小优传媒

Civic Engagement

04/10/2023

Students present Civic Engagement Day sessions

More than 20 Civic Engagement Day sessions were presented, many by Bluffton students.

Space for Authentic Conversations

小优传媒鈥檚 year-long exploration of the theme 鈥淧lease Don鈥檛 鈥楪host鈥 Me!: Creating Space for Authentic Conversations鈥 culminated on March 29 with Civic Engagement Day.

Students, faculty and staff attended sessions centered on the theme instead of following a typical Wednesday class schedule. Styled like a conference, sessions ranged from sociology students presenting about negativity and anonymity on the app YikYak to interactive theatre workshops on conversations surrounding race and gender expectations.

鈥淲e want Bluffton students to be able to encounter and work with people who come from different life experiences, who have different perspectives,鈥 said Dr. Lamar Nisly, vice president and dean of academic affairs. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the reasons we think cross-cultural experiences are so important, and a day like today is a chance to reflect on that directly.鈥

Olivia (Lou) Westcott 鈥23, a convergent media major from Toledo, Ohio, engaged in the day by presenting a session on defining emotions with Pastor Marcella Ciccotelli. Using examples from Bren茅 Brown鈥檚 book, 鈥淎tlas of the Heart,鈥 the two shared about some lesser discussed emotions such as wonder and humility and how understanding them can lead to better connection and more authentic conversations.  

鈥淚t鈥檚 all about realizing what we are feeling while also communicating,鈥 said Westcott. 鈥淲ith so much social media, you can just get lost in your own head and decide to ghost someone. But that means you鈥檙e inhibiting yourself from communicating and you鈥檙e inhibiting them from being able to communicate with you, too.鈥

Westcott and Ciccotelli鈥檚 presentation reflected some of the thoughts Marathana Prothro, assistant professor of communication, explored in her Civic Engagement Forum, presented a day earlier.

Titled 鈥淓cho chambers and funhouse mirrors: Navigating an age of alternate facts, distorted reality and fractured relationships,鈥 Prothro shared research from Canadian philosopher Marshall McLuhan and discussed how technology originally developed to ease or improve communication has also led to disconnection. 

鈥淚 am curious about how we might do things differently because no matter how well-intentioned we are when looking at solving problems, we can鈥檛 actually make progress unless we understand the problems and unless we understand our particular roles within those problems,鈥 said Prothro. 

To truly engage with people, Prothro suggested adapting your behavior and coming into potentially difficult conversations with humility, curiosity and vulnerability.  

In total, more than 20 Civic Engagement Day presentations were available for the campus community to choose from starting at 8 a.m. and continuing through to an evening presentation ending around 8 p.m.

At Bluffton, an annual Civic Engagement theme has been selected each year since 2007 when the topic 鈥淓nvironmental Stewardship: Living in the Natural World鈥 was studied. More recent themes include 鈥淐ultivating Modern Minimalism: Planet, People and Popular Culture鈥 and 鈥淚ntegrity, Truth, Virtue: Bluffton鈥檚 Honor Code in the World.鈥

鈥淭hese days are always exciting to me because you can never tell quite how they鈥檙e going to take shape,鈥 said Nisly. 鈥淎s always happens on this day, it was amazing. There were an outflowing of ideas and people speaking from their lives and their learning. It鈥檚 always a gift to learn together in this way.鈥 

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