69.
The average fraternity GPA is 2.2.
Kappa Sigma, Tau Kappa Epsilon and Sigma Nu fell below national standards, 1.64, 2.08, 2.20, respectively and are required to participate in weekly educational programs.
Until Banzer became coordinator in 2010, community grade reports were not posted online.
āThat was surprising to me because organizations that say they are about scholarship and academic achievement do need to prove that,ā Bazner said. āI do empathize with the chapters, especially those who may not meet that average and it may not look good for them.ā
Every Greek organization does have a minimum grade requirement, but some have higher standards than others.
Midwestern does not mandate a university GPA standard for Greek students, unlike some Texas schools. Angelo State University, which requires all Greek life students to maintain a 2.5 grade point average, and Southern Methodist University chapters must maintain a 3.0 or above GPA.
āI donāt feel right now as an university administrator that we need to be imposing that extra requirement on a student,ā Bazner said. āBut it is obviously something Iāll look at and something that as a community we need to challenge ourselves to constantly seek out improvement and be better than the average.ā
āWithin the Interfraternity Council, every single one of the chapters that fell below the all menās average are doing weekly presentations on scholarship, whether that be study skills, academic achievement or test anxiety,ā Bazner said. āEvery chapter, to my knowledge, is keeping up with their members on their progress. Obviously this (spring) semester will be the tell all.ā
Bazner believes that students coming out of high school and straight into a Greek organization are ill prepared for college, causing a few chapters to drop.
āThey donāt have the necessary resources coming out of high school in order to balance that work, social, school triangle,ā Bazer said. āIf you put your heart and soul into an organization, there are going to be extra requirements and it is that balance of how do we deal with extra responsibilities and requirements.ā
According to the fall 2011 grade report, the average GPA of new Greek members is lower than the average GPA for active members in eight of the 12 organizations.
As Greek coordinator, it is Baznerās responsibility to ensure that Greek students are meeting the standards of the university, particularly those in the student handbook those standards include each student earning no lower than a 2.0.
āAs far as academic, my main focus is that they understand that they are here for an education and giving them the tools and resources they need,ā Bazner said. āThen I track that data semester to semester, chapter to chapter, year to year.ā
With a chapter GPA of 2.43 last fall, Gamma Phi Beta had its lowest average since 2009.
When The Wichitan contacted the national Gamma Phi Beta International Sorority, they refused to comment on the GPA drop.
Instead, a spokesperson stated that chapters plan scholarship programs to encourage individual and chapter excellence.
āGamma Phi Beta believes its members need to be academically successful to participate, lead, serve and enjoy sorority membership to the fullest,ā said Maureen Walker, director of marketing and communications for Gamma Phi Beta International.
The national organization requires a minimum cumulative grade point average of 2.4 from college or 2.8 from high school.
āMembers are encouraged to exceed minimums and every chapter is expected to have a cumulative grade point average higher than the all-womenās average on the respective campus,ā Walker said.
As of fall 2011, the MSU all-womenās average for Greeks was a 2.91.
Sigma Lambda Alphaās chapter grade point average decreased from 2.82 to 2.73. With only four members, chapter president Gloria Villarreal said it is difficult to participate in Greek activities with their current membership.
āThe cause (for the GPA drop) was due to so many Greek events and programs that we had to attend at that time and it was very difficult for us because it was just a group of four,ā Villarreal said. āWe canāt be at two places at once.ā
Villarreal said Sigma Lambda is bringing in five new members at the end of the semester.
āWe make each other study together and make study log sheets,ā Villarreal said. āIts important because it shows that we are trying to improve our grades.ā
As president, Villarreal said she spends 12 hours a week doing Greek activities.
āI work part-time and go to school full time and have two important positions in my organization. If I can do it, anyone can. Just donāt be lazy,ā she said.
Sigma Nu, which currently has nine members, suffered its lowest chapter GPA in two years with a 2.2. Chapter president Josh Kattner explained that two membersā personal issues affected the average.
Scott Smith, director of leadership development for Sigma Nu Fraternity, said the general fraternity is disappointed to learn that the MSU chapter dropped, making it one of the lowest chapter GPAs on campus.
ā(We) understand that the drop could be a result of any number of factors affecting individual chapter members,ā Smith said. āWe will continue to work with the chapter to support academic improvement.ā
Kattner said that it is not entirely his responsibility to ensure all members are in good academic standing.
āI feel as president I need to make sure they have all the tools and resources available to remain in good academic standing,ā he said. āAt the same time we realize that we are all adults who are accountable for our owning grades and actions and accountability is highly regard in our chapter.ā
Kattner said he sets an example of good academic standing for his members.
āBoth semester GPAs negatively affected the chapterās overall standing, but the chapter accepted the result and continue to support the brothers,ā he said.
Kappa Delta Chi president Samantha Forester said this semester has been a test of the wills for her to balance school and sorority activities.
Kappa Delta is one of the few Greek organization whose chapter GPA average rose from 2.6 in the spring of 2011 to 2.7 last fall.
Forester said her women took advantage of university resources last semester.
āWe held an academic workshop with our (faculty) adviser,ā Forester said. āWe took advantage of the Student Support Services tutoring program which offers group tutoring as well as individual sessions.ā
Each member of Kappa Delta is required to complete 10 study hours per week excluding holidays, mid-semester grade checks. At least one visit with the faculty adviser is required each semester.
āI believe it is my responsibility as well as our academic chair (to ensure all members are in good academic standing),ā Forester said. āI, as the representative of my chapter, and our academic standing are a reflection of our chapter. While we have made improvements, that bar still needs to be raised and we are reaching for new heights.ā
Sigma Alpha Epsilon has the highest GPA of any Greek organization with a 2.83 chapter GPA as of fall 2011. Each chapter of SAE is expected to use the national minimum of a 2.3 as a baseline for determining if members are delinquent in scholarship at the local chapter level.
SAE chapters can raise GPA requirement if they see fit.
āEach SAE chapter collegiate is virtually independent of the national fraternity,ā said Deran Abernathy, associate executive director for Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity. āNationally we provide advice and counsel to the chapter collegiate, but have no power to control the activities or operations.ā
Bazner said it is common for some fraternities and sororities to empower their chapter to make decisions for themselves.
āOn some campus a 2.0 might be good and on other campus that GPA might not be good, but at the end of the day everything is kind of relative,ā he said.
Bazner said he is confident in the leaders in those Greek organizations will make that big decision.
āIf we do not allow them to make decisions for themselves and learn from their successes and their mistakes I believe we miss a huge opportunity to allow students to understand decision making,ā Bazer said.
Unlike SAE, Kappa Sigmaās chapter GPA has been one of the lowest of Greek chapters for the past three years. Last fall, it averaged a 1.64 grade point average.
Chapter president Daniel Basham admits he failed when it came to making sure all Kappa Sigma members keep their grades up.
āNot making grades directly contradicts the foundation upon which we are built,ā Basham said. āAnd to me not making grades shows that you donātā care about the ritual or ideas upon which any fraternity is founded upon.ā
Kappa Sigma members hold study hours based on their GPA from the previous semester.
Incoming freshman have a base number of study hours they must complete. If not, they will be fined and not allow to participate in social events.
Despite not meeting the IFC national standard last semester, Kappa Sigma still participated in its community service activities, including its annual Box-a-Thon last fall that raised $3,000.
Kappa Sigma is the only Greek organization to have a house for members that is owned by the fraternity, not the university.
The men of Kappa Sigma deal with handling the finances for the home, including the mortgage and taxes.
āAll of this is on top of managing 20 college guys, which at times, is about like herding drunken cats,ā Basham said. āThese experiences will help me later in life with managing any sort of business I go into.ā
Tau Kappa Epsilon also fell below the 2.5 national standard last fall to 2.05.
āItās unfortunate and an area that the chapter, advisers and headquarters will focus on to improve,ā said Nathan Lehman, the regional director for TKE.
According to Lehman, as of March 27, the average chapter GPA in TKE was 2.7.
Since fall 2009, Midwesternās TKE chapter has never met that average.
Bazner said that individuals that have fraternity and sorority experienceĀ are better prepared for the real world.
āThere are those organizations on campus that do great things and itās one of those things that you truly donāt understand unless you are apart of it,ā Bazner said.
Academic Support Center, Student Support Services, Counseling Center and the Career Management Center are all university resources that Bazner encourages Greek students to take advantage of.
āDo I think you can get the skills that are in fraternities and sororities elsewhere – yes. But I donāt think any other organization is quite like Greek where it brings this huge dynamic of diversity.ā
FormerGreekGirl • May 3, 2012 at 3:35 PM
Why look at the individual, when they are supposed to be representing a group AS A WHOLE? If Greeks are supposed to be proud of their letters–and want to show them off–then they should try to maintain their ORGANIZATION’S Overall GPA. Greeks claim pride in their fraternity/sorority; why wouldn’t they want to see the GPA raised so that they can trully be proud of their academic success?
Also, as a former member of an organization that was called out in this article, I have to say that it was correct to contact National Headquarters rather than the individual chapters. It’s more official and doesn’t leave room for excuses by members who may just be trying to save face.
I believe that Brittney did a wonderful job!
Anonymous • May 1, 2012 at 7:43 PM
Yes the AVERAGE is crappy. Yet many people honored Friday night at the Honors Recognition Banquet are from a Greek organization.
Michael • Apr 23, 2012 at 5:42 PM
The article is about MEDIAN GPAs. Isn’t it OBVIOUS that some Greeks will have GPAs that are higher than the median, and some Greeks will have GPAs that are lower than the median? Why shold Brittney have to point this out?
The fact is that average GPAs for Greeks are crappy. The Wichitan blew the whistle on y’all, you’re embarrassed, and now you’re going after the Wichitan instead of owning up to your faults. MAN UP!
ban brittney • Apr 23, 2012 at 2:45 PM
It Brittney doesnt want the negative comments on her article then she shouldnt of wrote it…
Where in the article does it mention that 66 Greek members have above a 3.5 and that over 10 have a 4.0?
Nowhere….. point made… Brittney and the Wichitan dont like Greeks…
Good luck on any event that the Wichitan or Mass Comm dept. ever needs help on, we will not help you now… EPIC FAIL TO YOU.
Brady Tyler • Apr 23, 2012 at 9:27 PM
That’s like saying that the Wall Street Journal doesn’t like Barack Obama because they reported a story on how he did something wrong or came up short on something.
So the question is where in the story does it say the Wichitan and Brittney have a vendetta against Greeks? It doesn’t. She doesn’t and the Wichitan doesn’t. Neither does the Mass Communication department. Don’t begin to assume you know a collective group of people by one article written.
What if I were to make a judgement on all of the Greeks because one chapter made a mistake or did something they shouldn’t have? It wouldn’t be fair.
Sure, it would be nice to mention that many of the greeks have great GPAs, but she can’t go look at individual student GPAs. She can see the chapters’ GPAs because Kevin chose to make that information public.
word • Apr 24, 2012 at 9:24 AM
On the sheet that she was able to view, it does include the number of individuals (no names included) that had a 4.0 as well as the percentage of above a 3.5. Just saying, she should have included all information and not just the negative.
It is apparent that the Wichitan has a vendetta when 3 of the articles in last weeks edition clearly show a disrespect towards those organizations.
Article about GPA- clearly the entire thing is negative
“Greek Tragedy” already in the name is it uncalled for, but to futher speak about a national organziation saying they have no priorities when clearly they are moral, ethical, and quite frankly better organization than the Wichitan.
Article about student organziations by Sarah Long claiming that Greeks are only involved with themselves. So why then do you say the Wichitan doesnt have it out for Greeks?
Just saying- GPA sure they can be worked on but the GPA needs to be worked on by EVERY student at MSU, Dont just call out a particular group unless you have done the research and are going to publish an article over every organization and athletic team.
Greek Tregedy- Dont understand why you have to be repetitive and have two articles covering the same thing, however your reporter should look into Greek Week and see that it a a week of service not a week of academics.
Organizations- Pretty sure that Greeks are more envolved than every other organization. Take Relay for Life for instance, (seeing that Sarah included this on her article) there were more Greek members present then non greeks and that is a proven fact, Look at the participants in the Auction- ALL GREEK, look at the participants in the miss relay pagent – at least 5 out of 6 were Greek. Look at the student organizations that were there, AKA, APhi, GPB, TKE, PSK, SAE, KDX, KSig and this is after they were thrown in the mud by the Wichitan.
The Wichitan can say what it wants but just know that Greeks at MSU arent going anywhere, they are only going to prove that the Wichitan yet again reported a story that they clearly didnt have the right to do, or the correct information.
Also, I think that if Brittney Cottingham is going to use my Fraternity in a story than she needs to contact me before publishing information. Instead she talks to a national office before consulting me. I think she could of done a better job becuase she would of understood why GPAs change every semester, not that she would of included it since she clearly didnt have a postive thing to say.
ehhhhh.... • Apr 23, 2012 at 2:34 PM
I dont think that their should be a follow up story on how hard they are wokring on their grades. I think the story should be on how to properly report on a story and not be one sided when you are supposed to be the relfection of the student body. Its apparent to see through all the comments on several stories this week that The WIchitan has crossed some boundries and is not upholding its values. I dont think anyone is personally attacking Brittney for writing the article. There are facts in the article that sure, they should be addressed, but its not the Wichitan place to be the one calling attention. That should fall on the administration. However, the administration at MSU says that you must obtain a 2.0 to be in good standing so with that said, your organizations that have a 2.01 all the way to a 4.0 have the same regulations so why then does the Wichitan choose to disrespect one set of organizations. I do however know that the reporter on this article did mislead alot of information as well as chose to not include several statements made that were promoting the different ways of trying to achieve better academics. I also disagree with the remarks about Gamma Phi Beta national office. I find that completly disrespectful and think that the Wichitan should present a formal apology to the office.
my name • Apr 23, 2012 at 1:27 PM
there should be a follow-up story on how hard greeks are working on their grades this semester.
Get it straight. • Apr 22, 2012 at 8:45 PM
First, leave Brittany alone. She is a journalist and she is doing her job. She was more than likely assigned this job and reported accurately with amount of information that is avalible to her. Secondly, what I think everyone is missing here is that every organization needs to quit harassing the other one. Greeks get your grades up if you don’t want the negative press and The Wichitian quit digging for stories about the Greek community because it’s an easy target. I would have likes to see the grades of other organizations on campus. The paper ahold be objective and thing it misses the mark sometimes.
Anti Wichitan • Apr 22, 2012 at 3:10 PM
Actually Michael, I am not Greek and way to fall into sterotypes of the a caveman not a Greek, and great job representing yourself as being immature. I just have the common knoweldge that Greek members at MSU do alot more then they are credited. I find it funny that you and Brady are quick to defend the Wichitan but yet yall both complain when someone turns the finger and critisizes the paper. Sounds kinda hypocritical of you. The only Tragedy is that the Wichitan is supposed to be the voice of the MSU Students not the voice of some opinionated “journalist” who does not know how to be unbaised towards an article. The fact that you are supporting her article when she clearly did not get all her facts correct is beyond me. The article claims that MSU does not have standards set for Greeks when clearly they do. I know for a fact that the Greek chapters at MSU have to complete a packet that is called Standards of Excellence that is reported online, the same site that your “journalist” got the GPA’s from. So once again, she chose to either misrepresent the student organizations or she is just a lazy “journalist” who does not need to be conducting articles for this paper. The really sad part of it is that many mass comm people are critisizing Greek Life when I know for a fact that a majority of them are Greek and furthermore that most of the people in attendace at your Radio Therapy for Relay for Life are members of the Greek Community. So great job disrespecting the people who actually supported you last week. Great way to show your representation… You should be ashamed of yourselves.
The sad part of the story is that Brittney chose to fabricate an article that she has no reason to write. Unless Brittney and the entire “staff” at the Wichitan are bosting 4.0 GPA’s then they need to take in their own words otherwise we will classify you as “a clear sign of this neglect.” You are right when you stated that “Priorities need to change. And soon.”, However the priorities that need to be changed are YOURS! Who gives you the right to critize your fellow students? How dare you cast your “greater then thou” attitude on organizations that do more community sevice, philanthropy, study hours, school pride, etc. than the Wichitan.
All I have heard this week from “staff” members from the Wichitan is litterally “I hate Greeks” <— yes those are the exact words from some of mass comm indiviuals who work on the Wichitan. You hate Greeks because they have passion for becoming individuals who believe in doing better for the community? Wow. You hate them because they dont take things lying down. Well guess what, you better believe that if your going to write a negative article you going to get negative reviews.
There is also an article in this paper written by Sarah Long. It talks about how people are not involved as much on campus. Well way to go Wichitan on making that situation even worse. You really think that the Greeks are going to want to get involved with events when you are just going to misinterprut things… Maybe YOU should practice what you preach before you cast the first stone.
The next time you choose to represent MY University you might want to do a better job otherwise You crossed the line and took something that was once valued at MSU and now made the Wichitan be considered as trash. Thank you for ruining another MSU tradition. I hope your satisfied with your bad ethics and just remember about Karma.
Brady Tyler • Apr 22, 2012 at 9:10 PM
I don’t know what you gathered from my comment above, but I do not feel that I was at all hypocritical in regards to what I wrote. I did not bash any organizations or students. I merely commented on the fact that bullying a fellow student because she wrote an article is bad PR for the individual as well as their organization(s).
And as far as the greeks/mass comm students nonsense goes, quite a few greeks may have selected “Attending” on the Facebook page for the event, but not too many showed up for the ACTUAL event. That is what I have an issue with. I am completely thankful to the ones that did, but that was a very small amount.
Where is your evidence that any thing in this article was fabricated? If you are going to call someone out for making something up, you need to be able to provide the actual information. And I have never heard any of the staff members of the Wichitan say the phrase “I hate Greeks.”
Maybe you are the one who needs to change your “greater than thou” attitude.
Michael • Apr 19, 2012 at 2:14 PM
@Martin Kuehler/Anti-Wichitan:
Spoken like typical mouthbreathing, knuckledragging Greeks. Don’t you have a dwarf to toss somewhere, bruh?
Anti Wichitan • Apr 19, 2012 at 11:51 AM
this article, like this paper is a joke. How about you actually report the correct facts and not some disrespectful article by a girl who was probably denied membership because she doesnt know what it is to live by respect and dignity.
Martin Kuehler • Apr 18, 2012 at 9:34 PM
hey loser get a life and some friends
Brady Tyler • Apr 18, 2012 at 10:18 PM
Seriously? That is extremely uncalled for.
Brittany does have friends and she does have a life. Her career goal is to be in journalism… so I would say that her life is right where she wants it to be.
It’s probably safe to guess that you are involved with the Greek Life at MSU, so I understand why this article would aggravate you. But, just because you don’t like something does not, under any circumstances, give you the right to talk down to anyone. Especially when they are speaking facts. What image are you creating for your organization by saying hateful things like that to someone says something you don’t want to hear.
All I have heard today is how stupid The Wichitan is and how it should be cut from MSUs campus. That is ridiculous. The fact of the matter is that stories like this are what gets papers off the rack. It’s a business and if papers don’t get taken, then a great medium dies out.
This is news, whether you want to hear it or not. Why should the Greek Chapters not be held to a higher standard? If academics is going to be bragged about by the greek systems, then they need to live up to that. I won’t deny that greek life has great benefits and it offers tremendous opportunities, but it should also be centrally focused on what it boasts about: “brotherhood & sisterhood, leadership and personal development, academics, and service to the university and the Wichita Falls community.”