
Professor of the Practice Amy LaCombe outside of her office
Gratitude is a key practice that Portico students learn through the weekly Examen meditations (see main story) and other forms of self-reflection during the course.
Caitlin Ferris 19 points out that when youre on a college campus where students come from families with varying levels of affluence, Its easy to focus on relative depravityeasy to get lost in the idea that other people have so much more than you.
But she adds that by taking stock of what shes grateful for, at the close of each week, she can keep those sentiments in check. Her meditations are poured into her personal journal, composed in class. And the more you do it, the more youre able to feel grateful, says Ferris, from Long Island, New York.
Learning to pause, even during the most hectic times, is part of this art of reflection.
Ive gotten into the habit of slowing down and taking a recap of everything thats happened. Ive become a more self-reflective person, says Christopher Peterson 19 of Middletown, New Jersey. Even if I dont keep a journal [after Portico], Ill still have that mental checklist at the end of the week. And Ill think about my reasons for being grateful.
Portico professor Amy LaCombe, whose discipline is accounting, explains how the typical student reflection evolves through the course.
During the early weeks, students tend to reflect on how theyre grateful for friends and family, the way they do at the Thanksgiving table, LaCombe relates (basing her observations on final, take-home reflections in which students look back on the semester). That ripens into fuller expressions of gratitude for all the opportunities awaiting them. Later, theyll often speak of the student organizations and public lectures on campus that have engaged them.
In a way, it [the written reflection] becomes less about themselves, LaCombe says, more about being part of the community at Boston College.
W.B.