Faculty Take Part in Exchange Program in Mexico

Two WNMU faculty members, Associate Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice Damon Bullock and Associate Professor of Management David Scarborough, spent part of the summer on a faculty exchange with La Universidad del Valle de Atemaja (UNIVA) in La Piedad, Michoacán, Mexico. The purpose of the exchange is multifold, said Bullock. It is partly an extension of the university’s educational mission, and it also helps to spread awareness of WNMU. In addition, faculty themselves are enriched by the experience. For Scarborough, who is learning Spanish, the immersive experience was invaluable for its effect on his Spanish language listening skills. “If you really want to be conversant you have to be there and listen, so that you are getting context as well as the auditory input,” he said. For Bullock, the experience connected directly to his academic specialization. “Being a sociologist,” he said, “I have always been interested in diversity and culture, so it feels...

New Faculty Exhibition at the McCray Gallery Showcases the Talent of the Studio Arts Programs

  “An inspirational showcase of our professors’ artwork” is how Expressive Arts major Charlee Alexander described the new exhibition of work by WNMU faculty on display at the McCray Gallery of Contemporary Art. “It is fantastic to see all of the faculty collaborating on something,” she said, “The community of the Arts Department is a really tight-knit, loving community, and all the professors are there to support each other’s work, as they do their students.” The exhibition, which opened with a reception on October 19, features the work of seven members of the Department of Expressive Arts. Professor of Sculpture and Department Chair Michael Metcalf exhibited cast bronze sculptures as well as a slyly humorous performance piece designed specifically for the opening reception of the exhibition. This piece, titled “Melting Head,” featured a head carved of wax that was previously used to create the mold for a cast bronze self-portrait. The head was...

From the Lone Star State to the Land of Enchantment: New Library Director Brings Fresh Vision to WNMU

When the State of Texas passed Senate Bill 17 in the spring of 2023, banning offices of diversity, equity and inclusion on public college campuses, it was a career-defining moment for WNMU Miller Library Director Samantha Johnson. Johnson, who was working at a community college library in Baytown, TX, at the time, was concerned about the legislation broadly, but on a professional level she was concerned that it was going to make it difficult to do her job. “I wasn’t going to be able to do any equity programming,” she said, “We had a very active equity office, and I had done a lot of work with them.” When the legislation passed, Johnson knew she was making the right move by leaving behind her longtime home state of Texas. Even before this most recent round of legislation in Texas, Johnson was hoping to relocate. “My husband and I have wanted to move out of Houston for a long time because it is very polluted, the traffic is awful, and the weather is horrible,” she...

Venezuelan Graduate Student Finds Home at WNMU

Oscar Arteaga expected to spend recent years working on his MBA in Kansas, but when his husband found a job in Silver City, Arteaga saw a new opportunity at WNMU, and he quickly decided to expand his educational experience beyond business. While business administration remains one of his concentration areas in the WNMU MA in Interdisciplinary Studies program, he has added two others: sociology and kinesiology. “I like sociology because it has to do with human behavior,” Arteaga, who is originally from Venezuela, explained. Similarly, kinesiology has given him “an opportunity to learn about the human body, body movement, physical activity,” he said. Currently in his second year of the program, Arteaga appreciates how his unusual combination of concentrations allows him to explore “human life in its different facets.” He gets to study human behavior and relationships, social interactions, the decision-making process, leadership, management, physical activity, and...

WNMU Hosts Early Childhood Education Symposium

The New Mexico Center of Excellence for Early Childhood Education Symposium was held on the Western New Mexico University campus on October 19, 2023.  The symposium was created to share with policy makers, educational leaders and other interested stakeholders what it means for WNMU to be designated by the State Legislature as the NM Center of Excellence for Early Childhood Education. The university received this legislative distinction in 2022 for having developed a full-service center that has been providing early childhood and family services for decades. WNMU provides the highest quality child care, an active research site, a family counseling center, professional development and numerous teacher preparation programs, and it integrates these early childhood services, which is what makes the center’s model unique. The symposium also provided a forum for discussing child wellbeing in New Mexico and how the various parts of the center put this integrative model of early...

Learning in the Gallery: English Composition Students Follow a Long Tradition of Writing about Artwork

From John Keats’ “Ode on a Grecian Urn” to Anne Sexton’s “The Starry Night,” writers have often taken their inspiration from other works of art. This kind of writing—called ekphrasis—is at the heart of a recent assignment that Associate Professor Roberta Brown gave to students in her English composition class. Brown said the assignment was not originally one she had planned for the semester, but rather one that emerged on the opening night of the recent McCray Gallery of Contemporary Art retrospective of the art of former WNMU art professor Cecil Howard. One of Brown’s students, Brandy Lynn, was also at the opening reception, and Lynn told Brown that she wished the class could write about Howard’s art. Brown agreed that the exhibit would serve as an excellent subject for the students in her English composition class, and she quickly amended her course plans to include the new writing assignment. Ekphrasis, explained Brown, “is a form handed down to us from...

Teacher Residency Program Provides Mentorship for New Teachers

The WNMU School of Education is in its second year of offering a Teacher Residency program that allows students finishing their coursework to earn $35,000 for a two-semester guided apprenticeship in which they work alongside mentor educators. The program was created following the passage of House Bill 13, the Teacher Residency Act, which in 2022 established funding and guidelines for offering teacher residencies across the state. According to Assistant Professor of Secondary Education Stephanie Fanselow, who directs the program at WNMU, lawmakers created the program as a measure to grow and diversify the teaching workforce. “They want teachers who look like the kids in the classroom,” she said. What that means can vary in different parts of the state, depending on the local population, said Fanselow. The residency is a two-semester program that pairs each teacher resident with a mentor teacher who works in a New Mexican public or tribal school. Students planning to teach at...

From Regular Patrols to Flat Tire Fixes, Campus Police Work Toward a Safe Campus

While the Campus Police force is small, with only six staff members, they play an outsized role in keeping the WNMU campus safe. “We are a full-service police department,” said Barbara Perez, WNMU Campus Security Specialist, “We handle all the cases, whether they are an offense report or an accident report, or just general information reports, we take care of all of it.” The officers are all retired from other police forces, said Patrolman Joseph Arredondo. “We do come with a lot of experience,” he said, “Any situation that arises, it’s not new to us.” All of the officers are certified through the state of New Mexico, Arredondo added. According to Perez, the most common type of crime on campus is theft, which is also the easiest to prevent. “We try to put it out there to make sure your doors are locked,” she said. Arredondo added that when crime occurs, it is commonly because the dorm entrance doors are propped open. While the exterior doors lock...

An Eclectic Mind: MA in Interdisciplinary Studies Grad Uses His Degree to Teach College Classes in Diverse Areas

When Jon Weiss (MA ’21) found the Master of Arts program in Interdisciplinary Studies at Western New Mexico University, he did not just find it serendipitous. Said Weiss, “I read the description , and I thought, ‘That can’t be right. That’s too close to what I want. I must be reading something incorrectly,’ It didn’t seem possible that there was something that put together … what I was interested in doing.” What Weiss was interested in doing was getting a degree that would allow him to explore his diverse interests. Having worked for many years as a mediator in Chicago and not ready for retirement, Weiss explored work in information technologies, tutoring, and teaching high school before deciding he wanted to go to graduate school. He had already earned bachelor’s degrees in Political Science and Information Technology and taken numerous science classes, and he was ready for a new challenge. After finding the MA program in Interdisciplinary Studies at WNMU,...

Looking to the Past and Future to Reignite MEChA

Students at WNMU will be continuing a long-lived student organization this year as they revitalize MEChA (Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlán). MEChA began in the 1960s as a national activist and educational organization that was fueled by the civil rights movements and especially by the Chicano Movement. Today it has over 400 loosely affiliated chapters, many of them on college campuses, including the chapter at WNMU. While the organization lost momentum on campus in recent years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this year, student leaders are determined to bring new energy to the group. MEChA President Anais Orantez, an English major with minors in Communications and Music, was recently elected to her position after serving in an interim role. She was asked to serve as Interim President by the previous president who no longer had time in his schedule to serve. While Orantez, who is in her second year at WNMU, did not see herself stepping into the role of President so soon,...