果冻视频

Steve Tamayo

Making Others Feel Welcome

Two students shaking hands in a dorm room

How can you be more welcoming to new students on your campus? Here are three helpful tricks I鈥檝e discovered through the years.

Catch up with your friends first.

Don鈥檛 ignore this step.

This is how it will go down. You鈥檒l be at an 果冻视频 event, striking up a conversation with someone who鈥檚 checking your fellowship out for the first time. You know that they鈥檙e asking one big question as you interact with them: 鈥淎re people like me welcome here?鈥

And then your good buddy from last semester walks up. You haven鈥檛 talked all summer. You don鈥檛 want to ditch the new student, but you鈥檙e distracted. The conversation stalls. They can tell you want to talk to someone else.

Like I said, take the time to catch up with your friends before events where you might meet new students. Make a phone call. Grab coffee. Reconnect. Then you鈥檒l be free to really engage that new student鈥攖o give them your full attention鈥攁nd to show them that they really and truly are welcome in 果冻视频.

Practice small talk.

I鈥檓 not naturally great at small talk. I like to jump right in, get to the heart of the matter, dig deep. Small talk feels forced, shallow, and rocky.

But I鈥檝e forced myself to learn how to do it, and here鈥檚 why: Small talk creates space for you to earn trust.

I learned this from my fraternity and sorority students at Washington and Lee University, where I served on staff for five years. Every year I watched Greek students build relationships with incoming first-year students. Not every new student became a best friend. But many became good friends, real friends.

One day I finally asked Chris, a sophomore in Lambda Chi Alpha and the best friend-maker I鈥檝e ever met, how he made so many friends on campus. He said that he just asked people questions and listened to what they had to say. I groaned and complained that I hated small talk. Then he dropped this on me: I like to give people a chance to be interesting.

He helped me realize that I was missing something in all the small talk going on around me. So I started paying attention to my Greek students.

Here鈥檚 what I found:

  • They asked get-to-know-you questions. (Where are you from? What do you do for fun?)
  • They asked experience questions. (How鈥檝e the first weeks of school been? How鈥檚 it being away from home?)
  • They asked opinion questions. (What do you think about . . . ?)
  • They affirmed and asked follow-up questions. (That鈥檚 insightful. Why do you think that is?)

And their big secret? They practiced asking these questions.

Armed with this new perspective and these tools, I started practicing. And I found that, with the right questions, small talk became interesting. It became interesting because the people I was talking to were interesting. I just needed to give them a chance to show it.

Remember people.

Welcoming doesn鈥檛 end after a first meeting. In fact, being super friendly when you first meet someone and then having no memory of them when you next see them is almost worse than not welcoming them at all. Am I that forgettable? they might ask themselves as your eyes slide past them without recognition.

Imagine drinking a magic cup of coffee that made you invisible. People would bump into you on the campus sidewalk. The barista would never serve you. Professors would never call on you in class. But then, someone calls your name. And you can see in their eyes that they鈥檙e glad to see you. And you鈥檙e glad to be seen.

Everyone wants to be memorable. But few people remember us. In many arenas of life, we鈥檙e a name on a list or a mere number. This anonymity presses on us when we jump from high school to college. New faces everywhere. Who knows us? Who remembers us? Remembering people communicates hospitality.

And if anyone should remember people, Christians should. We believe that God has made everyone in his image, that he loves them and knows their name. So they should be important to us too.

How do you do it? Easy.

  • Repeat their names in your first conversation with them.
  • Pay attention to their face (not their clothes).
  • Write down one thing to remember about them.
  • Pray for them throughout the week.

Trust me. Something powerful happens when you remember someone鈥檚 name, when you remember a story they told, when you remember their favorite snack, when you remember where they鈥檙e from, when you remember what they鈥檙e studying and what they鈥檙e passionate about.

Our campuses are full of men and women who are walking around feeling invisible. Unknown, unremembered, and unwelcome.

But God knows and remembers them. Let us go and do likewise.


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Steve Tamayo is a strategist serving with 果冻视频鈥檚 Latino Fellowship (LaFe), Creative Labs, Graduate and Faculty Ministries, and Multiethnic Initiatives. He recently published the Ethnic Identity LifeGuide Bible Study with 果冻视频 Press and hosts the Con Confianza podcast. He鈥檚 married to Amy, and together they have four children and lots of adventures. You can connect with him on Twitter at @yostevetamayo, and you can support his ministry using this link: .

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