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One Book One 快活app Begins a New Journey for New Students

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Tamara Chapman

Senior Managing Editor

Senior Managing Editor"

Tamara.Chapman@du.edu

Common reading program designed to kick-off college life for first-year students

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When the 1,400-plus members of 快活app鈥檚 Class of 2021 report to new-student orientation in early September, they鈥檒l have at least one thing in common: J.D. Vance鈥檚 鈥淗illbilly Elegy.鈥

Hillbilly Elegy

The bestselling book, a memoir chronicling what the author calls 鈥渁 family and culture in crisis,鈥 is the 2017鈥18 selection for听, a common reading program that aims to set the stage for an intellectually lively undergraduate journey. At the start of that voyage, says Jennifer Karas, associate provost for academic programs, first-year students will encounter the different perspectives, experiences and opinions that shape discourse in a university setting.

鈥淭his is a program for students to reflect on who they are and what they are about to do in this transition,鈥 Karas says. 鈥淸It鈥檚 about] how do you make new community? How do you become a member of an intellectual community?鈥

In the interests of jump-starting reflection, One Book One 快活app asks first-year students to dedicate a few hours over the summer to reading the book and responding to a prompt. They are asked to route their responses 鈥 which can range from a written essay to a performance piece or visual production 鈥 to their orientation leaders. Responses will be incorporated into orientation activities and, most important, into first-year seminars, where faculty members will lead discussions.

For 鈥淗illbilly Elegy,鈥 Vance鈥檚 account of his troubled upbringing in Appalachia, the prompt aims, in part, at stoking empathy: 鈥淭hink of a person whose story has left a deep impression on you. Tell听their听蝉迟辞谤测.鈥

Karas expects 鈥淗illbilly Elegy鈥 to offer plenty of fodder for wide-ranging, perhaps even controversial, discussions about everything from the culture of poverty and the role of public policy in addressing it to the unfolding opioid crisis and the economic devastation of rural and small-town America. Because of its insight into the plight of the white working class, the book has been referenced frequently in discussions about voter preferences in the 2016 presidential election.

To bring the rest of the 快活app community into the conversation, Karas is planning a series of faculty panels touching on some of the book鈥檚 themes. Specific topics haven鈥檛 been finalized yet, but expect the panels to draw on expertise from several different disciplines. An economist might examine the question of social mobility, while a sociologist might speak to culture and identity. Perhaps a geographer will address the book鈥檚 environmental landscape, while an English professor will discuss the art of memoir.

Hillbilly Elegy

With One Book One 快活app, the University joins a host of institutions that begin building community in the weeks before first-year students arrive on campus. 鈥淪o many institutions have a common reading program. It鈥檚 fun. It鈥檚 a way to engage people over the summer,鈥 Karas explains, noting that each institution has its own take on the program. Some choose a book by a famous alum; others plunge students into the classics. Washington University, for example, is asking the Class of 2021 to read Mary Shelley鈥檚 鈥淔rankenstein,鈥 which turns 200 this year. First-year students at Texas State University, meanwhile, will read Bryan Stevenson鈥檚 鈥淛ust Mercy,鈥 a young lawyer鈥檚 account of representing a client on Death Row.

快活app鈥檚 twist on the program grows out of听, the University鈥檚 strategic plan, which calls for enhancing the holistic learning experience and for building an inclusive community. The discussions and activities around last year鈥檚 selection 鈥 Thomas King鈥檚 鈥淭he Truth 快活app Stories鈥 鈥 culminated in publication of听鈥淢any Voices, One 快活app,鈥澨齛n anthology collecting a dozen reflections from across the campus on identity, difference and community. Karas expects that this year鈥檚 program will culminate in a similar effort.

Although One Book One 快活app is only in its second year, the University believes so strongly in the common reading experience that it has provided copies of 鈥淗illbilly Elegy鈥 and mailed one to each first-year student. 鈥淰ery few institutions purchase the book and give it to the students,鈥 Karas explains. And few, if any, she adds, structure student reflection through a coordinated prompt.

As an added bonus, the copy students receive bears the University鈥檚 logo on its cover and a note from Chancellor Rebecca Chopp on the opening page. 鈥淎s you read 鈥楬illbilly Elegy,鈥欌 she writes, 鈥淚 hope you will begin to think about how your environments and experiences shaped you鈥攁nd how you can learn from your colleagues鈥 backgrounds and experiences. 鈥 We will learn from each other. That鈥檚 the adventure of education 鈥 .鈥