BREAKING: SAE To Eliminate Pledging Process

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Friday is usually the go-to day of the week to release negatively perceived news, so I’m guessing Sigma Alpha Epsilon’s Supreme Council expects some serious pushback from the atomic bomb they dropped today–and for good reason. Not everyone is going to support this move.

Effective this Sunday, Sigma Alpha Epsilon will completely shut down its pledging process, citing the vision of the fraternity’s original Ritual and Constitution. According to the SAE Supreme Council, the fraternity aims to terminate unequal class structure between new members (pledges) and active members.

From SAE.net:

Sigma Alpha Epsilon, under the leadership and direction of the Supreme Council, has made a historic decision that will realign the Fraternity to produce the original member’s experience that our Founding Fathers envisioned. This change will adopt a method, practice and policy that treat all members equally and fairly and strive for a continuous development of our members throughout their lives. Effective March 9, 2014, new-member (pledge) programming will be eliminated completely from our operations, and the classification of new member (pledge) will no longer exist. All chapters and colonies will be required to implement this important change.

A new program, called the True Gentleman Experience, will be enacted immediately. This program will replace the current pledging process, and its goals are to “enhance the educational and leadership experience” and promote a more “positive, meaningful membership” for all new and active members.

That’s the front page, politically correct version.

The barroom version is this: hazing–and the public perception and perpetual threat of litigation that comes with it–has become a monstrous thorn in the national office’s side. This is SAE’s way of further distancing the fraternity from hazing incidents, at least from a legal standpoint.

Under the new program, recruits who accept their bids from SAE will immediately be activated.

Under the program, chapters and colonies may continue to recruit prospective members as they do currently. When they extend a bid, the college man who accepts the invitation will become a collegiate member. He will be required to accept our Scope of Association Agreement and complete the Carson Starkey Membership Certification Program. Furthermore, every member will be expected to meet our membership requirements and expectations and, should he fail to do so, our Fraternity Laws provide the means to suspend or remove his membership.

A “Member Educator” will replace the time-honored role of Pledge Educator–which is just the title to tell Mom and Dad in lieu of “Hazer Extraordinaire.” The Member Educator’s role will include overseeing the newly-implemented educational initiatives for his fellow brothers.

Times, they are a-changin’.

To learn more about the demise of SAE’s pledge program, read the full story on SAE.net.

[via SAE.net]

  1. TFMB10

    Nationals’ hands were pretty much tied. If they didn’t do away with pledging their insurance company (one of the few companies nowadays who will insure Greek organizations) would drop coverage. Without insurance SAE would be bankrupt and cease to exist as a national organization. Of course certain chapters will still haze and not follow the rules but the liability will be placed on those individuals and not on a national scale. It’s embarrassing and it completely sucks but honestly it’s the chapters/individuals who took it too far and actually killed pledges that should be blamed.

    11 years ago at 10:57 pm
  2. LaBlueGoingFar

    Hope they post pictures of all their new members after this goes into effect, so many pussies entering our Greek community that we all* earned. Hope you still haze the shit out of them. Oh wait…

    11 years ago at 8:23 pm
  3. Daniel Poone

    Meanwhile, we “initiate” our pledges within 72 hours of signing a bid to satisfy nationals. And then the real initiation comes later.

    11 years ago at 12:07 am
  4. chiny

    They’re mild, honestly. Nothing worth that. For SAE’s it’s more interesting because it’s easier to understand all the different facets and arguments, but in all reality it’s very tame. Nothing controversial.

    11 years ago at 8:25 am