The name YouthSync has never been about getting young people to think the same way. To us, Sync means bringing different minds into the same conversation. Students may leave holding different opinions, but they should also leave understanding why someone else reached theirs.
Part of that idea came from economist John Kenneth Galbraith, who questioned what he called conventional wisdom, the beliefs people accept simply because they are familiar. It reminded us that facts should not always be indisputable; and good conversations cannot truly begin without curiosity and battling arguments. Stephen Covey later principle of “Seek first to understand, then to be understood” reinforces that idea. Together, they shaped what YouthSync hopes to practice: to let students comfortably question and explore ideas that are unpopular, unfinished, or simply different from their own.
Whether someone is interested in law, science, business, education, or public policy, we hope YouthSync becomes a place where curiosity is valued more than certainty, and where every conversation leaves people thinking a little differently than before.