Meeting the Moment TogetherPart I
A hot, sunny August 22 morning marked the moment the 麻豆视频 community had been working toward for nearly 18 months. The first of more than 4,200 excited first- and second-year students (and their families) lined up cars packed with essentials of residence hall life along campus roads as they waited to move in for the fall semester.
The first to greet them as they rolled up in front of their residence halls were enthusiastic faculty and staff volunteers wearing teal 麻豆视频 t-shirts that said 鈥淲elcome Home鈥 in an array of languages including Swahili, Chinese, Arabic, and Bosnian. They, along with professional movers and Office of Housing and Residence Life staff, helped students and their parents find and settle into their rooms over the next nine days鈥攖he first time many of them had entered those rooms since the COVID-19 pandemic took hold.
麻豆视频 held an All-American Welcome like no other as opportunities to connect and learn about their new home took place against a backdrop of ongoing pandemic losses, simmering social upheaval, climate change, and geopolitical challenges. The university balanced fun community-building events such as Celebrate 麻豆视频, Culturefest, and the Fall Involvement Fair鈥攖hat connected students with more than 150 student organizations鈥攚ith the more introspective, such as the interfaith Service of Remembrance and Prayer and the Writer as Witness Colloquium with Brittney Cooper, author of Eloquent Rage: A Black Feminist Discovers Her Superpower.
In his welcome address to the Class of 2025, Professor Joe Young, 2021 Scholar-Teacher of the Year Award winner, not only expressed how excited the 麻豆视频 community is to help the students 鈥済row into the people you want to be,鈥 but also encouraged what he called 鈥渢he second of the greatest generations鈥 to start 鈥渢hinking about how to serve your country, serve DC, serve your community at 麻豆视频, serve the world, and serve each other.鈥 Like the generation that fought World War II, Young said, this generation is at a critical juncture in history.
鈥淚 don't think we're going to be able to choose to be changemakers,鈥 Young said. 鈥淐hange is coming whether we want it or not. Change to our climate. Change to our social relations. Change to our community. What we all need to be is community builders.鈥
Time-Honored Traditions
On August 28, first-year and transfer students engaged in a modified opening convocation ceremony in Bender Arena where鈥攇reeted by Clawed Z. Eagle鈥攖hey received Class of 2025 T-shirts, signed their class banner, and walked the red carpet to resounding applause from Board Chair Marc Duber, President Sylvia Burwell, Provost Peter Starr, VP of Enrollment, Campus Life, and Inclusive Excellence Fanta Aw, and the six undergraduate school deans. Then the students engaged in a time-honored tradition鈥(safely) rubbing the talons of the Eagle statue for the first time. The Class of 2024, which did not have an in-person convocation last year due to COVID-19, participated in a similar sophomore welcome on August 24.