“You unlock this door with the key of imagination…”

When I took on organizing the Sophomore Community program for the fall, I initially struggled with its shape and structure.  Through conversation with Stacie, Sarah, and the rest of the Student Life Team, the purpose of the program was clear.  We wanted to build on the community building and social emotional learning pieces that Frosh Advisory began nurturing last year.  With this in mind, I have tried to capitalize on what the year brings in order to build community and engage with school traditions.  






The October Soph Community date happened to fall the week before *St. Marty’s party.  Decorating for St. Marty’s Party is a wonderful way for the Sophomore class to bond, give community service, and participate in a school tradition.  Maggie let me know that the Sophomores traditionally decorate classroom doors for the trick or treating section of the party.  These decorated doors are for the time when the children, dressed in costumes that they choose, trick or treat through our academic building. It’s an important part of making this event festive and welcoming for these children.  Since the theme this year is Pixar, she wanted the doors to be themed using the films. 

With the help of the wonderful Sophomore Council and their moderator, Andrew Kjera, doors and themes were assigned to the eight Soph Community groups.  Last Thursday, during the afternoon X, students were assigned doors, themes, and working groups.  They were told that they had 30 minutes to design, decorate, and put up these doors.  The Community group with the most successful doors would earn a pizza party for November’s Community meeting.  Maggie and I also decided that a bag of candy would be awarded to the Community group that produced the best decorated single door. 

Students worked diligently.  Ideas abounded.  Mistakes were made, set aside and work began again.  Students helped groups not in their Soph Community group.  Other students shared resources with those around them.  Additional materials were requested, found, and utilized.  The controlled chaos was electric.  Watching the Sophomores, I was surprised to see how quickly and efficiently most students were working.  They were focused and having fun.  Andrew pointed out to me that these students all took Think, Make, Share last year and had worked on these kinds of design challenges.  They had experience tackling a problem with limited resources and time.  Watching the students work, I saw how their shared experience was helping them with this challenge.  This was an unintended and welcome consequence of this Community session!

I’m now planning November’s Sophomore Community session in conjunction with Sophomore Council.  I’m eager to continue to build this program.  What else can we do to come together as a community and build on the common skills we are working on as a school?  It’s an interesting problem.

*St. Marty’s party is a wonderful school tradition.  For those of you who are new to the community, Carondelet puts on a Halloween party for children who may not live in an area where it is safe to trick or treat and/or may not have the means to celebrate the holiday.  This event is called St. Marty’s Party, as it was originally put on for the children of St. Martin de Porres Elementary School which has since closed. Today, we serve the children of Monument Crisis Center.  Hopefully you had a chance to stay and participate in the party. The children had so much fun this year.

0 thoughts on ““You unlock this door with the key of imagination…”

  1. The door decorating was an awesome idea – and further engagement with soph coucil is a great way to get student buy in and a more robust program overall.

    I was impressed with what the sophs came up with for their doors in a relatively short amount of time. In a class moderator meeting we also talked about how amazed we are with the frosh and soph councils' ability to just get to work on a major task. In the past I recall long periods of unproductive brainstorming and over thinking, but Frosch council started their Finding Nemo walls ON THE DAY Maggie gave them the project. I DO think that TMS Challenge days and some of the ways others are innovating in their departments are giving students the skills to just "get to it" the way that I haven't seen in the past.

  2. This was amazing! I loved looking down from the second story as the sophomore class worked on their doors – there was a palpable spirit of joy and community building! Grateful to see community growing in such cool ways.

  3. Controlled chaos stresses me out but after the day had ended and I saw all the doors decorated, I realized that I am the one that needs to relax and let the chaos happen. It was a reminder that I can not be as in control as I would like and students will still get the job done.

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