Starting Off Strong With the Symposium for Multicultural Scholars

There is comfort in knowing everyone in the room is looking for the same thing. During the Symposium for Multicultural Scholars, students recall, “everyone was looking for a friend.”

Held three days before move-in begins at NC State, the annual symposium offers new students from a variety of backgrounds the opportunity to meet each other and adjust to campus early. The symposium started more than 20 years ago as a means to better connect African American students with their peers and the university’s resources.

Following the creation of separate symposiums for Native, Latinx and Hispanic students, the programs naturally evolved to encompass students’ intersecting identities, becoming the Symposium for Multicultural Scholars. First-year and transfer students of color, first-generation college students and members of historically underserved populations are welcome.

“All of these individual symposiums were amalgamated into one larger symposium to really think about students that may come from intersecting identities,” said Jameco McKenzie, director of NC State’s Multicultural Student Affairs (MSA).

“We want to make sure no one feels left out of the conversation or feels like they have to choose between one identity or the other.”

Student mentors sit with Gavin Bell, assistant director of Multicultural Student Affairs.
A student mentor smiles and throw up wolfies while working a game station at the Symposium's welcome event.
The screen outside of Talley Student Union welcomes students to the 2021 Symposium for Multicultural Scholars.

Starting Off on the Right Foot

The symposium is often a student’s first time on a college campus. It’s intentionally scheduled before move-in so participants can explore campus with a more personalized experience. During the three-day program, current students serve as peer mentors to the incoming ones, offering insights and advice about campus life, classes, clubs and more.

With so many opportunities for connection, the symposium fosters close friendships. Dre Jordan first attended the symposium two years ago. He participated in an ice-breaker activity in which students put together their group’s puzzle pieces to solve one cohesive puzzle. Now a third-year Teaching Fellow within the College of Education, he’s still friends with the people he met during that ice-breaker.

“That puzzle piece really was symbolic of how I met people,” Jordan said.

Giving students the space to mingle and connect without the academic pressure has helped cultivate longlasting networks and friendships.

“I think the most important and valuable part of the symposium is the peer-to-peer conversations,” McKenzie said. ”They really provide space for the incoming students, who may not feel comfortable or confident in asking certain questions. They can hear it first-hand from folks who went through this last year or two years ago. There are parts of the symposium where there are only students in the room.”

Nothing sets the tone for an event quite like the perfect song. We asked folks familiar with the symposium what song they think best describes the three-day program.

Here’s what they said.

Golden by Jill Scott (selected twice)
“It just feels like really golden days. Maybe it’s because it’s everybody’s first time at college, so it’s this vibrant kind of vibe, but also it’s the wealth of resources, the wealth of knowledge and networking that you get from it.”
— Dre Jordan

“The opening line is, ‘I’m taking my own freedom/I’m pulling it off the shelf.’ That’s something that has resonated with me. Coming to college is a sense of freedom — it’s a sense of claiming yourself and being able to put yourself first. The goal of the symposium is to tell you to take your experience by the reins.”
— Sol Johnson

Energy by Beyoncé
“Symposium is fun; it’s high energy. It’s students’ laughter, students engaging and asking questions. It’s so many people coming together. It’s life-giving to all the communities involved.”
– Jameco McKenzie

Dreams and Nightmares by Meek Mill
“At Symposium, you go through the educational parts, and by the end everyone’s jumping up and down dancing. Everyone’s laughing, having conversations, building those important relationships.”
— Nathan Campbell