Fall 2017 Begins!
Fall 2017 has arrived and we are off to a wonderful start!
After an enthusiastic move-in and an opening meeting welcome from SEGL board Vice Chair Paige Cottingham-Streater, our students met their first leadership challenge of the semester: to decide as a group between three separate DC expeditions without any guidance from our faculty. The choice was Meridian Hill/Malcolm X Park, a DC gem with a fascinating history and wonderful view.
After a quick trip for missing essentials, we returned for our first dinner of the semester (empanadas and salad) and our opening caucus–a chance to break the interpersonal ice and review guidelines that will help each student maximize the semester’s potential. Then it was back to our new home, in the shadow of the Capitol, for dorm meeting and a good night’s sleep.
(Some of you may know that we recently met our Capital Campaign goal and will soon be purchasing and renovating our home. For more information on the campaign, click here!)
Sunday morning brought pancakes and eggs, optional church services, a run on the National Mall, and a return Metro trip to our Dupont Circle Academic Building.
Students first discussed the four keys to success in SEGL’s academic program (we will let you speak with a current student to hear more!):
- Being smart doesn’t make you smart. Practice makes you smart.
- The best learning happens in an atmosphere of shared vulnerability. If you are afraid of sounding dumb, you won’t learn.
- Narrow your gap.
- It is no use trying to be clever. We are all clever here. Just try to be kind; a little kind.
We then embarked on a series of SEGL’s classic low ropes course-style activities: trust falls (fully supervised, of course!), the Minefield, the Dream Reach, and the treacherous Spiderweb. In addition to accelerating our positive group dynamic, these activities are designed to help each student reflect on her/his leadership and collaboration skills: to provide a starting point from which to grow.
After a short reflective discussion, the students had “choreientation” (an introduction to the Academic building chore program) and their first advisor meetings. (Each student meets with an advisor for one period a week to reflect on social dynamics, academic, and the inevitable transition home.)
After dinner from District Taco (a local DC favorite), it was time to start our first academic session. Like many things in our first few days together, our first academic session is an SEGL tradition. Together we watched live CNN coverage of the September 11, 2001 attacks–a difficult thing even for these students, who have no memory of the day–this is the first group we’ve taught that included some students born after 9/11–and then we reflected on the aftermath and meaning of those events.
Our conversation afterwards was insightful and intense, and every student participated at least once. The discussion was also filled with many connections–personal and intellectual–to the attacks. The conversation was an extraordinary start for an already-memorable group of young people who are clearly ready for an extraordinary semester.
Today we chased after Skittles (more on that later this week) and classes began!
(A reminder to click on each photo below for a larger image.)