South Valley campus Veterinary Technology program raises the bar

By Nick Stern, Senior Reporter

The Veterinary Technology Program at the South Valley Campus has exceeded the nation’s expectations and raised the bar in veterinary medicine, said Program Director, Bonnie Snyder.

Since the program’s inception in the 2004 fall semester, 98 percent of the graduates from the pro­gram have gone on to pass the Veterinary Technician National Examination (VTNE), while the national average pass rate for the exam is only 72 percent, Snyder said.

“It is a whole lot of hard work and I feel pretty proud of our students. A 98 per­cent VTNE pass rate is very good,” she said.

This high success rate has not only succeeded in giving the college and Vet Tech graduates good num­bers, but it has also helped those graduates and future graduates have a better chance of finding employ­ment, because the school has begun to be recognized as setting high standards within the field, she said.

Students who graduate from the program have been hired consistently by veteri­narians all across the coun­try because of the growing recognition of prestige in the Vet Tech program and its students, she said.

“We are developing a national reputation that leads to the point where other veterinarians in other states are recogniz­ing that if they graduate from CNM, then they have a pretty good train­ing and I am proud of that,” Snyder said.

The Vet Tech pro­gram is a rigorous, 20 month program which is spread over five terms and is accredited by the American Veterinary Medical Association, Snyder said.

Once all 28 classes and the 435 hours of clini­cal experience are com­pleted, the program itself is complete and those stu­dents receive an Associate of Applied Science but are then required to sit for the VTNE, she said.

Passing the VTNE is how graduates become registered Veterinary Technicians and can then practice legally and the only way to be eligible to take the exam is by gradu­ating from an accredited program, like the Vet Tech program, Snyder said.

“So it is kind of a waste of time in New Mexico to get the Associate of Applied Science if you do not intend to sit for the national exam. It is just kind of finish­ing what you started. I tell students when they get accepted into the program that they have two goals— one is to graduate and the other is to pass the VTNE because if they do not, then they are not registered vet technicians,” Snyder said.

CNM only accepts 26 students every fall into the Veterinary program and there is a pre-screening application that must be filled out and submitted by June 23 each year, along with quite a few other pre­requisites, she said.

Applicants must have passed biology and chem­istry, both lecture classes and labs, with a B or higher, along with a math course, English course, psychology, and IT 1010.

GPAs must be at least 2.75, and students must have passed the Health Occupations Basic Entrance Test, also known as the H.O.B.E.T, Snyder said.

And even if an applicant does meet all the require­ments of the pre-screening process, Snyder advises that it helps tremendously if stu­dents have real life experi­ence with animals, because some students in the past have been unable to handle everything that is involved with being a veterinary technician, she said.

“Being a vet tech is not all about holding Fluffy and petting Taffy. They have to be able to handle surgery and blood, cleaning cages and a lot of other things. We have a certain number of students who get into the program and decide they do not want to do it because they did not realize what it was and that is kind of a shame, because they worked very hard to get into the program in the first place,” Snyder said.

Snyder is very proud of the students in the pro­gram and the program itself because it has benefited so many people in the com­munity in so many different ways, she said.

She is proud of the program for helping the students become good at what they want to do by supplying the informa­tion, and making it pos­sible for the students to become someone that is beneficial to so many in our society, she said.

Snyder believes that the benefits from the program go full circle among the community, starting with the students who get jobs, all the way to the clients who bring their pets in for medical help, she said.

“Everyone benefits starting with the students who graduate and get jobs. The veterinarians who hire them benefit a lot too. Of course the animals they work with benefit along with the owners of the animals because they are increasing the standard of practice of veterinary medi­cine,” Snyder said.

Snyder said for stu­dents who plan on apply­ing for the program, to remember that experience with animals helps in the long run but a strong back­ground in science and math is very important because the program is a heavily science-based program.

“You cannot under­stand about pharmacology until you understand anat­omy and physiology. You cannot understand about surgery until you under­stand the science behind surgery. So you need to have a good science back­ground,” Snyder said.

For more informa­tion on the Veterinary Technician program, students can go to cnm. edu/programs-of-study or email Snyder at bsny­der6@cnm.edu

Tutor and poet has book release reading

By Jonathan Baca, Copy Editor | Photos Courtesy of Jessica Lopez and Facebook.com

8.1 8.2

Award winning slam poet, activist, former student, and ACE tutor, Jessica Helen Lopez brings a passion for language to everything she does, painting vivid pictures with words, and bringing wit and attitude to her many causes.

Lopez is scheduled to read from her second published book of poems, “C*nt. Bomb,” at Bookworks on 4022 Rio Grande Blvd NW, April 15 at 7 p.m.

C*nt Bomb is a follow-up to her highly acclaimed collection “Always Messing with Them Boys,” and is a provocative exploration of gender, sexuality, power, and the realities of being a woman and Mexican American in the modern world, Lopez said.

As for the controversial title that the Chronicle has cen­sored, Lopez said it is an attempt to take the power of the word “c*nt” back from people who use it to abuse women, and instead use it to empower them.

“It used to be a fertile word. It’s only been taken and misappropriated over the centu­ries, abused just like women have been abused: raped, pillaged and oppressed to this day,” Lopez said.

The book features femi­nist poems about the violence against women in Juarez, the beauty of the female body, reproductive rights, the process of transitioning from girlhood to womanhood, and Chicana pride, she said.

Lopez has been involved in the Albuquerque slam poetry scene since 2005, when she took a creative writing class at CNM, she said.

One of her assignments was to attend a poetry read­ing, where she met instruc­tor and local poet Don McIver, who convinced her to perform for the first time, she said.

“That was it— man, I was hooked,” Lopez said.

She has since been on five poetry slam teams, and has com­peted in eight national events, she said.

“Then I found my place in this community. And I’ve been writing, performing, publish­ing, and been an educator of spoken and written word ever since,” Lopez said.

In 2012, she was the Women of the World slam poetry cham­pion for Albuquerque, and she repeated this feat just two weeks ago, and will once again go on to represent the Duke City in the national competition.

Her first collection of poems, “Always Messing with Them Boys,” was published in 2011 on West End Press, and has won the Zia Book Award and was featured on the Southwest Book of the Year readers list.

The book has since been part of the curriculum for several literature classes at UNM, where Lopez also teaches poetry, she said.

“I found a lot of success with that book. It really opened my eyes to the publishing world, and the ability to tour with a book that was published by a press,” Lopez said.

Lopez was also featured at TEDxABQ in 2012 where she spoke about the power of poetry to tell personal stories, which can be found on youtube.com.

She said that without the help of mentors like McIver and support from a tight-knit com­munity of local writers and per­formers, her teammates in the Albuquerque Slam Team, and the rest of the poetry community, she would never have gotten to where she is today.

“I really had to model myself after my teammates, who were more experienced than I, and I learned a lot from them. It’s like that within Albuquerque, it’s a mentorship model,” Lopez said.

Lopez said that her advice for anyone who wants to break into the world of the written and spoken word is to read and write as much as possible, to find a community that can support you, and most of all, to never be afraid of failure.

“Allow yourself to be sur­prised, allow yourself to be disap­pointed, but don’t allow yourself to be stagnant. If you want to be a writer, writing will find you; it won’t leave you alone, it will gnaw on you like a bone, and you just have to meet it in the middle,” Lopez said.

The following is an excerpt from the poem “C*nt. Bomb.” by Jessica Helen Lopez. C*nt. Bomb. the c is as insidious as a paper cut as pleasurable as a paper boat — if you happen to know how to fold one and let it ride the u of it lies between your legs look down lovingly lucky you if you happen to have one pet it if you will pet it as if it is the pet rabbit your mother never let you have the c*nt is absolutely not a bomb it will not hand-grenade explode your skull open like a cantaloupe brain matter writhing against the wall behind your head it will not shred your hands to lace if you happen to finger the trigger every now and now the c*nt is most definitely a bomb
The following is an excerpt from
the poem “C*nt. Bomb.” by Jessica
Helen Lopez.
C*nt. Bomb.
the c is as insidious
as a paper cut
as pleasurable as a paper boat —
if you happen to know how to fold
one and let it ride
the u of it lies between your legs
look down lovingly
lucky you if you happen
to have one
pet it if you will
pet it as if it is the pet
rabbit your mother
never let you have
the c*nt is absolutely
not a bomb
it will not hand-grenade explode
your skull open like a cantaloupe
brain matter writhing against
the wall behind your head
it will not shred your hands
to lace if you happen to finger
the trigger every now and now
the c*nt is
most definitely
a bomb

To find Lopez’s book C*nt Bomb online CLICK HERE.

 

Westside campus puts on Arts Jam

By Nick Stern, Senior Reporter | Photo by Nick Stern

8.5

Arts Jam is back at Westside Campus for the spring and people have used the opportunity to express themselves in many different ways.

Arts Jam is an annual event that is all about arts and culture in which stu­dents and faculty alike get the opportunity to show­case their different talents and have a richer experi­ence within the college environment, Mark Love- Williamson, Religion, Humanities and Philosophy Instructor said.

The Arts Jam is one day a week for five consecu­tive weeks starting from Monday, March 24 until Thursday, April 10 and is exclusive to the Westside Campus within the Michael J. Glennon rotunda, he said.

“I always insist that my students get outside experi­ences. So the motivation was to enrich campus life and enrich the students’ experience,” Love-Williamson said.

Everyone who partici­pates is allowed to perform an array of arts that include music, poetry reading, novel read­ings, dramatic readings and art shows, he said.

Love-Williamson said that students were so involved in this event that even the pro­motion posters were designed by students who were inter­ested, he said.

The Anthropology Club also has workshops that are a part of the event and explains many different prehistoric skills from making pinch pots to rubbing sticks together for a fire, Love-Williams said.

Students and faculty are the primary performers while many faculty members brought their entire class to either per­form or to watch and support other performances, he said.

“Many faculty will bring their class, like an English class will come and the stu­dents will take turns reading. We encourage faculty to bring their classes or to suggest that their students come down and check it out,” he said.

Arts Jam is part of the student organization known as Novel Slam which is sup­ported by the college and throws the Novel Slam cel­ebration during every fall semester as well, he said.

Currently there are no plans to host similar events related to the Arts Jam or Novel Slam anywhere other than the Westside Campus in the future but the event will keep on being held every year and does play a large role in creating the campus’ identity and is highly anticipated by many in the Westside commu­nity, he said.

“It helps establish that this is unique to Westside and it helps establish a sense of community and identity here. Students and faculty who have been here a while look forward to Arts Jam and Novel Slam each year and it is our thing, but I would be willing to help other people get started someplace else,” Love-Williamson said.

Communications and Education Major, Charles Sanzone-Wood is part of a theater class that attended the Arts Jam this year and read from several different plays for the experience, and of course — extra credit, he said.

The experience has always been cherished by him and he believes that the event is important to people in the the­ater department because the performances can help build a sense of confidence among shy students, he said.

“It is always really cool but it is especially cool in theater because it is hard for some people who are not used to speaking in public to go out and read in public. You have to project and speak loudly and it kind of sounded like a bunch of people whispering, but next time they go up there, they are going to have more con­fidence,” he said.