Students bond in assembly
Keith Hawkins, a facilitator from Sacramento who holds âstudent bondingâ assemblies at high schools throughout the U.S., recently paid a second visit to Laguna Beach High, where he spent the morning helping kids in the senior class connect with one another.
Through an all-class lecture and smaller group activities, Hawkins aimed to help kids figure out who they are as people, to see the good in their peers and treat each other with kindness.
âWe had Keith work with our students for the first time last May and received really positive feedback,â Principal Don Austin said. âSince he helps kids to connect on so many different levels, we thought it would be better to hold the assembly earlier in the year this time, rather than at the end.
âOur seniors learned about what it means to have integrity, and that the things we say have an impact,â Austin said. âHigh school is the real world, and what students do here translates to the rest of their lives. Thatâs why itâs important for them to start making good decisions now.â
After he spoke to the kids as a whole, Hawkins broke the class up into smaller groups, where they played âice-breakerâ games before engaging in more intimate bonding activities.
Groups were lead by student facilitators, who were chosen by teachers and received training from Hawkins the prior evening about how to direct their groups.
Senior Camille Rang, who served as a facilitator, said she was moved by a âpaper tearingâ activity in which the students share with each other moments that drastically changed their lives. As they tell their stories, they tear a piece from the tissue theyâre given into the circle as a means of âreleasingâ the emotions that are associated with this moment and leaving it behind.
âIt was interesting to talk with kids I donât normally talk to and to be able to relate with whatâs going on in their lives,â she said. âThis experience taught me that every person goes through some type of struggle and that I shouldnât judge others so quickly.
âItâs definitely something Iâll be cautious about from now on.â
Rebecca Galan, another student who had the opportunity to engage with three different groups, said the experience was more cathartic for her.
A child of missionaries who live in Cancun, Galan left her parents and younger brother and moved to Laguna Beach two years ago to live with her aunt and uncle, so that she could focus on her education and have a more promising future.
âI donât usually open myself up to people, but I felt I needed to because everyone else in my circle was telling their own stories,â she said. âIt felt good to talk to my peers about where I came from and how much I miss my family.
âSomething I really admire about Keith is that he trusts and loves so openly. Itâs something I want to do, because it really brings people together.â
Through exercises like this and the cultural exchange program, Austin said his recent focus has been connecting people among the student body, staff and business partners.
âWhen someone becomes more than just a face you pass in the hallway, it creates a relationship with endless potential,â Austin said. âIf you ask the kids what they took away from this assembly, youâll get 100 right answers. Everyone got something different and positive from it.â
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.