Social Work Major Evaluates Student Academic Experiences During Pandemic

“Everything I’d always been in interested in was the social work trajectory,” said senior Jia Rowland, who made her way to WNMU from Indiana and was recently accepted to the university’s Master of Social Work program. “I like improving systems in order to improve the human experience, which is why I did this project.” She is referring to the research she conducted over the summer thanks to a stipend and support received through the WNMU Student Research and Professional Development program. Rowland had previously worked as a research assistant to WNMU sociologist Dr. Dara Naphan-Kingery. “I did all the dirty work, helped her code data and analyze the findings. I said, ‘I could do this on my own, on a smaller scale.’” Specifically, Rowland wondered if other students were having the same negative experiences she was during the pandemic. “When the pandemic began, I didn’t have a home to go to and was the only person in the dorms. I was working graveyard...

Eight Southwest Pots See the Light

The Western New Mexico University Museum recently gained ownership of the Hoffman Collection, which was transferred from the Roswell Museum and Art Center last month. “Roswell received the vessels in 2011, and they sat in storage,” said WNMU Museum Director Danielle Romero. “Since our focus is Southwest pottery, the Western New Mexico University Museum was chosen to be their new home.” The Hoffman Collection includes two Gila Polychromes, a Kayenta Black-on-White, one Mimbres Style III-Early, a Four Mile Polychrome, one Casas Grandes, an Acoma (historic) and a Santo Domingo (historic) vessel. The Four Mile Polychrome is the first of this type that WNMU Museum claims. The collection of eight vessels is on display as a whole right now, then visitors will be able to view each vessel alongside like pieces in other WNMU Museum collections. “The Hoffman Collection will eventually be incorporated into our existing pottery displays,” Romero said. Get the WNMU...

WNMU | Deming Learning Center Construction Underway

University and community leaders broke ground on the WNMU | Deming Learning Center this morning. Residents of southwest New Mexico can look forward to having a healthcare-focused training facility in their backyards. With the goal of enhancing current WNMU | Deming offerings and expanding the programs available to students in Luna County, the WNMU | Deming Learning Center will provide learning spaces for the WNMU School of Nursing as well as general education courses, according to a capital projects transmittal reviewed by the board of regents. On property within walking distance of Mimbres Memorial Hospital and Deming High School, the WNMU | Deming Learning Center has the potential to increase student enrollment, especially in healthcare disciplines, and meet the needs of students who are dual enrolled in high school classes. In addition to classrooms, offices, and a conference room, the 8,600 square foot facility will include skills and simulation labs, an observation...

Lab Rat Eyes Ph.D. in Chemistry

“I like knowing with certainty whether something is right or wrong and being able to prove it,” said Nick Arnold, a Silver City native who is double majoring in cell/molecular biology and chemistry at Western New Mexico University. He’d had set out to enter the university’s forest/wildlife program because he’d worked for the U.S. Forest Service in the past. But he discovered his preference for the science classes with definite answers. Also partial to working in a lab, Arnold liked taking a hands-on approach to his work. The WNMU senior completed a New Mexico INBRE summer experience focused on biomedical research. Arnold looked as the mutant variant of the DUSP5 protein, which “is related to cancer,” in particular. “I spent time expressing the protein and isolating it so we could send the protein to get its crystal structure. My mentor was a theoretical chemist who wanted to create a computer model and simulate the action of both the mutant and wild type...

Writer In Residence’s Book Wins Award

WNMU Writer In Residence JJ Amaworo Wilson’s "Nazaré: a novel" won the New Mexico-Arizona Book Award for Literary Fiction. Among the winners was "First & Wildest: The Gila Wilderness at 100," an anthology to which Amaworo Wilson contributed a short piece. A poetry finalist as Jack Crocker’s "The Algorithm of I," published by Mimbres Press of...

Psychology Major Grows By Leaving Her Comfort Zone

Psychology major Jazmin Castillo applied for a summer research experience thinking it would boost her application to graduate school. “Plus, it was a good opportunity to get out of my comfort zone,” said the Silver City native. As part of the BUILDing Scholars program in El Paso, she researched addiction psychology in animal models, focusing on how dietary intake impacts drug sensitivity. “We focused on a diet similar to the ketogenic diet,” she said. “On experiment days, we administered morphine in 15-minute increments. Then we’d put the rats’ tails in warm water and see how long they’d leave their tail in the water.” It was her responsibility to feed the rats daily, weighing them and their food to see how much they consumed. “I didn’t want to work with animal models but I met with my mentor and she said it could be a good experience for me,” she said. “I’d didn’t expect to pick it up so quickly.” At the closing symposium, she presented...

BSN Programs Re-Accredited

The WNMU School of Nursing underwent the accreditation process this fall, and both tracks of the Bachelor of Science in Nursing program were again accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education. WNMU now can enjoy another decade running a proven and fully accredited BSN...

WNMU Student Presenting at National Diversity in STEM Conference

One of the first Western New Mexico University students ever accepted into the selective Undergraduate Pipeline Network paid summer internship, Devon Hatcher studied traumatic brain injuries in mouse models at UNM between the spring and fall semesters. The senior cell/molecular biology major’s research was awarded as the top project of the summer. As a result, Hachter was invited to present at the National Diversity in STEM Conference in Puerto Rico this month. They also won a full travel scholarship to attend. Mentored by Dr. Jennifer Johnston in the WNMU psychology program and Dr. Tres Camacho in the WNMU cell/molecular biology program, Hatcher wants to pursue biomedical research in neuroscience. “I’ve always liked psychology and biology and I’ve tried to find a way that would create a degree plan that would allow me to do both and look at psychology from a biological perspective,” they said. So when Dr. Camacho mentioned to Hatcher the research opportunity in...

WNMU is a Child Care and Teacher Prep Program Influencer Statewide

By Dr. Cindy Martinez, Associate Dean in WNMU College of Education, Associate Professor of Early Childhood In 2019, Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham advocated for and the NM Legislature designated four Centers of Excellence at New Mexico higher education institutions. The Centers of Excellence would be charged with collaborating across public and private entities to innovate in job creation, business development and advancement of the field. Then, the COVID 19 pandemic hit and there were no more designations, until now. In 2022, the New Mexico Legislature designated a new Center of Excellence for the state at Western New Mexico University focusing on early childhood. Unlike other self-designated early childhood centers, the WNMU Center of Excellence in Early Childhood has received this legislative designation for having developed a full-service center that has been providing early childhood and family services for decades. With the embedded Family Counseling Center, the WNMU...

Hantavirus Research Expands Pre-Med Student’s Skills

WNMU cell and molecular biology major Vera Layton is minoring in chemistry and aiming for medical school. The senior from Tucson, Arizona, said she wants to become a doctor to help people, even though that sounds—in her mind—cliché. “I’m good with people interactions and good with medicine.” She spent June and July studying hantaviruses. The Undergraduate Pipeline Network summer research experience, essentially a paid internship in STEM, confirmed that Layton would rather be face-to-face with a patient than alone in a laboratory. “We were looking at molecular pathways for hantavirus. We know what it causes but not why it causes it,” Layton said. “Hantaviruses aren’t very well known. There’s no treatment. We’re trying to find ways to reduce hospitalization.” Working with one strain, Layton worked to extract all the components of the virus. “The only one I was able to successfully extract was the nucleocapsid. I was able to extract and synthesize...