Welcome to UMBC's Newest Pioneers

How will you join the work of building our community?

by David Hoffman and Craig Berger

Here we are at last, ready or not: a UMBC community nearly 51 years in the making. There is excitement in the air, and also dust and noise. The newest members of our community are arriving on a campus that is visibly incomplete, with heavy equipment literally reshaping the terrain. How fitting! Let the activity and broken ground serve as symbolic invitations to join in the collaborative work of building our lives, community, and world. We are not the first generation of students, faculty, and staff to gather here, but only now are all of us here, and this is our time to build.

Building together has always been at the core of UMBC’s identity. When the very first students arrived at UMBC in fall 1966, they encountered a campus short on conveniences and traditions: muddy paths connecting buildings without names. The students in that founding class worked and sometimes struggled together to create the template for campus life as we know it today. Many also responded to the profound questions and challenges facing America in the late 1960s, participating actively in efforts to promote peace, justice, and inclusion. As the first students at the first Maryland university established after the end of legal segregation, their very presence together signified the hope that diversity could be a source of great strength. In the program for the first UMBC commencement exercises in 1970, graduating senior Diane Juknelis captured the student body’s grit and social engagement: “The present class of graduates is the first in a long line of innovators who are not to be considered products of UMBC, but rather constant producers of all that gives it character and quality.”

The tradition of UMBC students taking ownership of their experiences, working collaboratively across differences, and being “constant producers” is alive and well. The campus is full of living monuments to students’ role as co-creators of this place. We also have a culture in which students, faculty and staff with different backgrounds and strengths can collaborate on shared projects. Together we’re taking action in the world, not just studying it from a distance. The “grit” we celebrate at UMBC is in part the determination to apply our talents and passions to making people’s lives better, and to persist together even when we disagree, and even in hard times.

If you’re a new student inspired to start making your own contributions, where do you start? Try joining one of these MyUMBC groups and participating in events, programs, and initiatives you’ll learn about through them:

Also, be sure to visit Involvement Fest on Wednesday, September 6th (noon - 3:00 p.m., Erickson Field) to find student organizations interested in helping you explore.

Finally: Be curious, kind, open-minded, and real. Learn from and about the people all around you. And begin truly to own and believe in the idea that you are a co-creator of this place. You matter a great deal, and we have work to do together.

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David on Twitter
Craig on Twitter

Posted: August 28, 2017, 6:40 PM