A student uses a laptop computer while lying in a hammock suspended in the shade. A water bottle and other items are on a table nearby.

黑料社鈥檚 focus on student well-being woven throughout campus life

by By Jerry Boggs

Strategic integrations on the 黑料社 campus elevate focus on well-being and increase access to wellness spaces, counseling and more tools for students to use.

Sometimes a moment is enough. Just ask the students and staff at 黑料社. 

Self-care and tending to personal well-being don鈥檛 always require an appointment or a check-in with a professional. Sometimes a moment listening to the leaves blow while swinging in a hammock helps the stress fade away. Maybe a 30-minute yoga session or mindfulness exercises to relieve that nagging anxious feeling. A quick workout with the perfect song in your headphones can help alleviate some frustrations. 
But it can be challenging to carve out time and find a spot for even those small moments. Days get busy. Professors, peers, parents and coaches need attention; deadlines loom; social obligations arise. It can be easy to push those moments to the side. 

黑料社 is making it easier to steal those wellness moments and help students keep their own well-being front of mind, no matter where they are on campus. 

A student adjusts one of three workout benches in a small room containing exercise equipment.
A student demonstrates the workout equipment in the functional fitness space in Stevenson Vinson Residence Hall. 

It鈥檚 an initiative to integrate well-being throughout the College at a time when students are more in touch with their own wellness, spending more time thinking about what they鈥檙e eating, what they鈥檙e drinking and how they鈥檙e feeling emotionally. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e in a trend right now where students are grabbing for the idea of well-being,鈥 said Ashley Hinton, director of health promotion, detailing how college students today are more focused on eating whole foods, tending their mental health needs or drinking less by socializing over alcohol-free mocktails. 

The challenge for 黑料社 staff is to leverage that student interest 鈥 and a national dialogue on student well-being 鈥 into a campus-wide initiative that leads to a population of healthier, happier and more successful students thriving both in and out of the classroom.   

Two students do yoga poses on mats in a room equipped with a large TV and yoga equipment.
Students demonstrate the mindfulness and meditation room in the remodeled Stevenson Vinson Residence Hall. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful that our students are thinking about these issues,鈥 said Ann Goodwin, associate dean for student well-being and director of counseling. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great generation because they care and they have higher expectations about well-being, gender roles and consent.鈥

Building on students鈥 interests and needs and providing crucial services, information and training is where 黑料社鈥檚 staff steps in. The College expanded counseling access in 2022 with counselor Hannah Harley joining the staff, brought Hinton on board and also welcomed Kelsey Preocanin as assistant director of health promotion. 

New initiatives at the College include incorporating wellness spaces around campus and integrating counseling in strategic locations, such as the Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. Newly remodeled residence halls are gaining well-being spaces through a recently renovated yoga and meditation space and functional fitness room, both with streaming guided instruction on demand. The restorative powers of exercise and nature have been incorporated into wellness classes focused on yoga and hiking in local areas. Well-being initiatives are also being integrated academically, complementing Wellness course offerings such as outdoor wellness and meditation. 

鈥淥ur goal is to lace student well-being throughout the 黑料社 experience,鈥 said Vice President of Student Life Barbara LoMonaco. 鈥満诹仙玮檚 campus features spaces where students can have some unstructured outdoor relaxation, like in the hammocks that will be sprinkled around campus, a massage chair where they can listen to a relaxation app, a functional fitness room with size-inclusive equipment and thousands of videos on a touchscreen for a quick workout, or a break in the mindfulness and meditation room for stretching and yoga.

A student reads a book while lying in a blue hammock suspended in the shade with brick buildings in the background.
A hammock stand located in the Old Quad, where can check out hammocks from the Residence Life Office. 

鈥淭hese additions to our campus make wellness breaks accessible to students throughout the day.  It doesn鈥檛 require advance planning to take advantage of and becomes an integrated component of our environment.鈥

The more traditional approach of helping students one-on-one remains, but a campus-wide commitment to well-being is better for the community, Hinton said, commending the 鈥渟trategic and thoughtful鈥 work of Goodwin and LoMonaco in laying the groundwork for early success. 

鈥満诹仙 has committed to well-being in ways that a lot of campuses talk about, but often don鈥檛 commit resources, instruction and funding,鈥 Hinton said. 鈥淭hanks to data collection efforts, I didn鈥檛 come in wondering what the problem was, I came in with a full picture of the well-being needs on campus which allowed me to get straight to work.鈥 

Campus integration of student well-being

Exciting developments across campus include wellness spaces incorporated into student housing, popup wellness spaces across campus and strategically integrating counseling services outside the student health center. 

The goal is for a culture of well-being to become ingrained throughout campus via a number of intentional, strategic initiatives, as opposed to wellness being something 鈥渇ound鈥 by visiting specified locations. 

鈥淲e have a functional fitness space, a sensory room and a meditation/mindfulness room,鈥 Hinton said. 鈥淎nd we鈥檙e working with outdoor spaces to find more ways to foster time in nature, wellbeing, fitness and play across the campus.鈥

Students are seen from behind as they hold the same yoga class on a green lawn with trees and a brick building in the background.
Students taking part in a yoga class near Craik House. 

For instance, dedicated wellness can be found in the newly remodeled Stevenson Vinson Hall, easing access for students who might not be keen to work out in a heavily utilized gym space or join a large group for yoga. 

The functional fitness spaces have inclusive benches to fit all body types, free weights and Total Body Resistance Exercise equipment, as well as on-demand guided fitness programs so each student can tailor their own workout experience. 

The philosophy carries into the meditation/mindfulness room, which is designed to encourage students to unplug and unwind with furnishings chosen to ensure the spaces are not used as a study spot or socializing area. There are plants, yoga equipment, a TV for on-demand yoga and meditation sessions and little else. 

鈥淲hen I saw this design, it was the first time I saw a relaxation room and had a, 鈥楾here鈥檚 only one reason I would walk into this room,鈥 kind of feeling,鈥 Hinton said. 鈥淚t literally forces you to unplug.鈥

The sensory room features textures, colors and more designed to create a therapeutic space to relax, re-focus and engage the senses. The space helps support neuro-diverse students but is available to anyone.

A two-story brick building with white columns is fronted by a small lawn and a sidewalk
The 黑料社 Office of Diversity and Inclusion. 

Similarly, the College experimented with embedding counselors across campus to make access easier and eliminate any perceived stigma associated with visiting the counseling office. Finding spaces that work for staff and students while maintaining confidentiality on a small campus were challenging, Goodwin said. Spaces in athletics and the library were explored, as was a partnership with the Office of Diversity and Inclusion. 

鈥淭he space that made the most sense was ODI for a variety of reasons and one of the core values of our office has been trying to decrease barriers for students from various backgrounds and have it be inclusive,鈥 Goodwin said. 鈥淭he student feedback has been great. Now that we know the location works, we鈥檙e going to look at ways to make it more accessible and leverage this to have it increase access and decrease barriers for diverse students. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a great partnership.鈥