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Students receive high school equivalency diplomas at ceremony Sunday

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THESE SIX STUDENTS were among 17 who recently received their high school equivalency diplomas through Missouri State University-West Plains’ Adult Education and Literacy (AEL) Program and particiapted in graduation ceremonies Sunday afternoon, July 26, at the West Plains Civic Center theater.  An estimated 100 family members, friends and university officials were on hand to congratulate the graduates and enjoy refreshments after the ceremony.  Front row from left: Jennifer Wake and Samantha Burlin, both of West Plains, and Nicole Peery, Dora; back row: Calvin Fuller Jr., West Plains, Robert Peytan Bassett, Alton, and Allison Routh, Mtn. View.  Other graduates include Alyssa Thompson, Crystal Arambula, Matthew Davis, Drew Burke, Kelly Moshier and Michael Devencenzi, all of West Plains; Angela Lockerby and Connor McManus, both of Alton; Tiffany Fisher and Janeva Stoltzfus, both of Mtn. View; and Darrell Rohrer, Summersville. (Missouri State-West Plains Photo).

THESE SIX STUDENTS were among 17 who recently received their high school equivalency diplomas through Missouri State University-West Plains’ Adult Education and Literacy (AEL) Program and particiapted in graduation ceremonies Sunday afternoon, July 26, at the West Plains Civic Center theater. An estimated 100 family members, friends and university officials were on hand to congratulate the graduates and enjoy refreshments after the ceremony. Front row from left: Jennifer Wake and Samantha Burlin, both of West Plains, and Nicole Peery, Dora; back row: Calvin Fuller Jr., West Plains, Robert Peytan Bassett, Alton, and Allison Routh, Mtn. View. Other graduates include Alyssa Thompson, Crystal Arambula, Matthew Davis, Drew Burke, Kelly Moshier and Michael Devencenzi, all of West Plains; Angela Lockerby and Connor McManus, both of Alton; Tiffany Fisher and Janeva Stoltzfus, both of Mtn. View; and Darrell Rohrer, Summersville. (Missouri State-West Plains Photo).


New classes added to fall schedule at Mountain Grove campus

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Shannon Hall in Mountain Grove

Shannon Hall in Mountain Grove

WEST PLAINS, Mo. – A new writing class, Writing II: Academic Writing (ENG 210) and an additional section of College Algebra (MTH 135) have been added to the 2015 fall semester course schedule at Missouri State University-West Plains’ campus in Mountain Grove.

Mountain Grove Campus Coordinator Lu Adams said the writing class will be held 4 to 5:20 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays, and the math class will meet from 5:30 to 8:20 p.m. Wednesdays at Shannon Hall, 401 E. 17th St.

Writing II: Academic Writing is a three-credit-hour class in which students will study and practice the discourse conventions of academic writing and writing about public affairs from the perspective of an educated person, according to the university’s course catalog.  Students will have needed to earn a grade C or better in Writing I (ENG 110) before enrolling in this class.

College Algebra is a three-credit-hour class that covers problem solving, polynomial, rational, exponential, and logarithmic functions, equations, inequalities and their applications; coordinate geometry, including conic sections and systems of equations/ inequalities; and an introduction to sequences and series, according to the course catalog.  Students who have not taken Intermediate Algebra (MTH 103) should have two units of high school algebra and an approved score on a departmental placement test to take this class.

Registration for these and other classes scheduled for the 2015 fall semester at the Mountain Grove or West Plains campuses, as well as online, will continue through Aug. 16.  A complete course schedule can be found at http://wp.missouristate.edu/admissions/schedule.htm.

For more information about admission and registration procedures, contact Adams at 417-547-7575 or visit www.wp.missouristate.edu.

9th annual Ozarks Studies Symposium set for Sept. 17-19

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DR. STEVE WIEGENSTEIN, director of graduate studies at Columbia College and author two award-wining novels, Slant of Light and This Old World, will be the keynote speaker of the ninth annual Ozarks Studies Symposium hosted by Missouri State University-West Plains Sept. 17-19 at the West Plains Civic Center. Wiegenstein will give his presentation, “The Lure of the Ozarks: What’s the Bait and Who’s the Fish?” at 4 p.m. Friday, Sept. 18. All symposium presentations are free and open to all.  (Photo provided)

DR. STEVE WIEGENSTEIN, director of graduate studies at Columbia College and author two award-wining novels, Slant of Light and This Old World, will be the keynote speaker of the ninth annual Ozarks Studies Symposium hosted by Missouri State University-West Plains Sept. 17-19 at the West Plains Civic Center. Wiegenstein will give his presentation, “The Lure of the Ozarks: What’s the Bait and Who’s the Fish?” at 4 p.m. Friday, Sept. 18. All symposium presentations are free and open to all. (Photo provided)

WEST PLAINS, Mo. – “The Lure of the Ozarks” is the theme of the ninth annual Ozarks Studies Symposium set for Sept. 17-19 at the West Plains Civic Center.

The event celebrates various aspects of Ozarks culture through presentations and performances by representatives of the academic world and the public sector. The Symposium Committee is sponsoring this program in partnership with the Missouri Humanities Council and with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional funding will be provided by the office of academic affairs at Missouri State University-West Plains, the West Plains Council on the Arts and the Community Foundation of the Ozarks. All activites of the symposium are free and open to all.

“This year’s theme seems to be a popular one, for we have 20 presentations on an exciting variety of topics, such as Ozarks literature, anti-Semitic violence, folk music, archeology, peach farming, back-to the land movements, Bald Knobbers, Rose O’Neill, communes and woodcuts,” said Dr. Phillip Howerton, associate professor of English at Missouri State-West Plains and coordinator of the symposium. “There are numerous reasons why people have been drawn to the Ozarks, ranging from the very positive to the very negative. Some people’s experiences in the region prompt them to stay a lifetime while others hurriedly make their escape. Everyone who lives here lives here for a reason, so we hope they will attend this symposium and join the conversation.”

The symposium will begin with an opening reception from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 17, on the mezzanine at the West Plains Civic Center. This reception will feature The Missouri Immigrant and Refugee Advocates (MIRA) photographic exhibition, “The Missouri Immigrant Experience,” which explores the lives and history of Missouri’s immigrants and refugees. The exhibit features the works of four Missouri-based artists, focusing on their own communities, as well as historical images. The reception is admission free and sponsored by the West Plains Council on the Arts, with financial support from the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

The symposium’s keynote address will be given at 4 p.m. Friday, Sept. 18, by Dr. Steve Wiegenstein, the director of graduate studies at Columbia College. Wiegenstein is the author of two novels, Slant of Light, which was the runner up for the 2012 Langum Prize in American historical fiction and a finalist for the 2014 Balcones Fiction Prize; and This Old World, which was a finalist for the M. M. Bennetts Award for Historical Fiction. Wiegenstein’s presentation is “The Lure of the Ozarks: What’s the Bait and Who’s the Fish?”

Other presentations during the two-day symposium include:

• “Re-Creation in the Ozarks: Sue Hubbell’s A Country Year” by Dr. Brian Hardman, associate professor of English, University of the Ozarks. A Country Year is considered a contemporary classic in the genre of nature writing, and nature writing plays a special role in Ozarks literature. This presentation will connect Hubbell’s book to the tradition of nature writing and explain how she is able, in the original sense of the word “recreation,” to come to the Ozarks and “re-create” her life as a farmer and beekeeper after her 30 year marriage broke up.

• “When an Ozark Boyhood Really Isn’t: Reconsidering Wayman Hogue’s Back Yonder” by Dr. Brooks Blevins, Noel Boyd Professor of Ozarks Studies, Missouri State University. As the first volume in its new series “Chronicles of the Ozarks,” the University of Arkansas Press is reprinting the 1932 book Back Yonder. Blevins, who has edited and written an introduction for the volume, digs into the heretofore obscure backstory of Wayman Hogue and finds some unexpected revelations about this “Ozark Chronicle,” revelations that address regional definition and identity.

• “What brought Frazier Glenn Miller to the Ozarks?” by Dr. Mara W Cohen Ioannides, senior instructor of English, Missouri State University. This paper examines what drew Frazier Glenn Miller to the region and the reactions of both the Jewish and non-Jewish metro-Springfield communities to the anti-Semitic violence he perpetrated.

• Music Panel with Dr. Ed McKinney, emeritus professor of history, Missouri State-West Plains. Dr. McKinney and a group of old-time musicians will discuss and perform a variety of Ozarks folk tunes.

• “The Big Eddy Site: A Deep, Stratified, Multicomponent Site in the Sac River Valley of Southwest Missouri” by Jack H. Ray, assistant director of the Center for Archaeological Research and assistant research professor, Missouri State University. Six seasons of field work at the Big Eddy site produced voluminous data on the archaeology of the lower Sac River Valley situated on the border between the eastern plains and western woodlands. This presentation focuses on the Paleoindian and Archaic occupations that occurred at Big Eddy between approximately 13,500 and 3,000 years ago.

• “Open and Sheltered Sites: Late Prehistoric Adaptations along the Western Flanks of the Ozarks” by Dr. Neal H. Lopinot, director of the Center for Archaeological Research and a full research professor, Missouri State University. Archaeological research during the past 20 years at sites along the western edge of the Ozarks and dating to ca. A.D. 1300–1500 has resulted in the recovery of much new subsistence information. Plant and animal remains from excavations at a large village, a civic-ceremonial center, a rockshelter, and a cave, all dating to the Neosho phase, will be described.

• “Peach Fever” by Susan Edens, assistant professor of practice in communications, University of the Ozarks. This short documentary film will present the story of a five-generation peach-growing family. The Morgan family has operated a successful orchard on the same stretch of land at the base of the Ozark Mountains for over 100 years. How do they do it? What does it take to grow a peach? What besides the taste and variety of this summer treasure brings the same people back year after year? This is the art and science of agriculture, but it is also a lesson in history and land stewardship.

• “Deep Revolution in the Arkansas Ozarks” by Dr. Jared M. Phillips, adjunct professor of history, University of Arkansas-Fayetteville. As the nation attempted to recover from the chaos and anger of Vietnam and the backlash against the Great Society during the 1970s, the counterculture began seeking new ways to live out the Aquarian Revolution. While much has been made of groups living in San Francisco and elsewhere, little attention has been paid to members of the counterculture who fled America’s urban environments and headed for the hills, in particular, the Ozarks of Arkansas. This paper discusses the rationale behind the thousands of young, largely middle class “back-to-the-landers” who came to the Arkansas Ozarks searching for a place to build a true and lasting human community, creating what is termed here as a “deep revolution.”

• “A Place of Restoration, Recreation, and Safety: The Ozarks in The Shepherd of the Hills, The Bald-Knobbers and The Witness” by Dr. John J. Han, professor of English and creative writing and humanities chair, Missouri Baptist University, and Dr. Aya Kubota, professor of American literature in the Department of Intercultural Studies at Bunka Gakuen University in Tokyo, Japan. This presentation explores the enduring appeal of the Ozarks region by examining three popular novels set in the highland region of the central United States: Harold Bell Wright’s The Shepherd of the Hills (1907), Clyde Edwin Tuck’s The Bald-Knobbers: A Romantic and Historical Novel (1910), and Nora Roberts’s The Witness (2012).

• “Rose Cecil O’Neill: Inspirations from Her Ozarks Bonniebrook Homestead” by Susan Scott, president of the Bonniebrook Historical Society (BHS) Board of Directors and acting volunteer curator for the BHS Museum and Fine Art Gallery. Scott will provide a brief biography of artist Rose Cecil O’Neill and will explore how O’Neill’s art and writings were inspired by the countryside and folklore of the Ozarks.

• “Readings from Border States” by Dr. Jane Hoogestraat, professor of English and literature coordinator, Missouri State University. Hoogestraat will be reading from her recently published book, Border States, a collection of poems set in her native state of South Dakota and her current home of Missouri.

• “Bootlegger’s Ballad and Hard Travelin’ Man: Studies in Woodcut” by Neal Harrington, gallery director and associate professor of art printmaking, Arkansas Technical University. Two series of works will be presented, the Bootlegger’s Ballad and Hard Travelin’ Man, to explore themes of the human condition and to show that the timeless quest for oneself is truly an eternal struggle. The independent character of the land and the people of the Ozarks region play a distinctive role in the development of this artwork, for this area encompasses a fierce and rich landscape full of folklore and mythologies of individuals who have forged their own trail in life.

• “The Dan Blocker Singers and an Ozarks Utopia” by Dr. Thomas Kersen, associate professor of sociology, Jackson State University. In the late 1960s, a nationally known singing group, The Dan Blocker Singers, moved to the Arkansas Ozarks to live communally. After enduring a series of misfortunes and the hostility of local citizens, they left the Ozarks in the early 1970s. This presentation, using various documentary sources and an in-depth interview, will go into greater detail about this intentional community and also explore the dynamics between this commune and their mainstream neighbors and other area communes.

• “The Saltiest of the Old-Timers Are Dead Now” by Kim McCully-Mobley, adjunct professor, Drury University. This presentation will be an overview of the career of folklorist Vance Randolph and will include aspects of the language of the Ozarks hillfolk, the Ozarks oral tradition and its connections to Beowulf, the need to collect and preserve stories, modes of storytelling today, and the role of music in documenting the topics and themes of the past.

• “Literary Lure in the Ozarks?” by Charity Gibson, assistant professor of English at College of the Ozarks. The Ozarks has received very little attention from major authors.; therefore, when looking at Ozark literature, one must realize that its absence from the canon may be perceived as a political statement about the values and ideologies of the Ozarks. This presentation will explore the literary attention given to or denied to the Ozarks.

• “The Teeth of the Souls” by Steve Yates, assistant director and marketing director, University Press of Mississippi and author of Morkan’s Quarry and Some Kinds of Love. The author will read selections from his recently published The Teeth of the Souls, a sequel to Morkan’s Quarry. The Teeth of the Souls tells the story of a marriage betrayed, a lifelong and secret love, and an Ozarks city riven by an Easter lynching.

• “Mountain Modernity and Archeology in the Arkansas Ozarks: A Case Study from Van Winkle’s Mill” by Dr. Jamie C. Brandon, Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Station Archeologist and associate research professor at University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. This presentation will provide an overview of archeological investigations at Van Winkle’s Mill, the site of a late 19th century sawmill community in the Arkansas Ozarks. This multi-disciplinary research endeavor – partnered with multiple descendant communities – has provided important information about the African Diaspora in the Ozarks and also aided in the understanding of the industrialization and modernization of the region.

• “Hardwood Hop: The Songs of Eric Bogwalker” by Eric Tumminia, adjunct professor of English, Missouri State-West Plains. The lure of the Ozarks cannot be denied, particularly for a second-generation back-to-the-lander.  The songs of Eric Bogwalker explore the ecology and rock’n’roll-ology of the Missouri Ozarks where he was raised, as well as the interplay between the global and the local. Bicycle treks in the Pacific Northwest collide with Appalachian anti-coal activism in the songs of Eric Bogwalker, and the Guatemalan Highlands high-five the Ozark Mountains. Tumminia will give a brief, five-minute introduction and artist’s statement and then perform a few songs with the accompaniment of a small band.

For more information about the symposium, visit http://ozarksymposium.wp.missouristate.edu/.

2015 summer session Dean’s List honorees announced

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The offiical Missouri State-West Plains logoWEST PLAINS, Mo.– Officials at Missouri State University-West Plains have announced their Dean’s List honorees for the 2015 summer session.

To qualify for the Missouri State-West Plains Dean’s List, students must have earned a 3.5 to 3.99 grade point average for six or more credit hours taken during the session.  Students who maintain a 4.0 grade point average for six or more hours are recognized in the Chancellor’s List.

Missouri State-West Plains is a teaching and learning institution providing quality post-secondary educational opportunities to the communities it serves.  Missouri State-West Plains offers associate degrees and serves as a delivery site for bachelor’s and master’s degrees offered by Missouri State University in Springfield, Mo.  In 2013, Missouri State-West Plains was ranked sixth in the Best Community Colleges category of Washington Monthly’s College Rankings.

Students named to the Missouri State University-West Plains Dean’s List for the 2015 summer session are arranged alphabetically by state then hometown.

Missouri State University-West Plains 2015 Summer Session Dean’s List

MISSOURI
Alton:  Ethan W Davis
Bakersfield:  Abbigayle F Evans
Birch Tree:  Luke A Noble
Caulfield:  Jessica L Wake
Eminence:  Kelli L Brewer
Eunice:  Natasha D Goodman Smith
Graff:  Elizabeth M Williams
Iberia:  Laura M Thompson
Lebanon:  Sydney M McBride
Mountain Grove:  Elizabeth A Caulliette
Mountain View:  Malachi R Schierling, Makayla N Thompson
Myrtle:  Shantana E Collins
Pomona:  Kaitlin M Boles, Jordan C Capeder, Tiffany D Jens
Puxico:  Garrett L Payne
Squires:  Tel T Fink
Summersville:  Amanda R Stretch
Thayer:  Vanessa A Callahan, Madeline E Simer
West Plains:  Brandi D Bell, Billy L Bridges, Kristan N Cross, Joshua S Cuen, Calley Dunnihoo, Chenoa D Ervin, Saralyn M Glascock, Raelyn D Hawkins, Joseph G Howell, Chelse J Johnson, Morgan R Kinder, Alexis B King, Megan R Orr, Hailey A Shinberger, Breanna S Stirewalt, Cody A Tompkins, Caleb B Whited, Martina L Wilson
Willow Springs:  Jose A Hernandez, Steven E Moffis
Winona:  Jessy D Gates

2015 summer session Chancellor’s List honorees announced

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The offiical Missouri State-West Plains logoWEST PLAINS, Mo.– Officials at Missouri State University-West Plains have announced their Chancellor’s List honorees for the 2015 summer session.

To qualify for the Missouri State-West Plains Chancellor’s List, students must have earned a 4.0 grade point average for six or more credit hours taken during the session.  Students who maintain a 3.5 to 3.99 grade point average for six or more hours are recognized in the Dean’s List.

Missouri State-West Plains is a teaching and learning institution providing quality post-secondary educational opportunities to the communities it serves.  Missouri State-West Plains offers associate degrees and serves as a delivery site for bachelor’s and master’s degrees offered by Missouri State University in Springfield, Mo.  In 2013, Missouri State-West Plains was ranked sixth in the Best Community Colleges category of Washington Monthly’s College Rankings.

Students named to the Missouri State University-West Plains Chancellor’s List for the 2015 summer session are arranged alphabetically by country, state then hometown.

Missouri State University-West Plains 2015 Summer Session Chancellor’s List

CANADA
Vaughan:  Paul D Campbell

NORWAY
Askim:  Guro Key Froberg

KENTUCKY
Louisville:  Jaelin M Sanford

LOUISIANA
Edgard:  Juwan R Green

MISSOURI
Alton:  Arial M Peace
Arbyrd:  Madison M Kellums
Ava:  MiKaela R Bristol
Birch Tree:  Mathew D Neal, Melissa S Wood
Bucyrus:  Kaitlyn A Stallcup
Cabool:  Lydia M Whetstine
Couch:  Shane A Shulters
Gainesville:  Kyle J Simpson, Bobbi A Taylor
Houston:  Elizabeth A Harris
Mountain Grove:  Dylan E Spinney, William A Thomas
Mountain View:  Tiffany A Green, Devyn A Reed
Piedmont:  Haley S Alcorn
Pomona:  Nathan E Boys, Jordan K Sletten
Puxico:  Haley M Roll
Springfield:  Joshua A Foster, Bethany N Parker
Thayer:  Austin M Henry, Cecily C Mills, Angela N Mustion, Whitney L Slaughter
Van Buren:  Katherine M Akiki
West Plains:  Courtney L Carter, Dakota J Cordel, Justin E Davis, Abby R Eldringhoff, Perry S Elliott, Autumn N Galiher, Ashton N Garner, Dylan M Gilbreath, Hannah C Grills, Christopher D Hale, Amber N Hathcock, Kristie A Hurtado, Kaitlyn T Kentner, Desirea L Legler, Cynthia L McCracken, Ashlie L Mendenhall, Jessica D Peterman, Trang T Pham, Stephanie M Riggs, Holt A Skinner, Andrea N Stonelake, Karissa R Surface, Austin J Torres, Kate E Tyree, Darian L Williams
Willow Springs:  Rhea D Cook, April G Hogan, John G Newell
Winona:  Jacob J Smith

NEW YORK
Brooklyn:  Aaron M Orlowski

OHIO
Cincinnati:  Jearvon Q Irvin
East Cleveland:  Michael D Parks
Warren:  Shondell T Jackson

Several informational seminars for the nursing program scheduled this fall

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Looney Hall houses the nursing program.

Looney Hall houses the nursing program.

WEST PLAINS, Mo. – The nursing faculty at Missouri State University-West Plains have scheduled several informational seminars for area residents interested in applying to the university’s Associate of Science in Nursing (ASN) degree program for the 2016 calendar year.

The seminars are free and will provide information on nursing as a career, educational preparation for nursing, and a description of the classroom and clinical components of the Missouri State-West Plains nursing program.  A question and answer session will follow the presentation at each seminar.  No appointment or pre-registration is necessary to attend.

Seminars for those interested in the ASN Regular Track and LPN-to-RN Track programs are set for 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 14, in Looney Hall Room 107; 2 p.m. Friday, Oct. 2, in Looney Hall Room 102; 4 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13, in Looney Hall Room 107; 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 3, in Looney Hall Room 107; 11:30 a.m. Monday, Nov. 16, in Looney Hall Room 107; and 4 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 3, in Looney Hall Room 107.

Looney Hall is at 128 Garfield Ave.

For more information, contact the Missouri State-West Plains nursing admissions coordinator at 417-255-7739, email KarlaBean@MissouriState.edu, or visit the department’s website at www.wp.missouristate.edu/nursing.

LPN-to-RN evening program will begin in January 2016

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Looney Hall houses the nursing program.

Looney Hall houses the nursing program.

WEST PLAINS, Mo. – Officials with the Associate of Science in Nursing (ASN) degree program at Missouri State University-West Plains will offer an evening program beginning this spring for area LPNs who wish to obtain their RN credentials.

Amy Ackerson, nursing program director, said this is the third year the university has offered an evening bridge program targeted to, but not limited to, working licensed practical nurses.  All course and clinical rotations for the evening program will be offered after 5 p.m. or online, she added.

Those admitted to the new cohort will begin classes in January 2016. The program will take three semesters and one summer to prepare students to take the NCLEX-RN exam.  Ackerson noted the class will be limited in number to account for a smaller student-to-teacher ratio.

Area LPNs interested in the program may apply now through Oct. 15, 2015.  This program is fully accredited by the Missouri State Board of Nursing and the Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing (ACEN).  Additional information about the program and application process can be found at wp.missouristate.edu/nursing.

For more information about the LPN-to-RN bridge program or the nursing program, call the Missouri State-West Plains nursing admissions coordinator at 417-255-7739.

AEL Center, College Readiness Program open house set for Sept. 24

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The offiical Missouri State-West Plains logo    WEST PLAINS, Mo. – Officials with the Adult Education and Literacy (AEL) Center and the College Readiness Program at Missouri State University-West Plains will host an open house 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sept. 24 at the center, 308 Pennsylvania Ave., in West Plains.

The open house will provide future students with an opportunity to visit the center and become familiar with the program’s services, organizers said. Refreshments will be provided.

AEL classes are provided to anyone interested in preparing to take the high school equivalency test HiSet, formerly the GED test. Students must attend an orientation prior to enrolling in classes.

The program also is offered in Ava, Birch Tree, Cabool, Houston, Licking, Mountain Grove, Mtn. View, Salem and Willow Springs, and teachers from these areas will be on hand to meet and visit with students about the different sites.

College readiness classes are provided to anyone interested in preparing to take placement tests for college or needing to brush up on specific skills before attending college. To make an appointment to get started with the program, please call 417-255-7744.

The College Readiness Program is providing Pre-Algebra (MTH 20) classes for Missouri State-West Plains beginning this fall. There are plans to expand this service to other areas in the future, organizers said.

For more information about the AEL Center and the College Readiness Program, call 417-255-7744.


Gift of Civil War-era letters brings conflict to life

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WEST PLAINS RESIDENT CHUCK KIMBERLIN discusses one of 52 Civil War-era letters he recently donated to Missouri State University-West Plains with Director of Library Services Sylvia Kuhlmeier, standing, and Assistant Professor of History Connie Morgan.  The letters, written by Sgt. John Arnold of the 97th New York Regiment, give a unique, first-person account of the conflict.  (Missouri State-West Plains Photo)

WEST PLAINS RESIDENT CHUCK KIMBERLIN discusses one of 52 Civil War-era letters he recently donated to Missouri State University-West Plains with Director of Library Services Sylvia Kuhlmeier, standing, and Assistant Professor of History Connie Morgan. The letters, written by Sgt. John Arnold of the 97th New York Regiment, give a unique, first-person account of the conflict. (Missouri State-West Plains Photo)

WEST PLAINS, Mo. – History teachers will tell you it’s not always easy to make the events of the past come to life for the students of today, but a recent gift to Missouri State University-West Plains should aid in that effort for students studying the American Civil War.

West Plains resident Chuck Kimberlin recently presented to university officials over 50 letters written by Sgt. John L. Arnold, a young man from Trenton, New Jersey, who served in Company E of the 97th New York Regiment during the conflict.  The dates on the letters range from the earliest days of the war in 1860 until 1864, when he was discharged as a captain from the Union Army.

Kimberlin gifted the university with the letters in honor of his late mother, well-known local genealogist Irene Kimberlin, who had contacts across the country.  He found them among her things after she died.

“Someone, possibly a member of John Arnold’s family, gave my mother these letters years ago because he or she thought my mother would enjoy doing some research on them,” he recalled.  “I knew she had them.  I had seen them, and I knew what they looked like, but I had lost track of them.  When she passed and we cleaned out her things, we found them.  I decided that, in memory of her and for the potential they have, I would give them to the university.”

When Kimberlin presented them to Chancellor Drew Bennett, he told Bennett that university officials could do anything they wanted with them, but he hoped they would be used for academic endeavors.  “I feel they could be used for research on this individual or for the time period in general,” he explained.

Assistant Professor of History Connie Morgan agreed, saying they will provide a wealth of information for students, faculty and historians alike.  “What will be interesting is the information he can provide about the battles he witnessed and the daily life of the soldier,” she explained.  “He’s basically giving us a look into the daily life of a Civil War soldier.  This was the first time something like this had happened in our country, the first time something had divided our nation.  Both sides thought it would be a very short, bloodless war, and they both were fooled.  Neither side was prepared for what truly happened.”

MUCH CAN BE LEARNED about a person and the times in which he or she lived just from a hand-written letter, according to Connie Morgan, assistant professor of history at Missouri State University-West Plains.  The letter above is one of 52 written by Sgt. John Arnold of the 97th New York Regiment that was recently donated to the university for academic purposes by West Plains resident Chuck Kimberlin.  (Missouri State-West Plains Photo)

MUCH CAN BE LEARNED about a person and the times in which he or she lived just from a hand-written letter, according to Connie Morgan, assistant professor of history at Missouri State University-West Plains. The letter above is one of 52 written by Sgt. John Arnold of the 97th New York Regiment that was recently donated to the university for academic purposes by West Plains resident Chuck Kimberlin. (Missouri State-West Plains Photo)

The topics covered in the 52 letters range the gamut, from details about various battles to the everyday, mundane activities of a soldier.  In every letter, Sgt. Arnold gives his location at the time he wrote them.  “There was enough information that you could look at a map and follow him,” Kimberlin said.

In his early letters, he describes mustering in at Albany, New York, and the regiment’s journey to Washington, D.C., by rail, wagon, barge and foot.  “There were a lot of times he seemed upbeat and excited, but they also tended to be the same type of letters soldiers have written home in every war.  There’s excitement, there’s sheer boredom, and there’s the mundane information of breaking camp and moving somewhere else,” Kimberlin said.

Sgt. Arnold also talks about several well-known battles, such as the Battle of Fredericksburg, the siege at Petersburg, the second Battle of Bull Run, as well as the lesser-known Battle of Cedar Mountain in Culpepper, Virginia, Morgan added.  “Most of their military time was the mundane.  When you look at the war’s length, most of the time was spent in camp,” she explained.

Some of the letters also detail Sgt. Arnold’s time working at Carver General Hospital in Washington, D.C., where he met Abraham Lincoln more than once, Kimberlin said.  “He describes Lincoln coming out to visit the troops, sometimes with his son, Robert Todd, who had his own little uniform and pony.  Lincoln also visited a camp Sgt. Arnold was in, and on that visit, he described Lincoln as being tall and very thin and mentioned he would be surprised if the president lived through the year.  Even so, Sgt. Arnold wrote that on every visit, Lincoln would shake every soldier’s hand,” Kimberlin said.

Just as important as the battle information contained in the letters is the social history described among the pages, Morgan stressed.  “Personal letters are the best way for us to know what daily life was like.  They can give a weather report, a crop report, the latest scoop on the gossip in town.  When you read these letters, you feel the emotion of the writer.  You don’t get that sense of emotion in today’s emails.  That’s why these letters are so amazing,” she explained.

The letters also reveal much about Sgt. Arnold himself.  From the neatness of his handwriting and the grammar he used, he appeared to be an educated man, and the paper stock he used, pages of which included an embossment, indicate he may have come from a family of means.  The quality of the paper probably helped in the letters’ preservation, Morgan said.

Currently, the letters are being transcribed and digitized so their content can easily be accessed online.  Morgan said this is a painstaking process that will continue for several months.  Once completed, however, their information will be accessible from any place with Internet access through the Garnett Library’s website, she added.

Meanwhile, Morgan is researching Sgt. Arnold and the history of the 97th New York Regiment.  “We will do a chronological line of the letters and the information included in each to get a better understanding of how and where the regiment moved,” she explained.

“I really hope students, as well as historians and others interested in the war, take advantage of these letters and the valuable information they provide.  I think there are a number of learning experiences students can gain from this information,” Kimberlin said.  “It also would be nice if people were inspired by this gift to go and find similar interesting things that would have academic value for students on this campus,” he added.

Study away trip to Costa Rica scheduled for summer 2016

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THE LEATHERBACK Sea Turtle will be the topic of a study away trip to Costa Rica in summer 2016. (Photo provided)

THE LEATHERBACK Sea Turtle will be the topic of a study away trip to Costa Rica in summer 2016. (Photo provided)

WEST PLAINS, Mo. – Students at Missouri State University-West Plains and community members can learn more about Costa Rica during a short-term, study away opportunity scheduled for summer 2016.

Ana I. Estrella-Riollano, instructor of biology and biomedical sciences, will lead a group of students on a trip to the Central American country to study Leatherback Sea Turtle Ecology (BIO 197), a three-credit-hour course, from May 18-26.

Leatherback sea turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) are the largest turtles on earth, growing up to seven feet long and exceeding 2,000 pounds, she said. These reptiles can be found in the tropic and temperate waters of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans, as well as the Mediterranean Sea. In 1970, it was listed under the Endangered Species Act, she added

Costa Rica is one of the world’s most important nesting sites for Leatherback sea turtles, Estrella-Riollano, said. Scientists there are working in tracking and studying nesting behaviors to help increase the population numbers around the world.

In the Study Away: Costa Rica program, participants will be in contact with the environmental, scientific and cultural characteristics of the region, Estrella-Riollano said. Students will experience more than 15 hours of service learning while patrolling the beach, searching for leatherbacks nests and protecting them from tides, poachers and other threats. They also will develop and understanding of the population trends and will help collect data that will be used by scientists to improve leatherback conservation efforts in the Costa Rica region and around the world, she explained.

The program fee is $3,500, which includes tickets for airfare, taxes, all meals in Costa Rica, all lodging, all transportation, park fees, airport exit taxes from Costa Rica, tips, international program fees and travel insurance. An initial deposit of $250 is due Oct. 30.

To apply for this course, visit http://missouristate-sa.terradotta.com/index.cfm?FuseAction=Programs.ViewProgram&Program_ID=10934. After enrollment, students can apply for the Ecology Project International (EPI) Scholarship ($100-$500) or request to raise funds for their trip with coffee sales through EPI, Estrella-Riollano said. For more information, please contact Estrella-Riollano at 417-255-7710 or AnaEstrellaRiollano@missouristate.edu.

Guest lecturer from Sri Lanka to visit Missouri State-West Plains

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Saman Perera

Saman Perera

WEST PLAINS, Mo. – Saman Perera, a guest lecturer from the Lanka Bible Seminary and Colombo Theological College in Sri Lanka, will speak about post civil war issues in that southeast Asian country during a special presentation at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13, in Melton Hall Room 112 on the Missouri State University-West Plains campus.

All community members are invited to attend this event, which is being hosted by the Missouri State-West Plains academic affairs office.

Perera will discuss reconciliation efforts between ethnic and religious communities; social justice, human rights and the roots of conflict; and peace building and non-violent conflict resolution, organizers said.

Perera describes himself in his biography as a peace educator, change agent and an activist focused on those who are ethnically, socially and religiously marginalized.  He is the founder of Samadana/m, an organization that fosters justice and peace through nonviolent action.  The organization’s work has been to help post-war Sri Lankan society heal and move beyond the wounds of the past.

Perera is minister-in-charge of Scot’s Kirk Presbyterian Church in Kandy, Sri Lanka, and currently serves as secretary of the Presbytery of Lanka.  He has been a visiting lecturer at Lanka Bible College Seminary, the Theological College of Lanka and Colombo Theological College, all in Sri Lanka.

He currently serves as chairman of the Ecumenical Relations Commission of the National Christian Council of Sri Lanka.

For more information, contact the Missouri State-West Plains academic affairs office at 417-255-7272.

Award, gift handed out at Ozarks Studies Symposium

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DR. ED MCKINNEY, left, emeritus professor of history at Missouri State University-West Plains, was recognized by members of the Ozarks Studies Symposium committee for his many years of service to the symposium and for his contributions to Ozarks music. The plaque presentation was made by Professor of English Frank Priest at this year’s symposium following McKinney’s music panel presentation. The symposium was hosted Sept. 18-19 by Missouri State University-West Plains academic affairs office and featured presentations on the topic “The Lure of the Ozarks.”  (Missouri State-West Plains photo)

DR. ED MCKINNEY, left, emeritus professor of history at Missouri State University-West Plains, was recognized by members of the Ozarks Studies Symposium committee for his many years of service to the symposium and for his contributions to Ozarks music. The plaque presentation was made by Professor of English Frank Priest at this year’s symposium following McKinney’s music panel presentation. The symposium was hosted Sept. 18-19 by Missouri State University-West Plains academic affairs office and featured presentations on the topic “The Lure of the Ozarks.” (Missouri State-West Plains photo)

DR. AYA KUBOTA, professor of American literature at Bunka Gakuen University in Tokyo, Japan, receives a locally-made pillow sham, quilted lap blanket and a Grizzlies coffee mug from Dr. Phillip Howerton, associate professor of English at Missouri State University-West Plains, at this year’s Ozarks Studies Symposium. Kubota joined Dr. John Han, professor of English and creative writing at Missouri Baptist College, to discuss “A Place of Restoration, Recreation, and Safety: The Ozarks in The Shepherd of the Hills, The Bald-Knobbers and The Witness” during the symposium Sept. 18-19 at the West Plains Civic Center. This year’s theme was “The Lure of the Ozarks.” (Missouri State-West Plains photo)

DR. AYA KUBOTA, professor of American literature at Bunka Gakuen University in Tokyo, Japan, receives a locally-made pillow sham, quilted lap blanket and a Grizzlies coffee mug from Dr. Phillip Howerton, associate professor of English at Missouri State University-West Plains, at this year’s Ozarks Studies Symposium. Kubota joined Dr. John Han, professor of English and creative writing at Missouri Baptist College, to discuss “A Place of Restoration, Recreation, and Safety: The Ozarks in The Shepherd of the Hills, The Bald-Knobbers and The Witness” during the symposium Sept. 18-19 at the West Plains Civic Center. This year’s theme was “The Lure of the Ozarks.” (Missouri State-West Plains photo)

CNA certification program classes will begin in January 2016

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The offiical Missouri State-West Plains logo    WEST PLAINS, Mo. – Classes for the Certified Nurse Assistant (CNA) certification program at Missouri State University-West Plains will begin in January 2016, according to officials with the university’s Allied Health Department.

Certified Nurse Assistant (ALH 100) is scheduled for 4:30 to 9:20 p.m. Thursdays, and the Certified Nurse Assistant Clinical course (ALH 105) is set for 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays.

Students who complete the courses, as well as a two-part written and practicum examination, can be certified by the Missouri Health Care Association (MHCA), which serves as the certifying agency for the program, university officials said. The examination will be included in the coursework.

The program will prepare students for employment in long-term care facilities. There are currently 17 such facilities in and immediately surrounding the West Plains area, and all require, at a minimum, CNA certification of their employees for care of the residents. The CNA program is a cooperative effort between the university, South Central Career Center and Willow Health Care, Inc.

“All the skilled nursing facilities in our community have a tremendous need for certified nurse aides,” said Roy Pace, administrator of Brooke Haven Healthcare. “Those who receive this training will have a job when they graduate, and the community will have skilled people taking care of their loved ones. I am very excited that Missouri State University-West Plains is offering this to our community members, giving people an important step towards a wonderful career in nursing.”

To show their appreciation, Willow Health Care, Inc., which operates Brooke Haven, will pay the required drug testing and TB test fees for all students enrolled in the 2016 spring semester classes.

Regular registration for 2016 spring semester classes begins Nov. 16. There are no prerequisites for these courses. For more information about admission and registration procedures, call the Missouri State-West Plains admissions office 417-255-7955, or visit www.wp.missouristate.edu.

Chancellor, SGA president visit student interns in China

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DURING A RECENT TRIP to Missouri State University’s branch campus at Liaoning Normal University (LNU) in Dalian, China, Missouri State-West Plains Chancellor Drew Bennett and Student Government Association (SGA) President Casey Buehler, West Plains, visited with Missouri State-West Plains students who are serving educational internships at LNU this fall. As part of the program, students take courses toward the Associate of Arts in General Studies degree and teach English to Chinese students. The students, who left for China on Aug. 14, are expected to return home Dec. 19. From left are Bennett, interns Matt Hoth of Houston, Erin Pierce of Clearwater, Florida, Micaela Wiehe of West Plains, Buehler, and Morgan Kinder and Kelsey Farris, both of West Plains. Seth Hadley, Birch Tree, also is serving an internship in China this semester. (Photo provided)

DURING A RECENT TRIP to Missouri State University’s branch campus at Liaoning Normal University (LNU) in Dalian, China, Missouri State-West Plains Chancellor Drew Bennett and Student Government Association (SGA) President Casey Buehler, West Plains, visited with Missouri State-West Plains students who are serving educational internships at LNU this fall. As part of the program, students take courses toward the Associate of Arts in General Studies degree and teach English to Chinese students. The students, who left for China on Aug. 14, are expected to return home Dec. 19. From left are Bennett, interns Matt Hoth of Houston, Erin Pierce of Clearwater, Florida, Micaela Wiehe of West Plains, Buehler, and Morgan Kinder and Kelsey Farris, both of West Plains. Seth Hadley, Birch Tree, also is serving an internship in China this semester. (Photo provided)

10 respiratory care graduates receive their pins

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APPROXIMATELY 120 students, faculty, administrators, family and community members gathered Dec. 3 in the Magnolia Room of the West Plains Civic Center for the pinning ceremony of 10 graduates of Missouri State University-West Plains’ Associate of Applied Science in Respiratory Care degree program. Provided the students successfully complete final exams next week, they will be eligible to take their Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT) credentialing exam from the National Board for Respiratory Care (NBRC) and seek employment as a respiratory therapist. Front row from left above are Missouri State-West Plains Chancellor Drew Bennett; Respiratory Care Clinical Education Coordinator Aimee Green; graduates Kristina Hensley, Springfield, Ohio, Whitney Slaughter, Thayer, Claribel Newton, West Plains, Shantana Collins, Myrtle, and Courtney Carter, West Plains; Director of Respiratory Care Cindy Smith; and Dean of Academic Affairs Dr. Dennis Lancaster. Back row: Graduates Tiffany Green, St. Louis, and Mathew Neal, Perry Elliott, Becky Johnson and Kristie Hurtado, all of West Plains. (Missouri State-West Plains Photo)

APPROXIMATELY 120 students, faculty, administrators, family and community members gathered Dec. 3 in the Magnolia Room of the West Plains Civic Center for the pinning ceremony of 10 graduates of Missouri State University-West Plains’ Associate of Applied Science in Respiratory Care degree program. Provided the students successfully complete final exams, they will be eligible to take their Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT) credentialing exam from the National Board for Respiratory Care (NBRC) and seek employment as a respiratory therapist. Front row from left above are Missouri State-West Plains Chancellor Drew Bennett; Respiratory Care Clinical Education Coordinator Aimee Green; graduates Kristina Hensley, Springfield, Ohio, Whitney Slaughter, Thayer, Claribel Newton, West Plains, Shantana Collins, Myrtle, and Courtney Carter, West Plains; Director of Respiratory Care Cindy Smith; and Dean of Academic Affairs Dr. Dennis Lancaster. Back row: Graduates Tiffany Green, St. Louis, and Mathew Neal, Perry Elliott, Becky Johnson and Kristie Hurtado, all of West Plains. (Missouri State-West Plains Photo)


Students continue trend of above-average scores on CAAP test

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The offiical Missouri State-West Plains logo    WEST PLAINS, Mo. – For more than 10 years, students at Missouri State University-West Plains have scored above the national average in all categories of the Collegiate Assessment of Academic Proficiency (CAAP) examination, university officials announced.

Results of the test, which is administered nationwide to graduates of two-year degree programs, were recently released for 2015 graduates and show Missouri State-West Plains students scored above the national mean score in all five categories of the examination.  Those categories include writing skills, mathematics, reading, critical thinking and science reasoning.  Graduates have scored at or above the national average in all five subject areas for 20 consecutive years.

“The outstanding performance of our students on this test year after year shows that our academic program is one of the best values in higher education in terms of quality and cost,” said Missouri State-West Plains Chancellor Drew Bennett.  “This is independent, empirical data that proves our students are learning what is expected at an institution of higher education based on national standards.”

“While you might think that we’ve become accustomed to these good results, it’s never a sure thing,” said Dean of Academic Affairs Dr. Dennis Lancaster. “The faculty and administration consider the CAAP results as a key measure of our performance as an academic institution, and because of that we focus on all the ways we can assist our students in their success. Their success is our success.”

Results of the testing show Missouri State-West Plains students posted a 64.2 mean score in writing compared to the national average of 61.  In math, their mean score was 56.6 compared to the national mean of 56.1.  In reading, Missouri State-West Plains students had a 62.7 mean score compared to the national average of 59.9, and in critical thinking, they posted a 63 mean score compared to 60.5 nationally.  In science, students posted a 60.9 mean score compared to 59.1 nationally.

“These five subject areas align well with Missouri State-West Plains’ five General Education Goals — communication, critical thinking, information management, valuing, and global awareness — those areas that we, as a faculty and institution believe are the hallmarks of a college educated person,” Lancaster said. “These goals guide us in developing our curriculum, so the results in the five CAAP areas are one set of indicators that point to how well our students are reaching these goals.”

Area residents interested in learning more about the academic programs available at Missouri State-West Plains can call the admissions office at 417-255-7955 or visit the campus’ website.

2015 fall semester Dean’s List honorees announced

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The offiical Missouri State-West Plains logo    WEST PLAINS, Mo.– Officials at Missouri State University-West Plains have announced their
Dean’s List honorees for the 2015 fall semester.

To qualify for the Missouri State-West Plains Dean’s List, students must have earned a 3.5 to 3.99 grade point average for 12 or more credit hours taken during the semester. Students who maintain a 4.0 grade point average for 12 or more hours are recognized in the Chancellor’s List.

Missouri State-West Plains is the two-year open admissions campus of the Missouri State University System. Missouri State-West Plains is a teaching and learning institution providing quality post-secondary educational opportunities to the communities it serves through the offering of associate degrees, certificate programs, and non-credit educational programs, and by serving as a delivery site for bachelor’s and master’s degrees offered by Missouri State University in Springfield. For more information about becoming a student, call 417-255-7955 or visit www.wp.missouristate.edu/admissions. For more information about ways to support the university, call 417-255-7240 or visit www.wp.missouristate.edu/development.

    Editor’s Note:  Students named to the Missouri State-West Plains Dean’s List for the 2015 fall semester are listed below and arranged alphabetically by hometown.

CANADA

Vaughan: Paul D Campbell

NORWAY

Askim: Guro Key Froberg

SPAIN

Madrid: Blanca Izquierdo-Paton

TURKEY

Instanbul: Lara Temel

ARKANSAS

Mountain Home: Melissa Goodman

MISSOURI

Alton: Dustin Z Vanwinkle, Derrek H. Rackley

Ava: Aaron M Box, Caladonia L Eubanks

Bernie: Selena M Poe

Birch Tree: Stephen M Dow, Jaret W Holden, Jessin K Yarber

Bucyrus: Chelsea L Shelton

Cabool: Roderick D Domingo, Weston M Mitchell, Stephanie L. Pearce, Lianne N Smallwood, Courtney A Smith, Candice A Tate

Caulfield: Dalton W Ross, Hailey N Turner

Columbia: Christopher J Godas

Couch: Samantha J Janes

Dixon: Jerica L Schaffner

Dora: Laurel M Goshorn, Thomas J McKee

Elk Creek: Chelsea J Peters

Eminence: Jeffrey S Cowen, Aljun N Danding

Fredericktown: Michelle A Wulfert

Fremont: Haley D Toy

Gainesville: Nathaniel C Coatney, Alex Q Lane, Rachel B Overturf

Hollister: Antonia L Morgan

Houston: Shannon N Lunz, Kenzie A Scheets, Hannah E Venn, Lauren Wade

Iberia: Laura M Thompson

Koshkonong: Joshua Z Johnson, Michaela N Kutter, Isaphene G Pierce, Christopher P Velez

Liberty: Ashley M Bishton

Licking: Lane D Duncan

Mansfield: Mackenzie Williams

Mountain Grove: Shayna A Filogomo, Cheyenne D McGraw, Kennedy R Wilkerson

Mountain View: Tiffany A Green, Malachi R Schierling, James H Sparks, Chyanne M Zitter

Nixa: Maddison J Payne

Norwood: Jordan D Cottengim, Daniel K Drecker, Harli D Lewis, Lorren R Mastrangelo, Lorissa M Saladin

Peace Valley: Pete E Chaisson

Piedmont: Tate C Brand

Pomona: Peyton M Bolander, Jordan K Sletten, Christopher W Thomas, Whitney L Wake

Pontiac: Joshua E Cone

Potosi: James R Limberg

Pottersville: Derek M McGinnis, Bethany R Roberts

Rolla: McKayla A Bixler

Saint Robert: Cinnamon C Bragg

Springfield: Mathew D Neal

Stoutland: Kathryn D Henson

Success: Braeden S Kuhn

Tecumseh: Audriana E Burton

Thayer: Kenneth L Franke, Courtney L Hargrove, Kristina A Hensley

Cynthia L McDaniel, Hope A Rackley-Grinnell, Emily A Reed

Theodosia: Dylan Price

Van Buren: Katherine M Akiki

Wasola: Victoria R Smith

West Plains: Taylor P Abrams, Crystal E Atwell, Carmen L Bentley, Taylor B Brassfield, Justin P Butkovich, Michael M Buxbaum, Lucas E Cardoza, Courtney L Carter, Makayla M Chen, Paydan A Clayton, Shelby L Collins, Tyler J Collins, Johannah R Crewse, Cierra L Crider, Kendra M Crossley, Michael A Denoux, Ashley N Dilbeck, Calley Dunnihoo, Valerie Friend, Kate S Gaines, Ashton N Garner, Whitney L Gatewood, Luke L Grisham, Morgan L Hall, Samuel L Hall, Amber N Hathcock, Myra C Henry, Kristie A Hurtado, Ayla L Ipock, Kassidy M Jacobson, Christopher A Kaiser, Jennifer L Kennedy, KeAndra L Kimball, Krysten D Little, Katarina A McLain, Courtney L Mead, Ashley D Meyer, William R Meyer, Michelle M Miller, Conner R Murray, Hannah E Nielsen, Forrest C Ogden, Brayden T Pace, Mae A Pavelka, Lesley C Pearsall, Jacob W Petrus, Bethany A Porter, Jacob A Rader, Kristy E Ray, Leona M Reed, Tyler J Rhoads, Sage F Roush, Krystal L Rowlett, Jenae B Scrimshire, Sabrina A Seiber, Andrew R Smith, Katey D Smith, Tayler R Smith, Sterling S Stradling, Kelsey L Tooley, Kristina M Tyler, Lexie J Waggoner, Abigail B Wall, Briona N Warden, Caleb B Whited, Dreydan J Williams

Willow Springs: Sarah M Corniels, Gage A Hanson, Patricia A Lynch, Jessica D McDonough, Caleb J McLaughlin, Wesley S Sanders, Nicole D Smart, Savannah N Solik

Winona: Paul W O’Donnell, Danielle R Sullivan

2015 fall semester Chancellor’s List honorees announced

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The offiical Missouri State-West Plains logo    WEST PLAINS, Mo.– Officials at Missouri State University-West Plains have announced their Chancellor’s List honorees for the 2015 fall semester.

To qualify for the Missouri State-West Plains Chancellor’s List, students must have earned a 4.0 grade point average for 12 or more credit hours taken during the semester. Students who maintain a 3.5 to 3.99 grade point average for 12 or more hours are recognized in the Dean’s List.

Missouri State-West Plains is the two-year open admissions campus of the Missouri State University System. Missouri State-West Plains is a teaching and learning institution providing quality post-secondary educational opportunities to the communities it serves through the offering of associate degrees, certificate programs, and non-credit educational programs, and by serving as a delivery site for bachelor’s and master’s degrees offered by Missouri State University in Springfield. For more information about becoming a student, call 417-255-7955 or visit www.wp.missouristate.edu/admissions. For more information about ways to support the university, call 417-255-7240 or visit www.wp.missouristate.edu/development.

Editor’s Note:  Students named to the Missouri State-West Plains Chancellor’s List for the 2015 fall semester are listed below and arranged alphabetically by hometown.

AUSTRALIA

Thornlands: Stephanie R Phillips

NEW ZEALAND

Christchurch: Gabriela K Edmondson

SERBIA

Belgrade: Maja Petronijevic

ARKANSAS

Jonesboro: Susannah R Kelley

Mountain Home: Darla F Hood

MISSOURI

Alton: Elizabeth A Baty, Jasen J Johnston, Kaitlin M Jones, Hayden A Sisco, Allena D VonAllmen

Arbyrd: Madison M Kellums

Birch Tree: Seth M Hadley, Melissa S Wood

Bucyrus: Cheston D Malam, Kaitlyn A Stallcup

Cabool: Cassandrea L McCart

Camdenton: Melinda S Wilson

Columbia: Justin B Abel, Laura B Dykstra

Couch: Shane A Shulters

Dora: Lissa C Siemers

Fremont: Heather D Toy

Hartshorn: Katy N Wilson

Houston: Noelle A Wright

Lebanon: Sydney M McBride

Licking: Laken A Hebblethwaite

Long Lane: Kayla L Gann

Lynchburg: Nathan P McCoy

Morrisville: Jonathan M Stander

Mountain Grove: Kallie J Calus, Miranda K Rogers

Mountain View: Mackenzie L Anderson, Brittany E Farias, Sandra E Flack, Billie D Randle

Myrtle: Taylor L Emberton

Norwood: Alice E Sullivan

Peace Valley: Vanessa D Chaisson

Piedmont: McKenzie A Brinkley

Pomona: Andrew B Letterman

Pottersville: Kierstan M Snider

Sainte Genevieve: Mariah L Ritter

Salem: Kayla A Oller

Seymour: Sean P Gillette

Springfield: Brian M Hite

Summersville: Kaylee S Odom

Thayer: Ashley R Cancino, Cecily C Mills, Whitney L Slaughter, Paula R Woodside

West Plains: Misty D Atkins, Shelbi D Bridges, Michelle T Chen, Michelle A Crone, Laura B Davis, Angelina N Denton-Howell, Darcy F Drake, Kegan J Drown, Ngozi E Ekeke, Perry S Elliott, Arwen N Estes, Kelsey V Farris, Autumn N Galiher, Hannah C Grills, Zachary D Harper, Jo A Harris, Jacob T Hollback, Matthew B Hoth, Joseph G Howell, Chelse J Johnson, Rebecca L Johnson, Kaitlyn T Kentner, Morgan R Kinder, Lauren E Mahin, Melissa L Medina, Joshua R Miller, Kody L Miller, Allison N Neely, Claribel L Newton, Makabe J Perkins, Heidi L Pettit, Lara F Pickett, Erin M Pierce, Anthony A Priest, Sarita A Rivera, Michael P Scheidt, Courtney Spivey, Kate E Tyree, Ashton L Vonallmen, Kathryn E VonAllmen, Madison F Wiehe, Micaela A Wiehe, Kristina L Woods, BreAnna E Wright

Willow Springs: Katarina A Biland, Devin Chavez, Donna L Green, Justin D Grogan, Ciara N Hogsett, John G Newell, Joshua M Perkins

Winona: Lauren M Atchison, Billie A Brown, Gretta D Phillips, Jacob J Smith

OHIO

Cedarville: Michael E Roop

Students use couponing lessons to help those in need

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STUDENTS IN FAMILY HEALTH classes at Missouri State University-West Plains last fall used couponing strategies to purchase these items for three area agencies that provide services to individuals and families in need. With the items are Taya White, left, of Salem, Missouri, and Alex Harris, West Plains. (Photo provided)

STUDENTS IN FAMILY HEALTH classes at Missouri State University-West Plains last fall used couponing strategies to purchase these items for three area agencies that provide services to individuals and families in need. With the items are Taya White, left, of Salem, Missouri, and Alex Harris, West Plains. (Photo provided)

WEST PLAINS, Mo. – It’s common knowledge among savvy shoppers that coupons will save you money in the checkout line, but 10 students in Brenda Smith’s Family Health (CFS 120) classes at Missouri State University-West Plains’ campuses in West Plains and Mountain Grove took that knowledge to a different level last fall.

The students studied coupon strategies and used what they had learned to purchase daily household supplies, hygiene items and various food items for three area agencies that help individuals and families in need.

“The purpose of the project was to study coupon strategies so they could share them with parent groups and families they would work with in their future careers,” Smith explained. “To make the study relevant, the students decided to apply these strategies to help agencies that currently work with families and children who may be disadvantaged, homeless or residents of the crisis shelters.”

Smith said the Child and Family Development Department applied for and received $500 from the university’s Annual Fund to make the purchases. They then collected coupons, purchased the items and donated their purchases to the South Central Child Advocacy Center and the Samaritan Outreach Center in West Plains, as well as the On Time Shelter in Mountain Grove. By utilizing the couponing strategies from class, the students were able to stretch the $500 they received to approximately $625 worth of items.

“It was a great learning experience, and I look forward to using it in my own life,” said student Taya White of Salem, Missouri. “I hope to be able to share couponing strategies to help others in the future.”

“The project was fun, and I would like to see it continue,” added Alex Harris, West Plains. “It was wonderful to be able to help my community with my classmates.”

Smith, Dr. Renee Moore, a professor in the Child and Family Development Department, and CFD graduate Checotah (McDaniel) Wade assisted the students with the project.

For more information about the Associate of Applied Science in Child and Family Development degree program or other academic programs at Missouri State-West Plains, call the admissions office at 417-255-7955. To support the university’s Annual Fund or learn more about other giving opportunities, call the development office at 417-255-7240.

Board approves health professions degree for Missouri State-West Plains

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The offiical Missouri State-West Plains logo    WEST PLAINS, Mo. – Members of the Missouri State University Board of Governors have approved the addition of the Associate of Arts in the Health Professions degree to the list of academic programs available at the Missouri State-West Plains campus.

The action took place at the March 16 meeting of the board’s executive committee in Springfield. The proposed program will now be submitted to the Missouri Coordinating Board of Higher Education (CBHE) for approval at its meeting April 13-14.

According to the resolution’s text, the new degree will be beneficial to students planning to become a physician assistant, physical therapist or other related health professional as it constitutes the first two years of a four-year program in these professions. It was developed in collaboration with the Missouri State University Biomedical Sciences Department specifically to give local students a pathway to complete health profession degrees at the Springfield campus. Because of the degree’s 42-credit-hour general education block, however, students may choose to transfer to other institutions offering similar programs, knowing they will have met the general education requirements at that institution, as well.

“The initial submission is an emphasis in providing students interested in the physician assistant program in Springfield with an opportunity to get a head start in West Plains,” explained Joyce Jennings-Pineda, assistant professor of biomedical science and biology at Missouri State-West Plains. “It consists of the 42-hour block of transferable general education with additional credit hours representing specific prerequisites toward the bachelor’s degree in cell and molecular biology offered in Springfield. It also emphasizes the pre-professional prerequisites required for entry into the Master of Science Physician Assistant Program. Entry into most health professions is dependent on successful completion of these same prerequisites. As a result, it will benefit students pursuing other four-year programs such as occupational therapy, physical therapy, radiation technology, dental hygiene, pharmacy and related disciplines.”

Dr. Steven Dodge, director of the physician assitant program at the Springfield campus, indicated in visits with faculty in the Missouri State-West Plains Biomedical Sciences Department a desire to expand the program into rural areas where need for these services is the greatest, Pineda explained. “With the new degree, it will be possible for future PAs to receive an important part of their undergraduate education here in West Plains and then go to Springfield to complete their degree and begin the first part of their PA training. In their final year of training, they can return to West Plains to complete their clinical training with local physicians and surgeons. Experience strongly suggests that such students will be very likely to remain in the West Plains area to practice and thereby help alleviate the shortage of practitioners,” she said.

According to national projections from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the health care industry will add more jobs than any other sector through the year 2018. Employment of health care occupations is projected to grow 19 percent from 2014 to 2024, much faster than the average for all occupations, adding about 2.3 million new jobs. In Missouri, there will be over 3,000 projected openings for physician assistants, physical therapists and other related health professions between 2012-2022, state figures show.

“Health care occupations will add more jobs than any other group of occupations,” Pineda said. “This expected growth is due to an aging population and an increase in the number of individuals who have access to health insurance because of federal health insurance reforms.”

Helping to reduce the shortage of health care providers in rural Missouri is an important part of the mission of the physician assistant program at Missouri State University, Pineda added. “It has long been noted in medicine that where clinicians learn their profession tends to be where they end up practicing after the completion of their training,” she explained. “Therefore, officials with the Missouri State program hope to increase the number of PAs practicing in rural areas through two main strategies – recruiting students from rural communities and arranging for as much of their education as possible to occur in or near their hometowns. In the future, the goal is to increase the number of students entering all the health professions by packaging courses specific to their needs, which they can complete on the West Plains campus, and use those courses as a platform to continue their education in a number of different fields.”

Pineda pointed out a survey of all Missouri State-West Plains students in the biomedical and biological sciences departments during the 2015 spring and fall semesters indicated a strong interest in the program already, and there was strong attendance by students at a natural sciences career program sponsored by the departments last September. The program included faculty representing the biology, biomedical science and chemistry departments on Springfield campus whose presentations focused on the courses students should take at Missouri State-West Plains before transferring.

If the Associate of Arts in the Health Professions degree is approved by CBHE, Missouri State-West Plains will then be authorized to offer 19 associate degrees and 24 certificate programs.

For more information about these degrees and certificate options, visit the Missouri State-West Plains website or call the admissions office at 417-255-7955.

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