category: President's Remarks 2021 Fall Academic Convocation By ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ University On August 24, 2021 Why Not Us, Why Not ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„? Faculty and Students of ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ University, you really are a wonderful sight for sore eyes! We didnāt get to do this last year. But today, thanks to the grace and glory of God, we are together again in this special place, celebrating the start of a new academic year. And, I for one, am extremely grateful. If you are new to ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„, youāve been welcomed and oriented pretty thoroughly over the last week. If you were with us last year and are returning to ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„, youāve also been welcomed back quite thoroughlyā¦weāve had a faculty assembly, weāve Worshipped at the Webb, weāve had a Connect Fair, last night we had an amazing speaker from FCA talk to our student-athletesā¦and now, to finish it all off, we have Convocation. Convocation is a calling together, a summoning, or a convening. It is a time-honored academic tradition at most universities, including our own. And Convocation gives me the opportunity to give you a brief messageā¦a message of thanks, a message of encouragementā¦and a message of action, indeed a call to action. Parts of my message today will be quite seriousā¦some of it a bit heavy. But I promise that we will end on a light and loud note! Thank Our Faculty Letās begin with a message of thanks. And the object of my appreciation is the relationship between the two groups assembled here today. Students, that means I want to speak to you about our faculty. At ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ we are indeed very fortunate. We aspire to world-class instruction. We promise world-class instruction. And that doesnāt happen just by hoping for it. To give you world-class instruction, we have to have dedicated, innovative, and inspirational teachers. And at ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„, we do! We have faculty with impressive academic pedigrees who actually care about the success of their students (and that doesnāt happen everywhere). We have scholars and practitioners who go the extra mile not just to teach their students but to mentor their students, to coach their students, to listen to their students. In short, we have a talented and helpful group of professorsā¦who work every day to ensure your success. So, to all of the faculty assembled here today, I say thank you. Thank you for your expertise. Thank you for the energy and passion you bring to the classroom. Thank you for the paths that you illuminate and the journeys you guideā¦not only the path to graduation, but also the path to a meaningful life. And to you, our students, I want you to know that these faculty are here for you. We are all here for YOU. And together we welcome you to this new academic year. [Students, I ask you to join me in a round of applause for our faculty.] Students, your return to campus energizes all of us. We are excited to work with you and to watch you grow and succeed. And as we stand here on the precipice of the first full week of the Fall semester, I could try to encourage you by saying the obviousā¦study hard, make good choices, get involved. Probably every university president or chancellor across the country is using those words this week: study hard, make good choices, get involved. But Iād like to go beyond the obvious, and letās spend a little time this morning doing something else. Letās think a little bit about the year 2025. 2025 Some of you here today are part of the Class of 2025. Youāre just now starting your college journey. We want this to be the most rewarding four years of your life. Some of you will finish sooner, some later. But for all of us I think we should take a moment for the following ponderableā¦What will life look like in 2025? Now, you might think, thatās just four short years from nowā¦not that much can change. But think back in time to four years agoā¦2017. In 2017: Probably none of us had ever heard of COVID or CoronavirusIn 2017, we werenāt using this thing called Zoom to interact with other humansIn 2017, a businessman named Trump was in the White HouseThe Number 1 Google search was āHurricane IrmaāāThe Big Bang Theoryā was still on TVEd Sheeran had the Number 1 single in America,A gallon of gas cost $2.41, andThe Atlanta Falcons, yes the Atlanta Falcons, were in the Super Bowl. A lot, I mean a lot, can change in four years. So, as we sit here today, letās project a bit into the future: Whatās the workplace going to look like in 2025?ā¦when you take that first job after graduation, will you be working in an office or will you be dialing it in from home in your pajamas? What about technology? How small will our phones get? How big will our watches be and what will they able to do? How will we shop? How will we date? (and by āweā I mean you). Will we still read books? And if so, will we be able to read them while our cars drive us around town? Will the traditional family as the core of society be strengthened or further weakened? Will we be at peace or at war? Will the gaps between rich and poor be larger or smaller? Will the increasing diversity of our society lead us to greater cooperation or to heightened tensions? What will the rest of the world think about us here in the United States? Will America still be a shining city on a hill, a beacon to the world? What about our Christian faith? Will the church grow, or will it decline? 2025. Just four short years. The crystal ball is always murky, but my point in gazing into it is to encourage youā¦to encourage all of usā¦to take a little ownership of our future. To write our own story. To actively shape our destiny, rather than to passively await it. As Winston Churchill is said to have observed, āAmericans will always do the right thing, but only after they have tried everything else.ā [REPEAT] Cut to the chase, my friends, and do the right thing first. As college students, as college graduates, as faculty and staff, letās do the right thing first. Why are you here? College is, in part, about obtaining the right skills, knowledge, and understanding to do the right thing. Weāre all here to help figure out what the right thing is. Students, why are you here? Recent study by Federal Reserve Bank of New York concluded that Americans with a bachelorās degree earned on average 75% more each year than those with only a high school diploma. Thatās the ācollege wage premium.ā Why are you here? Marketability, access to job opportunities, ability to specialize in particular career skills, pathway to advancement, employment securityā¦But is that why you are really here? The evidence shows that college graduates are happier and lead healthier, longer lives than those who didnāt go to college. Public opinion surveys show that college graduates have greater life satisfaction⦠They are more likely to be civically engaged and influence their communities⦠College graduates are able to actively produce new knowledge, not just consume knowledge that others give them College graduates know how to peacefully coexist with one another in an increasingly diverse world College graduates make positive and lasting differences in the lives of othersā¦they make an impact. If the college experience transforms regular people into thinkers, and doers, and world-changers, then why not us? Why not the people in this arena. Why not ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„? Why Not Us? We live in a divided society and a broken worldā¦humanity needs healers, uniters, and peacemakers. Why not us? Who among us will stand up and step up? The world needs more ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„. More of our nurses and health care professionals, more of our educators, our counselors, our pastorsā¦Let us be the solution. We live in a time of fearā¦humanity cries out for those who would give comfort and instill confidence. Why not us? The world needs more ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„. We live in an era of pathogens and pandemicsā¦humanity needs researchers who can harness the power of science to cure and to prevent. When the world searches for answers, why not us? Our biologists, our chemists, our physicists⦠We live in a community where children go hungry, where shops are closed, where parents struggle to pay the bills. Where prosperity is elusive, why isnāt it ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ that steps in to find the solutions. Our College of Business should be front and center in the effort to grow economic development in our own backyard. Why not us⦠At ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ we have a perpetual call to service. Our call is to serve God and Humanity. I ask you to hear that call and to act on it. If we want to improve the health of our communitiesā¦if we want to make those communities more prosperous and better educatedā¦and if we want to serve the spiritual health of Cleveland County, or western North Carolina and beyondā¦then who better than ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ University to do the heavy lifting. It rests on us, my friendsā¦it rests on ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„. For God and Humanityā¦thatās our mission, and thatās our charge. Our university was founded 116 years ago by people with vision who wanted to lift up those around them. Ladies and gentlemen, every one of us in here has inherited that noble mission. When I think about our call to service, I often think about one of my favorite Christian hymnsā¦.a song popular across many denominations, written in 1981 and titled, āHere I am, Lord.ā The lyrics may be familiar to some of you: Here I am, LordIs it I, Lord?I have heard You calling in the nightI will go, LordIf You lead meI will hold Your people in my heart Here we are, Lord. Choose us. Choose ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„. Wrap So, in the academic year ahead, of course I want you all to have funā¦to enjoy each other and to enjoy your time here. Pancake Bingo, the Webbies, and football at Spangler Stadiumā¦But rememberā¦always rememberā¦that gifted people have great responsibility. As our Bible tells us, āFrom everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded.ā One demand on all of us in the coming year is to stay vigilant about this pandemic that has yet to go away. Thereās the famous line from the old movie Wizard of Oz: āThereās no place like home.ā This is our home. This is our family. Whether for one semester, one year, four years, or a careerā¦this is our home. History teaches us that people will fight most ferociously to protect their family and their home. Thatās what we need to do this year. Thatās what I will ask you to do. We will do whatever it takes to keep this place open and to keep you on track for success. So, thereās my message to you today: We should be thankful for our faculty.Take ownership of your destiny for the next four years.Answer the call to service.Protect our home and our university family. Fight Song and Bo OK, everybody, I want you to have a great semesterā¦a great academic year. And hereās how we are going to close Convocation. Weāre bringing back an old tradition and making it new again. We recently rediscovered the lyrics to the ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ fight song. Everybodyās got a fight song, and we do, tooā¦but nobody signs along because the lyrics were literally lost in the archives for years. So, with thanks to Josh Cheney and our concert choir weāre going to close by signing the GWU fight song. Whatās a fight song without a mascot? If I can get a really loud āSko Dawgs, we might be able to get Bo to join us on stage for the fight songā¦
Post ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„’s 14th President: Meet & Greet One Webb: We are better together. Good morning, everyone. Thank you all for being here today. It is truly humbling to stand before a community that cares so deeply about ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ University. Whether you are a neighbor, a supporter, a student, an alum, or a friend of this institution, your presence today reflects the strength […] ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ University | November 13, 2025
Post 2022 Fall Academic Convocation Surround Yourself With Success Good morning, everyone. It is really, really good to see you all. Iām excited that we are here. Iām grateful that we are together. I hope you had a good first week of classes, and I hope youāre ready for a strong and successful semester. Ladies and gentlemen, I am eager […] ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ University | August 24, 2022
Post 2019 Dimensions Presidentās Address at Dimensions 9:30, Tucker Student Center Good morning, everyone. Thank you, Neal, for the kind introduction. Thanks for letting me join youā¦this is a large and impressive group. Iām glad to see you all. I hope youāre doing well and that the semester is off to a fast start. I also hope that […] ĆŪ¶¹Ö±²„ University | August 29, 2019