WNMU Undergraduate Creative Writing Contest – Entries Due

Entries may be poetry or prose with the following limits: Poetry - one entry of 1-3 poems Prose - one entry of fiction or creative non-fiction up to five pages Submit your entries by February 23, 2023, including a two sentence bio written in the third person, to creativewriting@wnmu.edu or heather.frankland@wnmu.edu. Winners, announced this spring, will receive awards and be published in The...

Early Childhood Program Receives Grant for Therapeutic Classroom

The New Mexico Center of Excellence for Early Childhood Education of WNMU was recently awarded a $50,000 Community Investment Fund grant from the Freeport-McMoRan Foundation. The grant money will be matched by the university and will be used to establish a therapeutic preschool classroom at the Childhood Development Center. A therapeutic classroom is one that is designed to facilitate programs that develop children’s foundational cognitive capacities that underpin all later development, including academic achievement. According to Christina Riddle, Program Director of the WNMU Family Counseling Center, the new classroom will be distinguished by its small class size and staffed by teachers and therapists with special training that has prepared them for the role. The idea for the therapeutic preschool classroom, said Riddle, was “born out of a need that we have identified especially over the last several years.” Citing the pandemic and a world of shifting stressors for...

WNMU Requests Capital Outlay to Achieve Carbon Neutrality

WNMU is requesting $15,000,000 from the NM Legislature to help the university achieve its goal of becoming carbon neutral by 2030. At present, the greatest source of renewable energy at WNMU is PNM’s Community Solar Direct program, which draws electricity from a solar farm in northern New Mexico. The university also draws power from photovoltaic solar panels located near the Fine Arts Center Theatre and the WNMU Museum, and the university plans to install additional solar carports as well as freestanding photovoltaic panels. According to the WNMU Campus Master Plan, the “best source of energy is produced right at the point of use. Therefore, onsite renewable energy generation systems are paramount for reducing carbon emissions in the most efficient method possible.” In addition to increasing the production of solar energy, carbon neutrality will also require that WNMU improve existing power and water systems to make them more efficient. The university has already taken...

WNMU Undergraduate Creative Writing Contest Open for Submissions

The Western New Mexico University Undergraduate Creative Writing Contest is calling for poetry and prose entries from undergraduate students at WNMU. Poetry entries should include 1-3 poems. Prose entries can be either fiction or creative non-fiction and should be a maximum of 5 pages. Entrants must include a two-sentence biographical statement written in the third person. Submit entries by February 23, 2024 to creativewriting@wnmu.edu or heather.frankland@wnmu.edu. Winners will be announced and awarded prizes this spring and will be published in a forthcoming edition of The...

WNMU Welding Program Leads Student to a Satisfying Career

Silver City native Ethan Sanchez did not always know that he would become a welder. “I started the CNA program. I wanted to be a nurse first of all,” he explained. Once he entered into direct care, though, he realized that it was not for him. While looking for an alternative career path, Sanchez met James Ortiz, Director of Community and Workforce Development at WNMU, who suggested he consider welding. “I tried it, and I fell in love with it,” said Sanchez. He noted that creativity and job security were the main reasons he was so attracted to welding. “You can always put your own touch to it,” he said, “I like to make personal.” He also enjoys having a career that will always be in demand and pays well. Since completing his welding certificate at WNMU in 2023, Sanchez has been working for a local construction company and has been surprised by where his new career has taken him. Most recently, he traveled to the San Diego area for a project, and he will soon...

WNMU to Create New Career Technical Education Center

Anyone who has recently needed home maintenance or repair knows that New Mexico needs more skilled workers.  According to the New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions, that need is only expected to grow.  The statewide need for workers in construction and extraction industries is expected to grow by 11% between 2020 and 2030, and in that same period, the labor market in installation, maintenance and repair is expected to grow almost 13%. The need for health care support workers is expected to grow 22.6%. Western New Mexico University is already addressing these shortages by training skilled workers through its Community and Workforce Development programs—including programs in welding, electrical, construction technology and industrial mechanics—but the university has plans to significantly expand its capacity through a new Career Technical Education Center. The new facility would offer trade training programs that tie directly to employment opportunities in Western New...

The Call of Mariachi Attracts Musician to WNMU

Even before he set foot in a classroom on campus, first year student Antonio Guerrero was immersed in Mariachi Plata de WNMU. A graduate of Atrisco Heritage Academy High School in Albuquerque, Guerrero was in Silver City last June for El Son de la Gila, a mariachi conference sponsored by WNMU, and for ¡Fiesta Latina!, the annual celebration of New Mexico’s connection with its Mexican heritage, customs and traditions. “We hit the ground running when I came here because even before I started classes, we had a two-week camp for ¡Fiesta Latina!” and the conference, said Guerrero. Mariachi Plata de WNMU is central to Guerrero’s attendance at the university. He learned about the group when members visited and performed at his high school with WNMU Music Instructor and Director of Mariachi Plata de WNMU Bryant Chaffino. “They are the biggest reason why I came here,” said Guerrero. Since this summer, Guerrero, who plays the vihuela for the group, has traveled...

WNMU Board of Regents Shows Support for President Joseph Shepard, Reaffirms Commitment to International Partnerships

The Western New Mexico University Board of Regents voted to review the university’s policies and procedures, reaffirmed the importance of the university’s international partnerships and heard from faculty, staff and student leadership representatives during their meeting, conducted in a hybrid manner, Friday, January 19, 2024. They also allowed substantial time for public comment. With no old business to consider, the regents spent a portion of the meeting hearing updates from across campus as presented by WNMU President Dr. Joseph Shepard, Vice President of External Affairs Dr. Magdaleno Manzanarez, Faculty Senate President Dr. Scott Smith, Staff Senate President Adele Springer and Associated Students of WNMU President Elizabeth Gonzales. Regent Chair Dr. Mary Hotvedt presided over the meeting from Miller Library along with Student Regent Trent Jones, with Regents Dr. Lyndon Haviland and Dal Moellenberg joining virtually. During his report, President Dr. Joseph Shepard...

In the Works: New Home for Early Childhood Education

 WNMU is requesting $14,000,000 of capital outlay funding for Phase I of construction of a new building complex to house the New Mexico Center of Excellence in Early Childhood Education, which is dedicated to educating and training New Mexico’s early childhood educators. The new facility will be built on university-owned land off of N. Alabama St., behind the St. Mary’s Academy building in Silver City. At 12,500 square feet, it will house five classrooms, a kitchen, administrative offices and a reception area, and it will be powered by rooftop photovoltaic cells in keeping with the university’s plan to be carbon-neutral by 2030. Outside on the property will be a toddler playground, a school-age playground, an amphitheater and an outdoor classroom, and nearby is situated the Guadalupe Montessori School. “The current Child Development Center is facing capacity constraints,” said Dr. Cindy Martinez, Dean of the College of Education, “These constraints will continue to...

Transplanted from Idaho, a WNMU Family Puts Down Roots in New Mexico

Attending WNMU is a family affair for first-year student Stacey Bernstein. Her mother is also a student at the university, earning her Master’s of Social Work, and her younger sister, who is a senior in high school, is a dual-enrollment student at WNMU. The family of six lives on 26 acres near Silver City with a bevy of animals: donkeys, a cow, chicken, geese, cats, a sugar glider and Saint Bernards, including a recent litter of puppies. Whether surrounded by animals or humans, community is very important to Bernstein and one of the things she appreciates most about WNMU. “It is very community oriented,” she said of the university campus, “Every day I see friends that I went to high school with. It is nice to see familiar faces.” Another reason for her to choose WNMU is that it is so close to home. Born in California, Bernstein and her family moved from Idaho to New Mexico just a few years ago, and she was ready to stay put. “I feel like I just had a big move,”...