Unhealthy Habits in the Greek Community at USC

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Greek life and partying is part of the college Un experience. This past fall, students from Arizona State University flocked to campus for the USC vs. ASU football game. However, very few actually came for the football game itself. They came to experience the infamous parties hosted my USC Greek life. This is not an isolated case. USC Greek life prides itself on the reputation that it has built. Thursday night parties are not only reputable, as being epic by USC students but by the college community as a whole. However, the party culture at USC has grown uncontrollably. The number of students transported to the hospital each weekend is completely unacceptable and needs to be reduced drastically. Although the University has put restrictions on Greek life activities, the health and well-being of students remains incredibly endangered as USC turns a blind eye towards underage drinking, hazing, eating disorders, peer pressure, insufficient sleep, and overall mental instability within the Greek community. Regardless of the insignificant “rules on the row,” unhealthy habits within both sororities and fraternities continue to thrive as the university fails to appropriately protect the health and well-being of Trojan Greeks. With nearly one third of the student population participating in Greek life, it is certainly a presence on campus and an aspect that cannot be ignored. It is a highly selective community filled with an elite group of students. Greek organizations do play a role in improving their surrounding community through service projects and philanthropy. They logged a total of 29,200 hours of community service and raised over $215,000 during the 2009-2010 academic year. Sorority and Fraternity projects included volunteering at... ... middle of paper ... ...o peer pressure. The pressure to party harder and “keep up” is hard to turn down. So students give in and drink even when they don’t want to anymore. It is about starting a conversation within Greek community leaders and getting students eager to make it a better and safer place for everyone. USC needs to have dialogue with its students regarding party safety. A major part in reducing the excessive alcohol consumption within the Greek community comes from student responsibility. Students need to see the negative effects of their behavior and get motivated to make a change. Change only comes about when it affects someone personally; therefore to affect permanent change, USC needs to make it personal with the students by genuinely caring for the well-being of the students and students need to take personal responsibility for their own personal health and safety.

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