Subscribe

Thanks for reading Sooner Magazine. If you share your email address with us, we’ll let you know when our next issue is published.

Subscribe
Login

Already a subscriber? Log in here.

Forgot your password? Send a reset.

Close
A publication of the University of Oklahoma Foundation
Close
A student dance group takes the stage at the 2023 OU Homecoming Rah! Rally. photo by travis caperton

The Hands Behind Homecoming

It takes a cadre of devoted students, a year's worth of work and a whole lot of pomp to bring OU's century-old tradition to life.

Thousands lined Boyd Street and wound around the north oval, waving glow sticks in time with the sounds of the Pride of Oklahoma Marching Band for OU’s first nighttime Homecoming parade. Chants and cheers and a slew of Christmas lights electrified campus for the crowd of students, alumni and Norman families.

Miss Indian OU Jonna Grace Brady at the first Homecoming night parade. Sophia Armoudian

Behind the scenes, the celebration was a massive feat of logistics—the product of countless hours of planning and months of anticipation for students who organized the week of Homecoming revelry.

Unlike many of its counterparts in the Big 12 and SEC, OU’s Homecoming Week is planned and executed by students, who spend nearly a year preparing for the festivities that draw thousands of participants each year.

Already, preparation for next year’s Homecoming is underway. By the start of the spring semester, a new Homecoming chair will have been elected, vice chairs will be chosen and students will be dreaming up ideas for the celebration—one of several events hosted by the OU Campus Activities Council each year.

Planning Homecoming Week is a marathon, current and former students in leadership roles say. It can even feel like an academic major, given the hundreds of hours they pour into planning. But it’s well worth the time to see students, alumni and the Norman community come together. 

“The thing that I love most about Homecoming is there’s really something for everybody,” says Emma Williams, this year’s Homecoming chair.

Students from every part of campus and organizations of all sizes can find a way to participate, whether it’s performing at the “Rah! Rally,” painting a banner, decorating a parade float, showing up for Trivia Night, or just snagging some free food on the south oval.

“I love seeing every corner of OU come together,” says Williams, a visual communication senior from Dallas.

This year, students put their own spin on two long-standing Homecoming traditions: the Rah! Rally and Homecoming Parade. Instead of the parade being held the Saturday morning of the Homecoming football game, students opted for a “Glow Parade” the night before the game, leading straight into the Rah! Rally on OU’s north oval. Students hoped the change would drive even more participation among students and Norman families and set OU’s Homecoming apart from its peers. 

Students have the chance each year to make their mark on the event, says Ty Aldridge, last year’s Homecoming chair and a 2023 OU graduate.

Pomping Alpha Gamma Delta/Beta Theta Pi float panels. Erikah Brown

“We offer the perspective of understanding the needs of the student body, but knowing Homecoming is student-run also provides that special drive each year for us to really make it our own and special,” he says.

Pulling off this year’s changes required plenty of communication with representatives from student organizations and OU Student Life: “A lot of emails, a lot of talking to people, a lot of meetings,” says Jasmine Mhamdi, a psychology and women and gender studies junior who is this year’s Homecoming vice chair of night programming.

On top of working with student organizations to encourage participation in Homecoming Week events, students juggle nominees for the royalty court, invite faculty and staff members to judge Homecoming competitions, and engage with alumni. 

“I’ve developed a lot of leadership skills through it all by talking with staff, faculty and alumni—it’s pretty cool,” says Harper Lashley, Homecoming vice chair for community engagement. “I get to meet so many new people all the time. I have connections with staff now who I would never in a million years have come across.” 

Students also fundraise to financially support Homecoming Week. The Homecoming operations team is responsible for visiting businesses across Norman and Oklahoma City to gain sponsorships that make events possible, says Jalen Williams, last year’s executive vice chair and a former operations committee member. 

Chalking OU’s south oval sidewalks. Sophia Armoudian

Homecoming student leaders work with staff adviser London Moore, who encourages them to take ownership of ideas and bring them to life, says Williams, an OU biology senior from Lawton, Okla. When students bring Moore an idea, she doesn’t give them instructions on how to achieve it—she’ll ask what they think they should do next.

“London drives that student focus,” he says. “She reinforces the idea that we need to think about practical ways to do the things we want. It forces you to really be in the role.” 

The friendships Homecoming executive committee members build through many hours of organizing and planning are a huge part of what makes their experience rewarding. 

“The bond between exec members is super special,” says Lashley, a Wildwood, Mo., junior majoring in nursing. “I wouldn’t have met these people without Homecoming.” 

And watching peers and alumni experience the fun and excitement of Homecoming Week makes all the time spent worthwhile, students say. 

Some might find the experience stressful, admits Mhamdi. But for her, it’s a joy.

“Seeing people enjoying something I’m doing,” she says, “That makes me feel energized, makes me feel loved, makes me feel appreciated.” 

Dana Branham is a former reporter for The Oklahoman and a freelance writer who lives in The Village, Okla.

To comment on this story, click here.

Next Story