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Common Dialogue Day Events and Sessions (November 4, 2025)

TimeEvent NameSpeaker(s)Location
9:00am – 10:00amFYE Hey, Kiddo ProjectsProjects are inspired by the book Hey, Kiddo by Jarrett J. Krosoczka.PAC lobby
10:00am – 11:15amKeynote SpeakerWelcome: Pres. Cheri Betz
Prayer: Nate Rawlins, Campus Ministry
Introduction: Wendy Crosby, Common Dialogue Day Chair
Keynote: Jarrett J. Krosoczka, author and illustrator
PAC Theater and
Teams Livestream
11:30am – 12:00pmBreak Out Session #1See BelowSee Below – In Person and Virtual
11:30am – 1:30pmLunchDialogue about “What’s Your Story?” over Lunch with Provided Discussion QuestionsCafeteria
1:30pm – 2:00pmBreak Out Session #2See BelowSee Below – In Person and Virtual
2:15pm – 2:45pmBreak Out Session #3See BelowSee Below – In Person and Virtual
3:00pm – 4:00pm“The Heart Still Hums” Documentary & Discussion“The Heart Still Hums” (2020) by Savanah Leaf and Taylor Russel is a documentary short that follows five expectant mothers as they navigate pregnancy and birth in the context of poverty and drug addiction. 29min.
Led by Gail Ryder
Rueckert
4:15pm – 4:45pmPrayer ServiceLed by Campus MinistrySt. Dominic Chapel
5:00pm – 7:00pmDinnerCafeteria

Keynote Presentation: Jarrett J. Krosoczka, Author and Illustrator

10:00 AM-11:15 AM: Keynote Presentation, Microsoft Teams and PAC Music Hall. (In-Person)

11:30 AM-12:00 PM: Q&A Breakout Session in DH

Breakout Session #1 ( 11:30am-12:00pm)

Session InfoDescription
Keynote Q & A

Speaker: Jarrett J. Krosoczka
Location: Rueckert (In-person)
Continuation of Q & A with our keynote speaker
My Story – a.k.a., What Not to Do

Speaker: Julius Nagy
Location: DH 203 In-Person
Survey of my life from birth to today. Exploration of the highs and lows and rising from the ashes.
How Telling the Stories of Common People Can Save the World

Speaker: Renee Collings
Location: DH 204 Teams Link
After 40 years in community journalism, I’ve learned that what I do isn’t just report on small-town events and local people. Rather, I hope to preserve empathy, truth, and belonging through those very stories. When we listen to one another–truly listen–we bridge divides, spark empathy, and remind the world of our shared humanity. Thus, telling the stories of common people can be seen as world-saving work. 
From Legacy to Justice: Becoming THAT Social Work Professor

Speaker: Elizabeth Davis
Location: DH 205 Teams Link
As a third-generation Siena Heights graduate, my story reflects a legacy of learning, faith, and justice. This session invites participants to explore how their own stories shape their sense of purpose and courage to be “that person” who speaks up for others. Together, we’ll reflect on how our shared narratives can advance Siena’s mission and the Dominican pillars in pursuit of the common good.
Changing Minds Through Stories

Speaker: Josh Keidan
Location: DH 206 Teams Link
This interactive session will focus on how we communicate with those who have differing views, and the role of story in shaping and changing minds.

Breakout Session #2 (1:30pm – 2:00pm)

Session InfoDescription
Collaborative Story-telling Through Improvisation

Speaker: Josh Keidan
Location: Rueckert
(in person)
This interactive session will focus on teaching us how to create stories with others by collaborating effectively.
Digital Story-Telling in the Age of A.I.

Speaker: Mary Raymond
Location: DH 203 Teams Link
How are tools like ChatGPT reshaping authorship and narrative? This session invites participants to reflect on how their stories are mediated through digital platforms and emerging technologies. Together we’ll discuss the opportunities, ethical questions, and creative possibilities of storytelling in a world where human and AI voices meet.
What’s Your Family Story

Speaker: Steven Wathen
Location: DH 204 (in person)
What do you know about your family’s history? I have been researching my family history for over 30 years. Creating a family tree was my initial interest, but along the way I have learned a lot of interesting things that go beyond names and dates. I will share some of what I’ve learned about my own family history and give some ideas for getting started on your own family history if you are interested.
Therapeutic Story Telling: Narrative Therapy in Practice

Speaker: Psychology Club and Amy Wertenberger
Location: DH 205 Teams Link
This session introduces students to narrative therapy, an approach that helps people explore how their personal stories shape identity and well-being. Tied to the theme “What’s Your Story?”, the presentation shows how reframing life narratives can promote healing, empowerment, and self-understanding.
9/11: When Memory Becomes History

Speaker: Renee Collins & Intro to Journalism students
Location: DH 206 Teams Link
Students in my Intro to Journalism class spent a few days learning about 9/11 and then developing questions and interviewing their parents, grandparents, or older adults who had strong memories of “America’s Darkest Day,” as a headline in the Detroit Free Press announced on Sept. 12. Students will share a little about what they learned from the interviews and read excerpts from their stories. The goal of the assignment goes back to a sign I remember seeing in a Newsweek photo from the Jonestown Massacre: “Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it” and highlights the transition students explored from lived experience (their parents’ experience) to historical understanding (their generation’s learning).

Breakout Session #3 (2:15pm-2:45pm)

Session NameDescription
Using Fiction to Tell Your Truth

Speaker: Tony Farina, presenter
Mark Vroman, moderator
Location: Rueckert
Teams Link
I want to share some of my personal experiences with fiction writing beginning with my first, terrible short story in middle school all the way through my current book series. I want to talk about how I’ve used those stories to work through events in my life. I will touch on the idea of biographical fiction and how, when done correctly, it can make a person, unique story, a universal one that connects with readers from all backgrounds and allow them to find themselves in the stories as well.
Your Life as a Tree

Speaker: Wendy Crosby
Location: DH 203
(in person)
Participants will be invited to draw their life as a tree, with the roots representing the past, the trunk representing the present, and the branches representing the future. The last few minutes will be reserved to share your drawing with a partner.
Poetic Stories

Speaker: Josh Keidan
Location: DH 204 Teams Link
This interactive session will provide participants with a poetic framework for sharing their experiences, which we will use in the session to write our own poems.
John Dewey’s Reconstructive Experience as a Means to Liberation

Speaker: Chitranjan Greer-Travis
Location: DH 205 (in person)
As a normative ideal, philosopher John Dewey’s development of a progressive pedagogy is quite plausible and remarkable. Although there is much work to do to dismantle systemic barriers that would prevent Dewey’s model from coming to fruition, his model is a beautiful blueprint to sustain democracy and help us to become more competent, purposeful and ethical. I draw on my lived experience as a Detroit Police officer (2016-2020) and reflect upon my decision to resign post-pandemic and the death of George Floyd.
How do you make a difference?

Speaker: Jeff Lake
Location: DH 206 Teams Link
A foundational pillars of much of Christianity (and broader religion, and for that matter, secular humanism) is that we have an obligation to “do good.” How we find our place and way to “do good” while still “Doing well”? I will use my story as illustrative of this process, and invite discussion to follow of how we have met that moment so far, and how we look to do so down the road.