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Having a field day

Inaugural MIT Dorm Olympics encourages students to participate in various field day events to showcase dorm spirit and pod pride.
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Photo of Ellie Feng and Ashley Ke crouching on either side of a sign that reads "Dorm Olympics: tug of war and jump rope"
Caption:
A group of undergraduate students, including Ellie Feng (left) and Ashley Ke, were inspired to put their own Covid-safe spin on field day and show some dorm pride in the process.
Credits:
Photo: Nick Jewell/DAPER
Photo of an MIT student wearing red jacket and black pants throwing a green dodgeball and has a red dodgeball in hand.
Caption:
Following social distancing and Covid-19 safety policies, residential pod group members competed in a number of activities — relay races, dodgeball, darts, tug-of-war, ring toss, group jump-rope, bean bag toss, and sack race — on Briggs Field.
Credits:
Photo: Nick Jewell/DAPER
Photo of an MIT student in white shirt and black athletic pants running down Briggs Field in ring toss event.
Caption:
An MIT student runs down Briggs Field in the ring-toss event.
Credits:
Photo: Nick Jewell/DAPER
Photo of an MIT student in grey long-sleeved shirt and black shorts taking part in the jumprope event.
Caption:
The top three teams from each weekend received a prize based on participation and event performance. In addition, at the end of the three-week Dorm Olympics adventure, the top-performing residence hall received a grand prize.
Credits:
Photo: Nick Jewell/DAPER

Relay races, bean-bag tosses, tug of war, and ring tosses galore are reminiscent of field days that mark the school year coming to an end and show some class pride. Here at MIT, a group of undergraduate students were inspired to put their own Covid-safe spin on field day and show some dorm pride in the process.  

The idea for MIT Dorm Olympics started at January’s COVID Hack, when students brainstormed ideas for improving the spring semester in four different areas: outdoor spaces, virtual community, remote learning, and policy awareness. As part of the virtual community and online socialization track, undergraduate students Ellie Feng, Ashley Ke, Leyna Duong, and Yunbeen Bae wanted to tackle two primary issues: students’ Zoom fatigue and their limited ability to interact with other campus residents. They imagined a field-day-style event that would get people outdoors to have fun and allow them to interact each other.

“We know that MIT’s dorm culture is very strong and we wanted to encourage lots of dorm spirit, especially for first-year students who are on campus for the first time,” says Feng, an event co-organizer. “Since the semester is predominantly online, we wanted to offer the opportunity for students to take a break and be able to connect with people in person.”

Having a Field Day - MIT Dorm Olympics

Events were held over three weekends from late April through May. Following social distancing and Covid-19 safety policies, residential pod group members competed in a number of activities — relay races, dodgeball, darts, tug of war, ring toss, group jump-rope, bean bag toss, and sack race — on Briggs Field. The top three teams from each weekend received a prize based on participation and event performance. In addition, at the end of the three-week Dorm Olympics adventure, the top performing residence hall received a grand prize. 

Taking first place overall was team Mango Pod from Baker House. The second- and third-place recipients were YBITYS from New Vassar and The General from Maseeh Hall. Baker House took home the coveted grand prize as the champion residence hall, followed by second-and third-place Next House and Maseeh Hall.

Dorm Olympics would not have been possible without the collaboration and support efforts from the Department of Athletics, Physical Education, and Recreation; Dormitory Council; Undergraduate Association COVID Hack; the Baker Foundation; the Division of Student Life; Campus Activities Complex; and the many event volunteers. “Undoubtedly, the most rewarding experience of planning and executing Dorm Olympics with the team has been the appreciative emails we’ve received from participants saying they really enjoyed their time competing in events with their pods,” says event co-organizer Yunbeen Bae. “Even people who were not participants reached out to say they loved the idea and didn't know why this didn't exist before.”

Beyond the three-weekend Dorm Olympics, the team hopes the initiative will grow into an annual event where all residential halls compete for the championship title. Participation this year was based on who was interested, says co-organizer Leyna Duong. “In a post-pandemic world, we can envision this to be a friendly competition among floor mates,” she says, “and building on larger activities to make it even more fun for the whole campus.”

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