Divisions and Administrative Offices
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Texas State University divisions, administrative offices, and interdisciplinary project teams across.
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Item Cuentos and Testimonies I: Diversity and Inclusion at Texas State(Texas State University, Office of the Provost, 2019-05) Bourgeois, Gene; Hayes, Autumn; Bowman, Scott; Pimentel, Charise; Pimentel, Octavio; Guajardo, Miguel A.; Valadez, Monica; Grimaldo, Leticia Romero; Henry, Genise; Henderson, Karon; Roundtree, Aimee K.; Williams, Miriam F.; Scott, Amanda; Norton, Christine; Watt, Toni; Kampschaefer, Scott; Saldivar, Scott; Ramirez, Sara; Pimentel, Octavio; Williams, Miriam F.Cuentos and Testimonies is a collection of short chapters, edited by Dr. Octavio Pimentel and Dr. Miriam F. Williams, is the result of an open invitation for faculty to share their thoughts and vision for diversity and inclusion at a Texas State. This edited book collection is designed to pave a path forward, toward healing and reconciliation. The editors acknowledge that we must continue to share our stories (cuentos) in real time and face to face, but there is power in the written word, carefully crafted and considered. Chapter 1: Introduction (pp. 1-4) Chapter 2: The Yes-Ands (pp. 5-10) Chapter 3: Intentional Inclusion - Thoughts on Galvanizing a Diverse and Inclusive University (pp. 11-17) Chapter 4: I Stress Less and Sleep More at a Hispanic Service Institution (pp. 18-23) Chapter 5: Ā”No escondan el nopal! Sus raĆces son obvias! ("Don't Attempt to Hide your Latinx Ethnicity! Your Ethnicity is Obvious") (pp. 24-29) Chapter 6: Framing of PlĆ”ticas, Reflections and Cuentos (pp. 30-40) Chapter 7: Diversity & Inclusion in Academic Program Development and Faculty Recruitment: An Interview with Professor Libby Allison (pp. 41-48) Chapter 8: Cultivating Activist-Based Pedagogy in the Age of Generation Z (pp. 49-55) Chapter 9: From Foster Care to College Student: Addressing the Need for Equity, Access and Inclusion in Higher Education (pp. 56-63) Chapter 10: Diversity is Essential to a Thriving Collegiate Culture (pp. 64-69) Chapter 11: Pushing Boundaries of Tejanx: Visibility, Inclusion, and Experimentation (pp. 70-75) Chapter 12: A Call for Anti-Discrimination: Embracing Difference through Respect, Responsibility, and Reciprocity (pp. 76-81)Item Cuentos and Testimonies II: Students' Voices, Inclusion, and Anti-Racism(Texas State University, Office of the Provost, 2021-09) Thorne, Debbie; Stills, Aja; Vastakis, Anastasia; Hinojosa, Olivia; Monroe, Rozelle; Kuykendall, Victoria; Serrano, Elisa; Rodriguez, Jack; Rose, Sarah; Esparza, Elizabeth; Dixon, Jhmar; Villalpando, Lindsey; Pimentel, Quetzin; Pimentel, Charise; Jimenez-Lopez, Jesus A.; Pimentel, Octavio; Blanco, Clarice A.; Scott, AmandaCuentos and Testimonies is a collection of short chapters, edited by Dr. Octavio Pimentel and Dr. Miriam F. Williams, is the result of an open invitation for faculty to share their thoughts and vision for diversity and inclusion at a Texas State. This edited book collection is designed to pave a path forward, toward healing and reconciliation. The editors acknowledge that we must continue to share our stories (cuentos) in real time and face to face, but there is power in the written word, carefully crafted and considered. Chapter 1: Introduction (pp. 1-6) Chapter 2: "We Need to Change Everything" (pp. 7-11) Chapter 3: Cautionary Tale (pp. 12-18) Chapter 4: Reclaiming Agency (pp. 19-25) Chapter 5: My Experience as a Black Man in the IT Industry (pp. 26-35) Chapter 6: Attention Deficit Disorder (pp. 36-44) Chapter 7: Aprende del Silencio / Learn from Silence (pp. 45-52) Chapter 8: My Stutter Journey at Texas State University (pp. 53-55) Chapter 9: The Origin of My Fear Trigger Warning: #thepatriarchy (pp. 56-57) Chapter 10: Diversity Amidst Disaster (pp. 58-66) Chapter 11: Soy PanameƱo y Afro-Americano Viviendo en Tejas: Ethnic Complexity of a Texas State University Student (pp. 67-70) Chapter 12: Constant Mispronunciations and Corrections (pp. 71-76) Chapter 13: A Critical Reflection on College Choice and Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI) Status (pp. 77-86) Chapter 14: Hispanic Serving Institutions: Chipping Away at Systemic Racism (pp. 87-95) Chapter 15: Cracking the Curriculum Code: A Student-Teacher Dialogue on Crisis, Pedagogy, and Practice (pp. 96-109)Item Playing for a Winner: Remembering Coach Milton Jowers(Texas State University-San Marcos, 2009-01) McDonald, VernonNo abstract prepared.Item Summary of a Conference on Texas Water Problems and Possible Solutions(Southwest Texas State Teachers College, 1954-12) Southwest Texas State Teachers CollegeOn July 20, 1954, more than five hundred farmers, ranchers, bankers, industrialists, members of the armed forces, teachers, and students gathered on the campus of Southwest Texas State Teachers College to hear leading authorities from private, state, and federal agencies discuss the increasingly acute Texas water problem ans some of the possible solutions. This conference was sponsored by Southwest Texas State Teachers College to meet two of its educational responsibilities: first, to ensure that teachers and prospective teachers studying at this public institution be prepared to present the problem of conservation to the students in the Texas schools; second, to educate the lay public to the nature of the conservation problem. This bulletin has been published in the belief that the addresses delivered to the conference are of such significance to the people of Texas that they should be given the widest dissemination both to teachers and the general public.