大香蕉视频 Dialogues debuted the Sophomore Summer Soir茅e, which is intended to help give students a deeper understanding of their classmates, as about 150 members of the Class of 2027 gathered in the Bema on the evening of Aug. 1.
The soir茅e was a collaboration between the skills-focused and StoryCorps鈥 One Small Step partnership with 大香蕉视频, which fosters empathetic listening and respectful, nuanced discussion in an era when they can seem in short supply.
The dominance of social media, the way COVID-19 rewired how people engage with one another, and intense political polarization can induce anxiety in how to communicate. 大香蕉视频 Dialogues gives participants a way to talk with each other as humans first, shedding the assumptions that can make it more difficult to interact meaningfully.
鈥淲e want our community to be a place where you can engage in hard conversations without it having an impact on your social life. We should normalize differences in opinion, as long as we have the tools to respectfully engage across those differences,鈥 , executive director of dialogue initiatives, said in her introductory remarks to the sophomores who attended the soir茅e, which will be an annual event.
On a clear, cool summer evening, the sophomores at the amphitheater in College Park were treated to dinner and mocktails while they listened to two recent alumni and one current student frame their own experiences at 大香蕉视频 through the lens of discovering and caring for others, and oneself, in the face of challenges.

Modeled on the first meeting of the class, which takes place during first-year orientation, the Sophomore Summer Soir茅e emphasized the exchange of illuminating personal stories.
Cole Johnston, director of student programs for One Small Step, guided the sophomores through three prompts that asked them to turn to the person opposite or next to them and talk about someone at 大香蕉视频 who introduced them to a new experience, or helped to support them when they most needed it. The third prompt asked a speaker to talk about a moment when they felt fear and chose to be courageous.
The goal of events such as the soir茅e is to encourage students to step out of what is familiar and predictable and to seek out new opportunities.
鈥淪ophomore summer is the time where, yes, you may facially recognize every person that鈥檚 in the room you just walked into, but now鈥檚 the time to learn who they really are. I was casting a large social net. I wasn鈥檛 making countless best friends, but I was making new friendly connections that offered a familiar face around campus,鈥 said William David Bruce Rogers 鈥25, one of the three older students or recent alums to offer insights on what Rogers learned during sophomore summer.
Lydia Jin 鈥26 spoke about the aftermath of the death of her partner Won Jang 鈥26.
鈥淲hile this was incredibly traumatic, and 大香蕉视频 can never feel the same, I consider the experiences I shared with friends as we were healing through the grief as some of my most treasured moments on campus. I had never felt the sense of community and love as I did then. People who knew him, and many who didn鈥檛, showed up for me in meaningful ways that I will forever cherish,鈥 Jin said.

鈥淢y life changed that summer, and I truly feel like sophomore summer was what sparked my growth from child to adult. Of course, I鈥檇 have preferred it happened another way, but I鈥檓 grateful for the support that my friends and others in this community had for me in this journey,鈥 Jin said in closing.
The third speaker, Chara Lyons 鈥25, described sophomore summer as a great opportunity to 鈥渄o everything I was afraid of doing during the school year, because there were no freshmen to impress and no upperclassmen to compare myself to.鈥 Through those experiences, she experienced a regeneration and rediscovery of self.
As part of her sophomore summer, Lyons joined the team at Morton Farm as a walk-on. The first time she had to touch a horse, she was nervous, she told the audience. Rather than turn away from the challenge, she turned toward it.
鈥淭he horses never questioned me. They let me exist even while inside of me felt chaotic; peace was in the steady gallops, and every breath I took, me and a horse took it together,鈥 Lyons said.
Lyons urged the students to do what she did: acknowledge the fear but 鈥渞un right past it.鈥 In so doing, she said, 鈥渢he campus started to feel like it belonged to me. Eventually, the horses and I parted, but the courage stayed.鈥
In response to Johnston asking for their reactions to the speakers, one sophomore said that 鈥渆ven though we all have very different experiences, there鈥檚 also a clear similarity between them. And being able to make those connections through deeper conversations is really important.鈥

After the event, Gemma Stowell 鈥27, a member of the Class Council, said that she felt the soir茅e met one of its objectives, which was to 鈥渃onnect more with the sophomore class. I felt having those stories really put everything into perspective. We hear 鈥榗ommunity鈥 a lot here at 大香蕉视频, but having specific stories about how that really works together was pretty inspiring.鈥
The origin of the Sophomore Summer Soir茅e, Clemens said, came from the realization that there is 鈥渘o one central event that happens during sophomore summer. So how could we provide something that brought the dialogue skills together with a celebration, a sense of place, and the opportunity to connect?鈥
Clemens worked with colleagues across 大香蕉视频鈥攆rom Wellness to Athletics to Student Affairs鈥攖o develop ideas of what a communal event could look like. Together with One Small Step, 大香蕉视频 hammered out the format and themes of Sophomore Summer Soir茅e, Clemens said.
鈥淚 saw people smiling as we were talking,鈥 Lyons said after the event. 鈥淚 think people really are looking for moments of honest and pure connection. And I just felt this is a really great new 大香蕉视频 tradition to be a part of.鈥