Finding your niche
Finding your niche

With over 300 clubs and organizations, deciding where to devote time and energy can feel daunting. Whether you want to join or just support, these insights from current members of student organizations â like DanceWorks, Moody Magazine, Ski Team and Greek life â will help the rest of the Orange community navigate extracurricular activities on SUâs campus.
Common Themes
1. Support the organizations in Schine. Itâs literally so easy. âIf people are tabling, walk up and support them. Sign their petition, eat a cookie because I know what it feels like to table. People always think we are trying to recruit people, but we just had free snacks for Womenâs History Month.â –Ericka Love, Zeta Phi Beta
2. Seniority is a thing. âUpperclassmen or people who have just been in the organization for longer periods of time hold positions. They have been around and know how things should operate.â –Sofia Arashiro-Garcia, DanceWorks
3. Networking is crucial. âI didnât think that it would already be such a competition of needing to make connections on campus in order to grow in clubs. It doesn’t matter how good you are at what you do. If you want to have a good position, you just need to make friends with the right people. I guess itâs a taste of the real world.â –Mattea Vecera, Mixtape Magazine

DanceWorks
1. Itâs no Dance Moms, but joining is still a competitive process. âLeading up to auditions, itâs very competitive. Just because you were in the organization last year does not necessarily mean you get a spot in the dance this year. People arenât very open and talkative until theyâre in dances.â – Sofia Arashiro-Garcia, dancer
2. Once performers are assigned to dances, the pressure subsides. âIn terms of how people speak about themselves and others, itâs more of a positive and uplifting environment instead of competitive or tearing each other down.â – Emily Devito, dancer
3. Get in close with the 4 members of Eboard. âItâs only 4 girls that get to choose the new Eboard. If youâre in one of those girlsâ dances, they obviously have gotten to know you pretty well. That can give people a leg up.â – Sofia Arashiro-Garcia, dancer
4. Bring a box of tissues to the last show. âBefore the last show, the seniors sit in a circle and talk about what their time in the organization has meant to them and why they love DanceWorks.â – Emily Devito, dancer
Professional fraternities
1. Bring a suit for Phi Delta Epsilon. âThey make us dress up in professional business attire every Sunday. When we go, we have to dress as if weâre getting a medical interview. So, itâs like a full-on blazer and fancy pants.â -S ofia Arashiro-Gracia, sophomore PhiDe member
The University Pep Band: The Sour Sitrus Society
1. Join the band for the best tickets to all the games (and to provide musical entertainment, obviously). âIâve played the trombone since sixth grade, but I also love basketball and knew I would be at all the games. I remember watching the Pep Band when I was in high school and thinking, âThey have so much fun! I want to be in the front row but not have to camp outâ.â – Will Mahaney, senior trombone player
2. Never forget: Georgetown has and always will suck. âAt the end of every rehearsal and after every game, whoever is in charge gives their announcements and always says, âAre there any questions?â Everyone raises their hands. He calls on someone who asks, âWhat time is it?â He answers and everybody screams back, âand Georgetown still sucks!â.â – Will Mahaney, trombone player
3. Keep your eyes peeled for when the trombone and tuba players put on a show. âWhen we play âGimme Some Lovin,â all the trombones jump down the line, starting with the leftmost person, like a ripple effect. Then, during the under-8-minute timeouts at menâs games, all the flags run around the court with the tubas following along behind them.â – Will Mahaney, trombone player

Syracuse University Marching Band
1. Storm Castle Varsityâs post-home-game football victory âAfter every football victory at home, the whole marching band goes into Varsityâs Pizza and stands on the tables, play the fight song and then flips the opponentâs banner upside down.â – Will Mahaney, trombone player
U100
1. Save the hard-hitting questions for someone else. âEverybody has to have the same answers to some specific questions like âIs this really a party school?â. Yeah, it is, but they make us say no. Itâs all very rehearsed answers, and itâs not necessarily like I can totally speak the truth all the time.â – Emily Devito, junior tour guide
CitrusTV
1. Donât just sit in the back. Put in the work! âThe idea that if youâre a freshman, you can just shut up and sit in the back is not totally true. Itâs the work you put in. Freshmen come in and assume they just have to shadow or watch and not insert themselves. But, if you apply yourself and start talking to the upperclassmen, you can get on air second semester freshman year.â – Sammy Lindell, junior host and reporter
Cheer
1. You define âGame-Day Ready.â âYour hair has to either be half-up, half-down or fully up and always with a bow. Otherwise, we like to refrain from requiring certain things. We would never say you have to put this makeup on because some people donât feel comfortable or confident that way. I know my coach likes to frame it as doing what makes you most confident!â – Michelle Beraud, senior cheerleader
2. No swearing, only positivity and smiles. âWe are not supposed to swear at all. You should always really have a smile on your face. Youâre not allowed to cheer against the other team.â – Michelle Beraud, cheerleader

3. Cheering does not mean mingling with athletes. âI personally donât interact with them. A couple girls are legit friends with some football and basketball players and some girls have hooked up with them. If we see them out, we kind of know who each other are and act friendly, but thatâs the extent of it.â – Michelle Beraud, cheerleader
Junior Panhellenic Council
1. Chapters support other chapters. âI feel like just in Greek life in general, people have that conception that thereâs always going to be some tension or beef between chapters, which is weird and stupid.â –Natalia Pedraza, sophomore on the Philanthropy Committee of the Junior Panhel
Ski Team
1. Competing and supporting go hand-in-hand. âWhen you finish your run, you go back up and cheer for the next person.â – Sammy Lindell, junior racer
2. Own your walk-up song. âWe play walk-up songs for each of the racers and other schools have caught on. My song was Walk in the Spot by Matroda. I would act crazy and get up to the start gate, pumping my fist. The other teams would always look forward to it.â – Sammy Lindell, junior racer
Greek Life
1. Donât judge a book by its cover (or Greek life by Bama rush TikTok). âI never ever thought I was going to join Greek life. Like, it is something that I was and still kind of am against. But, I tried it because I realized I was assuming a lot of things. I decided to do it, and itâs amazing and perfect.â – Carley DellaRatta, Kappa Alpha Theta
2. Joining the Greek community does NOT make you a Greek God. âA lot of people feel like if youâre in Greek life, you move different and try to act like youâre the shit, but that is definitely not true.â –Calvin Atieku, Phi Beta Sigma
3. Avoid drunkenly interrogating upperclassmen about their sorority before rush. âIt is just a bad look to be sloppily asking girls (who you do not know) if their sorority is cool and who they party with and how many parties they have.â – Molly Cummins, Phi Sigma Sigma
4. Never speak of the 5 Bs during recruitment. âThe goal of rushing is to learn about the values of different chapters, the sisterhood and philanthropies which really have nothing to do with the 5 Bs: Booze, Bank (money), Boys (frats), Biden (politics) or Bible (religion).â – Molly Cummins, Phi Sigma Sigma
5. Join multicultural sororities and fraternities. âRush is so different. You donât have to go to every event. You meet all the members and then there are different events based on the pillars of our sorority. You can pick and choose what you want to go to and then you end up having an interview with the entire chapter.â – Chu, Delta Phi Omega