WNMU Seeks Legislative Funding 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 nearly 14% between 2022 and 2032, and in that same period, the labor market in installation, maintenance and repair is expected to grow by more than 12%. 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 and construction technology—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 southwestern New Mexico, especially those available in the four-cities region that...

WNMU Museum Welcomes New Collection of Early Mimbres Artifacts, Shedding Light on Historical Southwestern Culture

The latest collection of artifacts donated to the Western New Mexico University Museum comes to the university from just up the road. The materials are from La Gila Encantada, a Late Pithouse era Mimbres site located in Little Walnut Canyon on property owned by the Archaeological Conservancy. Archaeologists consider the Late Pithouse period to be approximately AD 550-1,000. According to WNMU Museum Director Dr. Danielle Romero, the site was excavated in 2004 and 2005 as part of an archaeological field school run by Dr. Barbara Roth of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. The site is a small one, said Romero, with nineteen pithouses and a small two-room field house. A pithouse is a mostly subterranean structure that Mimbres people inhabited before the Classic Era, when they began building larger above-ground pueblos. “We think they are all autonomous pithouses,” Romero said of Gila Encantada. “At some of the larger pithouse sites, we see evidence of extended households,...

Mariachi Plata de WNMU Named “Festival Favorite” at Prestigious Event

Last fall, Mariachi Plata de WNMU had an opportunity to travel to Jalisco to be featured at De Tecalitlán Los Sones, the world’s most prestigious festival of mariachi. The group attended the festival by invitation of its organizers. “They heard of us through the mariachi that we work with from Guadalajara, Mariachi Estrella de Mexico,” said Director of Mariachi Plata de WNMU Bryant Chaffino. For the past two years, WNMU has partnered with Estrella de Mexico for El Son de la Gila, the annual mariachi conference held on campus in June. The festival is eleven days long, according to Chaffino, and each day several mariachi groups perform on a stage in the town square. All of the other performers were professional mariachis; Mariachi Plata de WNMU was the only university group to perform at the prestigious festival. The setting of the festival was itself inspiring, said Chaffino. While Tecalitlán is a small town in terms of population, it has had an outsized influence on...

Nursing Students and Faculty Visit Santa Fe to Learn about Health Care Advocacy

Toward the end of fall semester, WNMU Nursing students and faculty had a chance to learn more about the legislative process and professional advocacy at the New Mexico Nurses Association Student Day at the New Mexico Legislature. “The purpose is to teach the students to advocate,” explained Associate Professor of Nursing Margaret Fran Driver. “They had students from every university in the state come to Santa Fe.” Driver led the trip along with Assistant Professor of Nursing Angela Cox. Joining them were two Level 3 nursing students, Ariana Medina and Catherine Fierro. The experience was a full-day affair, said Driver. “They had a morning session where they talked about the legislation that would be coming up in the next legislative session,” she noted. “And then we walked over to the Roundhouse and watched the Legislative Health Committee.” At the Roundhouse, the students and faculty then had a chance to talk with several legislators, as well as with the...

WNMU Wishes Happy Retirement to Longtime Staff Member

A longtime member of the WNMU community is stepping down following a distinguished career of service to the university. Barbara Flores’ most recent position has been as Program Manager, Library Operations/Special Events. She has also worked in Academic Affairs, the Registrar’s Office, Athletics, the Western Institute of Lifelong Learning and the President’s Office. A number of Flores’ significant memories of her time at the university stem from her service on Staff Senate. Flores, who was one of original senators when Staff Senate was created in the 1980s, was instrumental in changing the pay structure for staff. “Staff used to get paid once a month,” explained Flores. “I did some research and called all the other universities to find out how they were paying their staff, and everyone was getting paid twice a month. So I contacted the university president, and he agreed to move to twice a month.” Flores also played an important role in encouraging the...

Western New Mexico University Earns Reaccreditation by Higher Learning Commission

The Higher Learning Commission (HLC) has informed Western New Mexico University that the university has been reaccredited for the next 10 years. The accreditation decision was made following a rigorous peer review, evaluation and site visit, according to WNMU Accreditation Liaison Officer Connie Rooks. HLC is a private, nonprofit institutional accrediting agency. HLC Accreditation validates the quality of the institution and is essential for the university to continue offering federal financial aid. Rooks said that the site visit, which occurred in October 2024, went smoothly. “We were really excited about the type of feedback we were getting,” she said. At this visit, a delegation of individuals with extensive experience in higher education came to the campus to speak with students, faculty, staff and administrators. The path leading to the site visit was rigorous, said Rooks. While the accreditation process is always ongoing during the ten-year cycle, she said,...

Teaching in the Borderlands: WNMU College of Education Faculty Gain Immersive Experience

Every day, students in Puerto Palomas, Chihuahua, and Columbus and Deming, New Mexico, navigate two countries, two languages, and two distinct educational systems. For these young U.S. citizens living in Mexico, crossing the U.S.-Mexico border to attend school is just another part of the routine. But for the faculty members from the WNMU College of Education, a recent visit to this border community was an eye-opening experience—one that revealed both the challenges and importance of bilingual education in the borderlands. The day trip to Deming, Columbus and Palomas was organized by Professor of Education and Associate Dean of the College of Education Alexandra Neves. It was prompted by a desire to better understand the students that the university is educating and to better understand the students that education majors will have in their classrooms. Many WNMU education students come to the university from Deming, said Neves, and the university also has dual enrollment...

Welcome Back!

Welcome to spring semester 2025! Enrollment is still open for spring courses, which begin Monday, January 13, 2025. Students interested in enrolling should contact their...

WNMU Dedicates New Sculpture with Ribbon-Cutting Event

Western New Mexico University held a dedication and ribbon-cutting ceremony in honor of the university’s newest and largest public sculpture, Dec. 12, 2024. The event celebrated Professor Emeritus Michael Metcalf’s newly installed work, Collaboration: The Student’s Journey. WNMU President Joseph Shepard opened the dedication by addressing why public art is so important to the university. “The arts,” said Shepard, “are what make us human. … The arts are about moving beyond your current generation.” Shepard noted that Metcalf had made a profound difference to WNMU intellectually, artistically, and as a colleague. “Today,” he said, Metcalf “gets to make an indelible difference for generations to come with his artwork.” After thanking all the people that helped bring about the sculpture, Metcalf spoke about his inspiration for creating it, the university’s Applied Liberal Arts and Sciences program. “I was curriculum chair at the beginning of it, so I...