Dual Enrolled Student To Graduate With Associate Degree Before Receiving Her High School Diploma

Seventeen-year-old Keirston Bloomfield will technically graduate from college before she graduates from high school. Having taken prerequisites for the WNMU nursing program since her freshman year of high school, Keirston has earned enough credits for an associate degree, which also happens to be enough credits to graduate from high school — one year early. When she was younger, Keirston thought she wanted to be a vet and pursued some opportunities to explore that field more. “I didn’t like it much so I thought maybe instead of animals, I could help people,” she said. She started taking dual enrollment classes at Western New Mexico University and will walk in this week’s commencement ceremony, earning an associate degree in liberal arts. (Her Silver High School graduation isn’t until May 20.) But this won’t be the end of Keirston’s educational journey. “I’m planning on finishing the rest of my prerequisites for the WNMU nursing program and applying...

Special Assignments, Class Guests Inspire Students During National Poetry Month

Jasmine Chambers In celebration of National Poetry Month, Western New Mexico University Professor Heather Frankland’s English 099 morning class completed a special assignment and worked with Silver City and Grant County Poet Laureate Eve West Bessier, who led the students through an image prompt that used N. Scott Momaday’s poem, “Delight Song of Tsoai-talee,” as inspiration. Bessier published and featured three of the student poems in her poet laureate blog on the Southwest Word Fiesta website. Jasmine Chambers’ poem is an example of the outstanding work these students produced.   “I am Alive” By Jasmine Chambers I am the pen that writes my story I am the sun that gets up everyday I am the hands that work hard I am the water within every stream I am the ink on the paper I am the pixels on the screen I am the color of the picture I am the emptiness in the room I stand in good relation to my family I stand in good relation to the guides I stand...

Regents Approve Budget, New Degree Programs, Capital Project Priorities

The Western New Mexico University Board of Regents whizzed through a lengthy agenda Friday, approving the upcoming fiscal year’s budget, agreeing on proposed new degree programs and ensuring the university is poised to capture anticipated Federal funding for infrastructure projects. After receiving general updates from faculty and staff senate presidents, student body president and also university president Dr. Joseph Shepard, the board members addressed 17 action items, tabling just one and unanimously passing the rest. Discussing the $50-million 2021-2022 fiscal year budget, Vice President for Business Affairs Kelley Riddle said, “For Instruction and General, we’ll be budgeting a carryover balance of $5.4 million. This includes a temporary budget for the Road to 4k Initiative previously approved by you,” she said. Dr. Daniel H. Lopez, one of the newest members of the board who was President of New Mexico Tech for two decades, said he asked a lot of questions about...

Inaugural WNMU Remembrance March Honors Those Who Have Served

The inaugural Western New Mexico University Remembrance March held on Saturday drew dozens to walk in honor of service members past and present. Held Saturday, this event allowed participants to commemorate the 1942 Bataan Death March. While 72 participants had pre-registered, even more who attended registered on site. More than a dozen marchers took on the 14-mile out-and-back route, while the remaining participants completed the one-mile Honor March. Each route began and ended on the WNMU campus. At least 20 marchers were veterans themselves marching in the Military category, and a couple registered in the Military Heavy category, committing to carry 35-pound packs for the duration of their journey. Some in the Civilian category carried photos of their loved ones who served in the U.S. armed forces, and others opted to write the name of a loved one they wanted to march in honor of on their participant number. Alternatively, civilians could choose to march in honor of service...

Professor Participates in Discussion on Racial, Economic, and Educational Inequalities

Roberta Brown, Composition Coordinator and Assistant Professor of English Composition at WNMU, recently participated in the Hannah Arendt Humanities Network Co-Laboratory on Racial, Economic, and Educational Inequalities. Meant to develop proposals aimed at reducing educational inequalities at the college level, it was a Structured Democratic Dialogue led by figures from the Open Society University Network and Bard College in New York over the course of a few weeks. “After President Shepard asked faculty and staff to increase enrollment to 4,000 students by the fall of 2022, I stumbled to this program in the hope that I could learn how to remove barriers to attending WNMU and attract new students to our university,” she said. Just one of 20 participants selected to join the conversation, Roberta said she had a number of takeaways. “Access to higher education is a global problem. Many of the educational challenges we face in New Mexico are not unique. Scholarships, early...

Introducing the Newest Members on the WNMU Board of Regents

The State Higher Education Department released the list of 25 New Mexicans who were nominated by Gov. Lujan Grisham and confirmed by the Senate to serve on Boards of Regents at public colleges, universities, and special schools across the state. “This year’s cadre of regents includes individuals with a high level of experience and enthusiasm for higher education, which will be key for guiding our state institutions forward in the coming years,” Higher Education Department Secretary Stephanie Rodriguez said. “We look forward to collaborating with them and all higher education leadership to ensure that New Mexico’s students and schools succeed.” Public four-year colleges, universities, and special schools are governed by boards of regents consisting of members who serve six-year terms and student members who serve two-year terms. The Board of Regents is responsible for governance of the school, including establishment of goals and policies, and overall operation...

Study.com Gives Top Rank to WNMU Online Programs

Several WNMU academic programs have earned top ranks by Study.com with School of Education online degrees shining in particular. For 2021, WNMU was listed: No. 12 Best Online Bachelor’s in Special Education, No. 16 Best Online Bachelor’s in Elementary Education, No. 27 Best Online Bachelor’s in Early Childhood Education, No. 28 Best Online Bachelor's in Social Work, and No. 37 Best Online Bachelor's in History. Over 40 million visitors per month use Study.com to research potential schools, degrees, and careers for potential students. To compile the lists, Study.com considered hundreds of universities across the country and ranked them based on academic and career resources, the quality of education, faculty, and...

WNMU Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program Meets All Requirements

The WNMU Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program, which was established 39 years ago and is also known simply as VITA, was found to have met all ten of the IRS’ Quality Site Requirements during an audit. “We are 100% in compliance,” WNMU Professor of Accounting Dr. Laurie Barfitt said. The Remote Site Reviews ensure VITA programs are performing their duties lawfully and as instructed. “Our VITA site workers were praised for their hard work and efforts to bring the service to the community, even throughout the pandemic,” said Dr. Miguel A. Vicéns, who is Associate Dean of the WNMU School of Business. Along with one community volunteer, there are seven accounting students working the long-running university VITA program this year. WNMU School of Business student-worker Paige Pinto, who is the program’s local supervisor/director, coordinated the site review. The VITA program provided by the WNMU School of Business was initiated by local certified public...

Creative Writing to Electrical Technology

Charlie Demars’ "The Embarrassment Burrowed In" won second place in the prose category of the 2020 WNMU Undergraduate Creative Writing Contest hosted by the Humanities Department. The Utah native moved to New Mexico after years of traveling, following his high school graduation. “I ended up in silver because I had a sister I’d never met,” he said. He worked at a local school for some time and then the dove into his own studies after the pandemic began. Charlie spent a semester exploring various classes but is now enrolled in the electrical technology program. “I didn’t grow up with any practical skills. Electrical seemed like a neat thing I had no idea about. It’s probably one of the more rewarding experiences I’ve been involved in,” he said. Before deciding to pursue applied technology, creative writing and English were his favorite classes. He submitted prose to the contest to earn extra credit. “The story is about my own childhood. Growing up, I feel...

WNMU Named Best in Police Officer Training

With the number of Americans on probation or parole at nearly 4.5 million, probation officer employment is projected to grow by 10%. Those looking to enter that field might considering starting their path at WNMU, which has as a top program for aspiring probation officers, according to new rankings by Intelligent.com. The site lists WNMU as the very best in police officer training specifically. All of the programs making this list meet the rigorous standards of educational quality set by well-known accrediting agencies such as the Higher Learning Commission, which is the body WNMU is accredited through. “In an accredited probation officer degree program, you’ll learn the communication, critical thinking, and emotional stability skills required to succeed,” Intelligent.com states. These rankings were developed in an evaluation of 220 education programs, comparing each on the basis of flexibility, faculty, course strength, cost, and reputation. According to Intelligent.com,...