Student Development
Commitment to Community
The Catholic and Marianist vision of education makes the University of Dayton community unique. It shapes the "warmth of welcome" we first experience when we arrive on campus and the family spirit we treasure long after graduation. It calls us to academic rigor integrated with faith and life. It challenges each of us to take up the hard work necessary to build the intellectual, spiritual, religious, moral, physical, and social dimensions of our educational community.
The University of Dayton’s Catholic and Marianist mission calls us to develop our character and integrity as leaders committed to building community in our world.
Community
is more than a word; it's our shared vision
Good Choices
made repeatedly over time develop into habits which have a positive lifelong experience
A Deeper Understanding of Community and Responsibility
Commitment to Community highlights three Catholic and Marianist principles for learning and living in community and the seven key habits that are derived from them. You are called to understand these principles and to develop these habits. Doing so will strengthen our educational community and will prepare you to live as a mature member of society.
When students embrace and live by these principles and habits, they are more able to become persons of great character and integrity committed to building community in the world that is reflective of a Catholic and Marianist education.
The University of Dayton’s Catholic and Marianist mission calls us to develop our character and integrity as leaders committed to building community in our world.
Commitment to Community Pledge and Prayer
We accept this challenge and make the following pledge:
- We commit ourselves to learn in and through community.
- We commit ourselves to respect the dignity of every person in thought, word and action.
- We commit ourselves to practice solidarity in order to promote the common good.
- We commit ourselves to recognize and value a diversity of people, perspectives and ideas.
As a contributing member of this educational community:
- I will treat myself and every person with respect and compassion.
- I will speak up when I witness behaviors that harm or demean people and damage community, such as vandalism, discriminatory behavior and harassment.
- I will be honest and truthful and will live with integrity.
- I will develop a life of faith and/or reflection and will respect the religious traditions of others.
- I will integrate what I learn with how I live.
- I will seek opportunities to learn about and engage with diverse people, perspectives and cultures.
- I will take responsibility for myself and my community.
- I will practice service in leadership.
- Together, we promise to strengthen our role in building communities of hope, respect, peace and reconciliation in our world.
God of Love
We give you thanks
that You created us in your image
and that you created us to be in community.
In community we find friendship.
In community we learn about ourselves and the world around us expands.
In community we come to understand how to love and be loved.
In community we experience joy.
And yet, living in community is hard work.
It can be difficult to respect and to love ourselves
It can be difficult to respect and love one another.
It can be difficult to know when to let go of our own wants and desires
to prioritize the good of the community as a whole.
All too often, we fall short of building such communities
where love and joy flourish.
Help us to create communities of hope and respect,
of peace and reconciliation.
Give us courage to make the difficult choices
to respect the human dignity of ourselves and every person
to be in solidarity with those who need compassion
and to work toward the common good.
Be with us in the challenges of living and learning in community.
We pray all this through the power of your Holy Spirit
whose breath we share.
Amen.
Principles of Community Living
The Catholic and Marianist vision of education makes the University of Dayton community unique. It shapes the “warmth of welcome”1 we first experience and the “family spirit” we treasure. It calls us to academic rigor integrated with faith and life. It challenges each person and group to take up the hard work necessary to build the intellectual, spiritual, religious, moral, physical and social dimensions of our educational community.
Behavior, expectations, policies relationships at UD are guided by the Catholic moral tradition. This page highlights three Catholic and Marianist principles for learning and living in and the key habits which are derived from them. Individuals and groups are called to understand these principles and to develop these habits. Doing so will strengthen the educational community at UD and will prepare students to live as mature members of society.
Community is more than word; it's our shared vision
Living and learning in community are essential to the full development and education of the whole person. The Marianist tradition values being in community as the practical way in which Christians learn to live the Gospel, striving to love God, neighbor and self in daily life. All people learn essential life lessons, such as self-awareness, communication, cooperation, mutual respect, courage, forgiveness, patience and trust, from being in community with others.
The climate of acceptance that Marianists call family spirit presumes an attention to the quality of relationships among the people in the community. At the level of daily interaction, all members of the community treat each other with respect and speak with simplicity and openness. Over the long term, these daily habits acknowledge the value and dignity of every member of the community and create the ground in which genuine friendships can flourish.
However, building community requires more than friendliness and is certainly about more than following rules. Genuine community requires a commitment to personal growth, authenticity, learning about others, self-sacrifice, accountability, dialogue and hard work.
Such a vision of community and friendship runs the risk of being romanticized. It must therefore be recalled that friendliness and hospitality are genuine expressions of a process that necessarily includes conflict, division, and all manner of human suffering and failing. Yet, those grounded in the Marianist vision of education recognize that only precisely out of this mix of joy and sorrow can genuine communityes be formed.
Through learning in community, UD students are more able to become persons of great character and integrity. They are better prepared to assume responsible membership in communities throughout their lifetime and to make a positive difference in the world.
You are Valuable. We Recognize the Value of Your Presence
The Catholic and Marianist vision of being in community is based on the conviction that every person has innate dignity because all people are made in the image and likeness of God:
All persons are endowed with a rational soul and are created in God’s image … there is here a basic equality between all and it must be accorded ever greater recognition … any kind of social or cultural discrimination in basic personal rights on the grounds of sex, race, color, social conditions, language or religion, must be curbed and eradicated as incompatible with God’s design.4
This conviction calls us not only to respect ourselves and others but also to love ourselves and all people because of the human dignity each of us receives from God. Respect and love for self include making personal, social and academic decisions that preserve and improve one’s own dignity and well-being.
Respect and love for others includes intentionally seeking opportunities to learn from them, to support their growth and to be mutually challenged. The presence of a wide range of perspectives, opinions and beliefs — and the diverse people who represent them — enhance the depth of the UD community and the ability of students to integrate the academic, religious, cultural and social elements of their lives. The University Statement of Dignity states clearly:
A primary assertion of both our religious and civil traditions is the inviolable dignity of each person. Recognition of and respect for the person are central to our life as a Christian and educational community and are what allow us to pursue our common mission while being many diverse persons.5
How Do You Contribute to the Common Good?
The Catholic and Marianist emphasis on solidarity and the common good emerges from the conviction that respect for human dignity draws us into . The Catholic emphasis on the common good is countercultural. Rather than prioritizing freedom of the individual over the needs of others, a concern for the common good leads us to make choices as individuals, groups or organizations in light of how these choices positively affect other persons and the community as a whole.
The common good is the sum total of social conditions which allow people, either as groups or individuals, to reach their fulfillment more fully and more easily … Every group must take into account the needs and legitimate aspirations of every other group, and even those of the human family as a whole.6
Our decisions and actions affect people where we live, in our classrooms, residence halls, houses, neighborhood, campus, city and country, and ultimately the world community.
As we make these decisions and live in , we remember that the common good is more than compassion from afar and more than what is best for the greatest number of people. The Catholic understanding of the common good is rooted in the practice of solidarity and in a preferential option for the poorest of our brothers and sisters.
In the present condition of global society, where injustices abound and growing numbers of people are deprived of basic human rights and considered expendable, the principle of the common good immediately becomes, logically and inevitably, a summons to solidarity and a preferential option for the poorest of our brothers and sisters.7
[Solidarity] is not a feeling of vague compassion or shallow distress at the misfortunes of so many people, both near and far. On the contrary, it is a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common good; that is to say to the good of all and of each because we are all really responsible for all.8
Practicing solidarity means being actively present with those who are struggling. Practicing solidarity is about challenging behavior that is harmful to others. It also involves working to change unjust social structures that inhibit people from reaching their fulfillment. Practicing solidarity includes a commitment to care for our common home, the environment, by being mindful of and making decisions that benefit the earth and all God’s creatures. We are called to practice solidarity and to actively contribute to the common good at UD and beyond.
5 “Statement of Dignity,” University of Dayton.
Habits for Community Living at UD
Good choices made repeatedly over time develop into habits, which have a positive lifelong influence. The following habits are essential for living the Catholic and Marianist vision of community. Individuals, groups organizations are called to develop and practice these habits, whether they are on campus, off campus or online.
Are the physical, spiritual, academic, social and personal dimensions of my life in harmony?
- Learn about the Catholic and Marianist views of life that shape UD’s values.
- Inform and integrate your faith and beliefs with your academic learning and moral living.
- Seek truth and wisdom, not just knowledge and job skills.
- Seek out mentors and models who will affirm and challenge you.
- Consider your life’s path not just as a career, but as a vocation or a calling from God.
- Grieve losses, embrace challenges, celebrate successes. Live fully and joyfully.
Do I respect myself? How does my behavior show it?
- Seek relationships that bring out the best in you and others.
- Make choices that are safe, healthy and consistent with your faith tradition and values.
- Follow the law. Don’t abuse alcohol or controlled substances.
- Develop a sense of reverence for the dignity of your own sexuality.
- Develop a social media presence that is consistent with your values and beliefs.
Does my behavior show respect for the people around me?
- Demonstrate dignity and respect in your communication with others.
- Develop relationships with people who are different from you.
- Honor the dignity and sexual integrity of others with your actions and words.
- Pay attention to the safety, comfort health of others.
- Consider the impact of your online presence on others and of this community.
- Learn to handle conflict with respect, dialogue, understanding forgiveness.
Am I becoming the kind of person I want to be?
- Model moral behavior and virtue.
- Practice behavior that is not insulting, demeaning, destructive or harmful to you or others.
- Exercise academic integrity. Follow the UD Honor Code.
- Respond truthfully and respectfully when your behavior is questioned by another.
- Accept the consequences of your behavior, while learning to forgive and to accept forgiveness.
Am I willing to be part of a faith tradition that is larger and wiser than I am?
- Develop a capacity for silence.
- Pray, alone and with others. Participate in worship.
- Reflect on how faith contributes meaning to and challenges your everyday life.
- Study your religious tradition to deepen your understanding, practice commitment to it.
- Learn about and show respect for the religious traditions of others.
- Live gratefully; show appreciation; give thanks to God and others.
What does it mean for me or my organization to contribute to the common good?
- Exercise self-discipline as an individual and in group situations.
- Be aware of the weakest and most vulnerable around you and seek to serve and empower them.
- Challenge groups and organizations to respond to community problems and needs.
- Speak up when you witness alcohol abuse, drug use, violence, vandalism behaviors that harm or demean people or damage .
- Engage in sustainable practices that protect and nurture the environment as a portion of God's creation.
How do I learn from others and encourage them to use their gifts?
- Listen first. Learn from others. Consider the needs of all.
- Practice humility and generosity of spirit when using your gifts and skills.
- Lead for the common good of the community, not to advance your own image.
- Speak up for those in need and those who have no voice.
- Encourage your student organization to make a positive contribution to UD and to the city of Dayton.
The distinctive family spirit of life at UD depends on the commitment each of us makes to the Catholic and Marianist vision of learning and living in . In the struggles and joys of forming community, students are encouraged to support one another and to draw on the support of faculty and staff, advisors and mentors. Together, our commitment to these principles and habits will form us with life-long skills for making a difference in our world.
Commitment to Community at UD
The distinctive family spirit of life at UD depends on the commitment each of us makes to the Catholic and Marianist vision of learning and living in community.