sorority

(redirected from sororities)
Also found in: Dictionary, Thesaurus.

fraternity and sorority

fraternity and sorority, in American colleges, a student society formed for social purposes, into which members are initiated by invitation and occasionally by a period of trial known as hazing. Fraternities are usually named by two or three Greek letters and are also known as Greek-letter societies; women's Greek-letter societies are commonly called sororities. The oldest Greek-letter society is Phi Beta Kappa, founded (1776) at the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Va. It soon became a scholarship honor society. After 1830 the literary societies that existed in many colleges were slowly supplanted by fraternities modeled on the three established (1825–27) at Union College. After 1870 many professional and honorary fraternities were established to give recognition to scholarship in various fields. Most fraternities and sororities, however, serve mainly as social clubs. The typical Greek-letter society owns or rents a house that is used as a residence hall for members and as a center for social activities. Some Greek-letter societies have only one local organization or chapter; others are nationally organized with chapters in several institutions. The Interfraternity Conference (1909) and the National Panhellenic Congress (1929) were established to consult on the common interests of American fraternities and sororities. Because many fraternities only admit new members on the basis of a unanimous vote, many of the organizations have been able to maintain discriminatory entrance policies. For this reason, and because of incidents of violent or abusive hazing, fraternities are forbidden on some campuses and their activities severely curtailed on many others.

Bibliography

See W. R. Baird, Manual of American College Fraternities (rev. ed. 1949); W. A. Scott, Values and Organizations: A Study of Fraternities and Sororities (1965).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia™ Copyright © 2022, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

sorority

Chiefly US a social club or society for university women
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
References in periodicals archive ?
In a press conference Thursday, the fraternities and sororities that came together under the United Fraternities and Sororities of Panay group announced their plan to hold a blood donation drive on August 4 at the Gaisano City in La Paz district here.
Piazza Center for Fraternity and Sorority Research and Reform, named after a sophomore who died in a 2017 hazing incident, will produce a national scorecard on fraternities and sororities. Researchers will also generate ideas for reforms.
Further, significant differences were found between sorority members (M= 14.87, SD=5.25) and non-sorority members (M=16.53, SD=5.73) on the Sexual Sensation Seeking Scale [t(328)=2.75, p=.006], indicating that women who were not members of sororities were more likely to engage in novel and/or RSB for sexual enhancement.
But groups known as "final clubs," informal social clubs a student joins before graduating, as well as some fraternities and sororities have continued to operate off campus.
TalkSpace also has partnerships with Delta Tau Delta and Sigma Kappa, potentially reaching 40,000 undergraduates and on track to double that number by the end of the school year as discussions continue with more fraternities and sororities, said Lynn Hamilton, TalkSpace's chief commercial officer.
Administration and opposition lawmakers approved in plenary HB 6573, or the 'Anti-Hazing Act,' that prohibits the act of hazing, regulates other forms of initiation rites of fraternities, sororities and other groups and provides penalties for its violation.
Socorro Guan Hing said in a memorandum issued on Tuesday: 'The University has decided to suspend the recognition of all Fraternities, Sororities, or similar organizations effective at the start of A.Y.
Socorro Guan Hing, has directed the suspension of recognition of fraternities and sororities in the campus, stripping them of their power to recruit students in their organization for the next school year.
Throughout the years, fraternities and sororities adapted and consolidated in order to ensure survival while remaining a vital component on campus.
The questions were then tested on members of sororities and fraternities not included in the study and adjustments were made to the question path.
But, to their credit, both the university and UO sororities and fraternities publicly took responsibility for the actions of some students and promised to do what they could to make amends.