"WOW, what a great club!"
- Calvin & Hobbes
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Every year more than 500+ students participate in
a three-month training program to prepare to become orientation
leaders.
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WOW leadership training has evolved into a
three-tiered process:
- Orientation Leaders (OLs) learn how to be
effective group leaders for new students and to help behind the
scenes as Event Staff members during the orientation week.
- WOW TEAM spends six months learning how to
be successful trainers for Leaders-in-Training (LITs), who may
graduate from the training program and become OLs. TEAM members
have been an OL at least once prior to their term.
- WOW Board develops leadership training
programs for the TEAM and the LITs, as well as putting together
the pieces of WOW for new students and families with the help of
the TEAM. Board members have been on the TEAM at least once
prior to their term.
- WOW introduces the new students to the community
and businesses around them.
- WOW gives students an opportunity to prepare for
their classes and meet their advisors.
- WOW introduces new students to important issues
they may encounter while at this university.
- WOW provides a social atmosphere in which new
students will make lasting relationships at their new school.
- WOW allows new students to experience a taste of
college life before classes actually begin.
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What is WOW?
WOW is an
organization created for orienting new students to life at Cal
Poly and in San Luis Obispo. The LITs (Leaders in Training) help
make this possible, and TEAM WOW trains them for that task. Year
after year, hundreds of students volunteer hours of their time
and come back a week early for Fall Quarter to show the WOWies
(new students) around. Here's why:
This program is
made up of the most fun, random people you will ever meet. It
also has this strange tendency to create lifelong friendships
and, in some cases, romances between those who make it their
own. Alumni who have experienced WOW and left San Luis long ago
still pop by for a visit to Tuesday Night Spring Training
Meetings and other special events. These are the Friends of WOW,
or FOW. This program can be life-changing, to say the least.
That's why many of us keep coming back for more. The text in
these pages cannot explain this phenomenon.
WOW can be a
wonderful, fun, and exciting opportunity. It can create the best
of friendships and can be an experience you never want to end.
The only conditions are the ones you put on it. By being a
member of this program you become WOW. You are part of its
history and its future. In short, WOW will be everything you
decide to make it. It is your program. Take some ownership in
it. Make it yours. Make it fun.
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WOW Evolution
Week of
Welcome history adapted from information provided by the
University Archives, Cal Poly State University, San Luis Obispo
and interviews with past advisors of the program.
To better
understand WOW and its goals, we'll take you on a little trip
back in time. Way back in 1901, when Cal Poly was founded, the
school's orientation program was nothing like it is today. Over
the years, it has grown and changed.
In 1957, the
term "Welcome Week" was coined. It started as a leadership
training camp for student leaders. The student leaders were from
clubs, Associated Student Body, and student centers all over
campus. These students were the original WOW leaders.
As enrollment
grew at Cal Poly, the orientation of new students expanded. New
students were organized into 25 to 30 WOW Clubs of about 29 new
students and four counselors. Each club had its own nickname and
theme. The Welcome Week booth was located in a variety of places
during the next few years, including the Administration Building
Lawn and at what is now Mott Lawn. The booth had a PA system to
play records and music, and they served refreshments to new
students that stopped by.
Half of Welcome
Week was spent in SLO learning about campus resources, going on
campus tours, and visiting San Luis Obispo itself on tour buses.
New students could also attend dances and "mixers" throughout
The Week, some of which were held in the Men's Gym (now called
Mott Gym) and Crandall Gym.
The other half
of Welcome Week was spent at a 2-day "Welcome Round-Up Camp" at
Camp Pinecrest and Camp Ocean Pines (where TEAM retreat is
currently held) in Cambria. The camp included panel discussions,
dances, ping-pong, volleyball, baseball, church services,
speakers from campus, group question and answer sessions, the
annual "Hootenanny," and a treasure hunt to acquaint new
students with campus policies, rules and functions.
The 1960s set
the stage for WOW as it is today:
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WOW training meetings were set at 7 p.m. on Tuesday nights.
These meetings included stuffing new student folders. This
is still our traditional meeting time and night during
Spring Quarter.
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Counselors (now called Orientation Leaders) were required to have a minimum 2.0 GPA.
Today, additional requirements are in place.
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New students and counselors were obligated to wear "Rooters
Caps" which became a tradition for many decades. Today,
you can identify an Orientation Leader by the bright shirts
they wear during The Week.
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Their version of Campus Knowledge was a 75-question quiz
given to new students. At the end of The Week, prizes were
given to the top students who answered the quiz correctly.
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In 1961 it was suggested that the WOW Clubs only have two
counselors per group, and the extras became the first ever
Event Staff members. We still maintain two leaders per
group.
WOW is all
about traditions and the history that makes it up. To move
forward, we should remember the past and the roots the programs
come from.
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