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Vice Chair Piér Quintana honored for service

Outgoing Governing Board Vice Chair Piér Quintana, file photo

At the December 2025 Santa Fe Community College Governing Board Meeting, President Becky Rowley and members of the board honored Vice Chair Piér Quintana as she concludes her six-year term of service. Quintana’s term officially ends on Dec. 31, 2025, marking a significant period of leadership and transformation for the college.

President Rowley presented Quintana with a commemorative plaque and expressed gratitude on behalf of faculty, staff and students, stating that the college “really, really appreciates your service,” and “you have helped us grow into a better institution and we are really going to miss you.”

Quintana reflected on her time with the board, saying that “this has been six years of my life that have been incredible, but not without their challenges.” She thanked the community for trusting her, her fellow board members and President Rowley for their collaboration, and her family for their support.

During her remarks, Quintana highlighted several key advancements achieved during her tenure, including the establishment of public work sessions to improve transparency and informed decision-making, navigating major pandemic-era challenges and strengthening program review processes, supporting the college’s transition into CHESS to expand access to higher education statewide, advancing Mosaica as a fast-responding workforce development engine, and championing paid parental leave. She noted that SFCC is the first community college in New Mexico to offer paid parental leave and only the second higher education institution in the state to do so, adding that it is “the better policy” and an achievement the college should be proud of.

She encouraged ongoing vigilance in governance as education evolves, noting that “as we find ourselves in a new political and technological era, the role of governance will look different.” She emphasized the importance of continuing to encourage students to think, speak and act for themselves and to “preserve the development of the human brain.”

Quintana closed her remarks by thanking the college community once again and saying, “I’m looking forward to hanging out with you all socially… Godspeed, my friends.”

President Rowley presents Vice Chair Piér Quintana with a commemorative plaque at the December 3 Governing Board Meeting

Continuing Education Spring 26 registration opens at 9 a.m. on Monday, December 8

New catalog features acclaimed author Elaine Koyama and new weekend & evening classes

Continuing Education proudly announces the release of its Spring 2026 Noncredit Class Catalog, highlighting 87 new courses and an expanded range of programs designed to serve Santa Fe’s vibrant and curious community of lifelong learners.

Building on the college’s strong relationships with community and corporate partners, the new catalog celebrates collaborations with Revolution Bakery, The Railyard Performance Center, Dance Earth Creations, The Four Seasons Resort Santa Fe, Sky Railway, Agua Fria Nursery, CHOMP, The Reel Life and many others who continue to enrich SFCC’s community-based learning.

“SFCC’s Continuing Education thrives because of the shared vision we hold with our partners,” said Benjamin Lincoln, Director of Continuing Education. “Together, we’re cultivating spaces where creativity, skill, and curiosity meet opportunity.”

This spring, SFCC Continuing Education is honored to welcome Elaine Koyama, celebrated author and educator, whose course Making Memoirs Memorable invites students to explore the craft of storytelling through the lens of lived experience.

“Hosting Elaine Koyama in our Spring lineup speaks to our mission of amplifying accomplished voices who inspire others to write, create, and connect,” Lincoln said. “Her work reminds us that education is not only about skill—it’s about story.”

A new highlight of the Spring 2026 catalog is the Weekend and Evening Classes feature, offering flexible learning opportunities for working adults. With more than 40 courses now available outside traditional weekday hours, SFCC Continuing Education is expanding accessibility for those eager to learn beyond the 9-to-5 schedule.

“Our new Weekend and Evening schedule is a direct response to our community,” Lincoln added. “We’re making lifelong learning more inclusive, convenient, and exciting for everyone in Santa Fe.”

The Spring 2026 Continuing Education Catalog includes a dynamic range of personal enrichment and professional development classes—from art, culinary, and outdoor adventure to digital design, leadership, and language studies.

“Education doesn’t end with a degree,” Lincoln said. “It’s a lifelong journey—and our goal is to make that journey accessible, meaningful, and full of discovery.”

Registration for Spring 2026 Continuing Education classes opens at 9 a.m. on December 8, 2025 both online and in person. View the full catalog and register online at www.sfcc.edu/ce or call 505-428-1676.


Therapy dogs bring finals week stress relief to SFCC Library

The SFCC Library welcomed a team of furry, friendly therapy dogs on Wednesday, December 3, offering students a joyful break from finals week pressures. From 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., students gathered in the Library for a chance to pet, cuddle, and relax with the visiting pups—a tradition that brings smiles and reduces stress during one of the busiest times of the semester.

The visit was offered in collaboration with the Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s Pet Outreach Team, whose trained therapy dogs help create calm, supportive environments for students navigating end-of-term deadlines and exams. Wagging tails filled the space as students took a well-deserved pause to recharge.

Congratulations to everyone pushing through finals—your hard work is almost done!


Library announces winter interim hours

The SFCC Library will be open during the weeks of December 8 and December 15 with adjusted winter interim hours. Key schedule notes include:

  • Open 8 a.m.–5 p.m., Monday–Friday during both weeks
  • Storytime on Saturday, December 13
  • Closing early at noon on Tuesday, December 16

Students and community members are invited to stop by for study space, resources, and winter activities.


OIT Maintenance 6 a.m.-Noon Sunday, December 14

OIT will be performing maintenance from 6 a.m.-12 noon on Sunday, December 14, 2025.All systems will be affected by intermittent outages.

If you have questions or concerns, please contact the OIT Service Desk at (505) 428-1222


SFCC celebrated Native American Heritage on Tuesday, Nov. 25

T’owa Shadeh of Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo presented the Bow & Arrow Dance.

SFCC honored and experienced Native American Heritage at an event celebrating culture, tradition and community. Thank you to the Office of Student Engagement and Recruitment for presenting the event! Special thanks to Daniela Gurule, Marcos Maez, Lydia Daily and Student Ambassadors Daniel Moore and Jake Savoie Barker. SFCC appreciates all who helped with the set-up as well Genuine Foods for the tasty buffet lunch, which included Indian tacos and frybread.

Thank you to Ben Lauer and Daniela Gurule who shared highlights of the event with Campus Weekly.

The well-attended event began with an opening prayer by the guest speaker Augustine Derrick Calvert, a spritual leader at Ohkay Owingeth Pueblo. He spoke in Tewa, the language of Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo.

A traditional Bow & Arrow dance was presented by T’owa Shadeh (meaning People Dance) of Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo. Playing the drum as the group danced was Brenda M. Atencio, creator of Towah Shadeh. She’s also well known in the region and internationally as the hip-hop recording artist and performer “G. Precious.”

Augustine Derrick Calvert was the guest speaker. He spoke of the importance of learning your ancesteral language no matter where you come from. He spoke of his memories and of people who influenced him to learn the Tewa language. He shared a light-hearted story about how his knowledge of Tewa became a way to develop a code and strategy in playing baseball that other teams who did not know the language would not understand.

Even though he’s now been an instructor of the language at Ohkay Owingeh Puelblo for more than 12 years, he shared that he continues to learn more about the language. He’s learning how other Tewa-speaking Pueblo communities speak, sometimes differently than at Ohkay Owingeh. He talked about the importance of preserving the language and introducing it to young people, so the language, which is central to cultural traditions can continue.

At the conclusion of the event, Brenda M. Atencio led the closing ceremony. She invited everyone from SFCC to join her in a Round Circle Dance. She expressed that the dance is one of gratitude and that asks for blessings to come to all who had gathered for the event.

Thank you to Ben Lauer, who shared photos from the event. The image with the mountains in the background was taken by Marcos Maez. Click to enlarge.


Pushcart Prize Nominees: Santa Fe Literary Review

Santa Fe Literary Review announces Pushcart Prize selections.

The Pushcart Prize is an annual American literary award that recognizes the best works of poetry, short fiction, and essays published by small presses and literary magazines in the previous year. The Pushcart Press, which established the prize in 1976, publishes an anthology of the winners each year, making it one of the most honored literary projects in America.

To read or download the issue with the nominated works visit: https://www.sfcc.edu/literary-review-issue/2025/ Copies are also available at the SFCC Library.

Congratulations to all the selected nominees! It is a prestigious recognition.


New Student Orientation sessions on Dec. 10, Jan. 9 and Jan. 13

President Becky Rowley, Ph.D., welcomed new and prospective students at a previous New Student Orientation (NSO).

Do you know either a first-time student or a prospective student who is interested in earning a certificate or degree? Invite them to attend an upcoming New Student Orientation (NSO) session. To register for the session, they need to go to https://bit.ly/sfcc-nso-spring26 .

The three NSO sessions are scheduled for:

December

  • Wednesday, December 10, 12-4 p.m.

January

  • Friday, January 9, 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
  • Tuesday, January 13 ,12-4 p.m.

“New Student Orientation is a great way for students to get comfortable on campus before classes start,” said Michelle Aragon, Welcome and Support Coordinator. “They get to meet other students, find out about helpful resources, and start building their community here at SFCC. We want everyone to feel confident and supported as they begin this new chapter.”

New Student Orientation (NSO) is designed for all first-time, degree-seeking students, whether attending full or part time. SFCC also welcomes prospective students who want to learn more about SFCC.

Each New Student Orientation session includes a welcome from college leadership, an overview of student services, guidance on using the mySFCC portal, and tips for accessing campus resources. Financial aid and academic advising team members will be available to provide information and support during the sessions.

New or prospective SFCC students can reach out to Welcome and Support Coordinator Michelle Aragon at 505-428-1050 or michelle.aragon1@sfcc.edu for more information about New Student Orientation and getting started at SFCC.

Spring credit classes begin on Tuesday, January 20. For information on registration visit sfcc.edu/get-started/apply-and-register/ or call 505-428-1270.

Information tables about SFCC’s resources at a previous New Student Orientation.

Clay Club Ceramic Sale drew large crowds

The Clay Club Ceramic Sale was November 19 and November 20. Shoppers had fun talking with the Clay Club members about the variety of work.

Santa Fe Community College Clay Club Ceramics Sale presented its annual sale from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday, November 19 and Thursday, November 20 in the Main Hallway.

One hundred percent of the Clay Club Silent Auction proceeds benefit Campus Cupboard, the college’s food pantry that supports students and employees experiencing food insecurity. SFCC Campus. For information, call 505-428-1000.

Campus Cupboard

Thank you to Ben Lauer who took these photos. Click to enlarge. See more at this SFCCNM Facebook Album.


SFCC and IAIA have holiday fairs on Saturday, Dec. 13

9 a.m.-5 p.m. Santa Fe Community College at 6401 Richards Ave. Santa Fe, NM, 87508
9 a.m.-4 p.m. Institute of American Indian Art at 83 Avan Nu Po Road, Santa Fe, NM, 87508

SFCC and the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) will showcase more than one hundred of the finest artists and craftspeople from across New Mexico at SFCC’s Holiday Arts and Crafts Fair and at the Institute of American Indian Art’s Holiday Art Market on Saturday, December 13. SFCC’s Holiday Arts and Crafts Fair will be in the Main Hallway and Campus Center from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 6401 Richards Ave. IAIA’s Holiday Art Market will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Performing Arts and Fitness Center at 83 Avan Nu Po Road. Admission and parking are free at both events. Shoppers can easily visit both campuses, which are only a six-minute drive or an 11-minute bike ride apart.

SFCC Holiday Arts and Crafts Fair
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, December 13
Main Hallway and Campus Center 6401 Richards Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87508

The SFCC Holiday Arts and Crafts Fair will feature jewelry, metal art, tinwork, holiday ornaments, hand-carved birds and angels, beadwork, baskets, leatherwork, quilts, handmade vintage stockings, wreaths, straw applique, photography, greeting cards, scarves, ponchos, wooden bowls, ceramic dishware and mugs, fiber art, wooden cutting boards, small canvas paintings, aroma products and much more. The Manko food truck will have food for sale. For information contact 505-428-1402 or email chad.gasper@sfcc.eduNote: All booths are sold out.

IAIA Holiday Art Market
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, December 13
Performing Arts and Fitness Center, 83 Avan Nu Po Road, Santa Fe, NM, 87508

Artists representing more than 50 Indigenous nations and groups will be participating. Art available for purchase will include handcrafted beadwork, pottery, glasswork, bronze, wood carvings, jewelry, prints, paintings, textiles, ribbon shirts and skirts, quilts, stickers, and more. Concessions will be available, offering breakfast, lunch, and snacks. For more information, please contact holidayartmarket@iaia.edu.

2024 IAIA Holiday Market, Photograph by Jason S. Ordaz, Institute of American Indian Arts

SFCC and IAIA are jointly promoting the markets. The colleges are encouraging shoppers to stop at both markets.


Check out the latest Inside SFCC

SFCC Faculty Member and Lead Faculty member for Human Services Carlos Balladares and student Tom Vimont

Check out Inside SFCC Vol 10. Read the story, “From making fries to saving lives: SFCC student finds his purpose in Human Services.” Tom Vimont, a Human Services student who returned to school after decades in the restaurant industry, shares thanks for advising by Advisor Jonathan Harrell, encouragement from faculty member Carlos Balladares, and support from the Tutoring Center, Financial Aid and other Student Resources.

Stephen Gomez, Ph.D. (SFCC Faculty), R. Charlie Shultz (Academic Director, SFCC-CEA), Kane Wilding (NMSD student/SFCC Dual Credit student) with his poster presentation and an NSF interpreter

In Noteworthy, read Celebrate student success and the power of giving. In the first section, read about dual-credit New Mexico School for the Deaf student Kane Wilding who was recently honored at a National Science Foundation Conference. Wilding was accompanied by SFCC mentors Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA) Academic Director R. Charlie Shultz, Director of the Innovation Center Ondine Frauenglass, and faculty member Stephen Gomez, Ph.D. Shultz shared how the NSF-ATE grant is supporting the SFCC team’s efforts to introduce young people to science and technical skills.

Also, learn how everyone can support students on Giving Tuesday, December 2, through the SFCC Foundation by giving on that day or now. In addition, see a round-up of upcoming events.



Watch Writing Generation Series Fall 2025 Participant Reading video

Click above to view the video from the Writing Generation 2025 Participant Reading.

SFCC’s Library hosted a free participant online reading on November 19 as the culmination of the Fall 2025 Writing Generation (Wri-Gen) Series. The participants were invited to read any writing inspired by their participation in the Fall 2025 series. The attendees had viewed and/or participated either in all or some of the online readings and creative sessions that had been led by esteemed authors Chip Livingston, Rowena Alegría and James Thomas Stevens.

To read more about the distinguished authors who read their work and led creative sessions this semester please read this press release.

SFCC Library Director Valerie Nye and SFCC professor of English and Creative Writing Stanley (Austin) Eichelberger coordinated the free Fall Writing Generation Series and are developing a Spring 2026 series.

All videos can be found in the YouTube playlist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7H67Ojgmmo&list=PL6AhJfrOrlErcvW8Iayqy72Z4IaVtJKgp


CHESS celebrates five years of collaboration and innovation

CHESS marked its five-year anniversary with a warm celebration at the Higher Education Center in Santa Fe, hosted by CHESS CEO Dr. Shaun McAlmont and CHESS Board Chair and SFCC President Becky Rowley, Ph.D. The event brought together partners from across the member colleges to reflect on the consortium’s achievements, highlight the progress of the Workday Student implementation, and reaffirm CHESS’s mission to strengthen higher education through shared services, collaboration, and student-centered innovation. Attendees enjoyed a relaxed gathering that honored five years of teamwork and looked ahead to the next chapter of transformation. The event was livestreamed and all employees at member colleges were invited to attend online.


Swing Shift Holiday Concert at 7 p.m. Dec. 17 in FEC

Swing Shift Santa Fe Holiday Concert
7 p.m. Wednesday, December 17, 2025
William C. Witter Fitness Education Center (FEC) Atrium (upstairs).

Swing Shift Santa Fe is a Continuing Education group of amateur musicians dedicated to keeping Big Band Era music alive. Directed by instructor Brian Hill.

This concert is free and open to the public.


Splash Mob (Swim Club) will meet at 12:30 p.m. Dec. 11 in FEC

Slash Mob (Swim Club)

When: Thursday, December 11, 2025 at 12:30pm
Where: SFCC Fitness Education Center (FEC) Lobby / Pool deck

What: Meet in the lobby then head to the pool deck for some fun! Plan to be in the water. Club will be
working on timings.

Questions? Accepting members.
Email: maryjane.gonzales@sfcc.edu

Come! Join! Have fun! Swim! Share ideas! Participate!

SFCC Splash Mob Swim Club is open to all SFCC registered students (credit, audit, staff).

The purpose of the club is to participate in swim-related social activities, training
workshops and develop a love for the sport for all levels of swimming ability — beginner to competitive — in a supportive, caring, fun environment.


‘Burned in’ exhibition by student Jen Turner continues in Ripple Effect Gallery in Room 723 D through Jan. 30

The Ripple Effect Gallery (Room 723 D) presents artist and SFCC student Jen Turner’s “Burned In.” The opening was on November 14 and the show continues through January 30. The installation explores the theme of deep time and its existence within civilization and in the natural world. While working, Turner considers the phenomenology of evolution, interconnectedness, and ideas of control vs. chaos. She applies the grid as a motif, sometimes carved in clay or woven with horsehair onto geometric forms.

Lastly, she uses Iive plants to mark time.

The main installation features a hand-tied horse hair grid applied to the entire space and three large clay sculptures. The show will also include four other works: three small sculptures and one large wall work.

Jen Turner lives and works in Santa Fe. She has studied art at various institutions including the Glassell School of Art and Parsons/The New School. She received a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Texas in Austin. She has designed exhibits for The Museum of the City of New York, The Women’s Museum in Dallas and The National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. Her design work has been featured in The New York Times, wallpaper, and Dwell, among others.

A closing reception in January 2026 will be announced soon.

The gallery is open to the public when the college is open:

Monday–Friday, 7 a.m.–10 p.m.;
Saturday, 8 a.m.–8 p.m.; and
Sunday, 12 p.m.–5 p.m.


Glass Club Sale was a success

Thank you to everyone who helped with the Glass Club Sale and those who supported the artists. Thank you to Ben Lauer for the photos.


Please contribute your (tiny) art to the Free Little Art Gallery at the SFCC Library! Located near the front desk, the Free Little Art Gallery accepts tiny paintings, sculpture, and other artwork.


Exhibition “Art, Extraction, and Imagination – If the Land could speak, what would it say?” had a successful opening and continues through Dec. 19 by Room 567

From left to right, Jared Weiss (SFCC Program Head of Drawing and Painting), Shane Tolbert (SFCC Academic Director for School of Art and Design), Shayla Blatchford (Pocacito Workshop Artist and Pocacito Cofounder), Max Gruenig (Pocacitor Cofounder), Felicia Martinez (Pocacito Board Member), Markus Hatzlemann (Deputy Consulate General of the Federal Republic of Germany in Houston) and Dean James (Jim) Wysong, Ed.D.

SFCC Academic Director Shane Tolbert shared a report about the successful opening reception on November 3 for “Art, Extraction, and Imagination – If the Land could speak, what would it say?” (See this press release about the exhibition opening, which featured work by artist Shayla Bratchford and students who participated in the Pocacito student workshop offered at SFCC on November 1.)

Shane Talbot’s report: The School of Arts and Design at Santa Fe Community College hosted an opening reception for the Pocacito Student Workshop led by local artist and activist Shayla Blatchford. More than 40 guests attended, including Markus Hatzlemann, Deputy Consulate General of the Federal Republic of Germany in Houston.
Max Gruenig, Pocacito Co-Founder, opened the evening by introducing the workshop and its participants. Dean James Wysong welcomed guests to the college and spoke about the importance of elevating local voices and creating visibility around uranium mining—an issue deeply connected to New Mexico’s history and communities.
Blatchford shared insights into her ongoing Anti-Uranium Mapping Project, highlighting how the visual arts can serve as a bridge for understanding and healing. Through the workshop, students explored themes of Interdependence, Reciprocity, and Rematriation, fostering dialogue that connects audiences across regions and cultures.

As part of Pocacito initiatives, four SFCC students participated in the workshop and 40 students attended two presentations on uranium mining in East Germany and in the Navajo Nation. 
The exhibition runs through December 19 and is funded by Germany’s Foreign Office. It can be viewed in the exhbition space next to Room 567.


SFCC offers Group Fitness Instructor Certificate

Do you enjoy fitness and are you interested in helping others get fit? Consider the Group Fitness Instructor Certificate, which can be completed in just three semesters. The 28.5 credit program prepares students the skills and experience to lead safe and effective and engaging group fitness classes in a variety of formats.

For more information contact Kim Hopkins via email at kimberly.hopkins@sfcc.edu. Find out more about the program/certificate at https://www.sfcc.edu/programs/group-fitness-instructor/.


Library lockers available for day use

SFCC Library now has lockers available for day use! Open to students, staff, and faculty. Keys are available for checkout at the front desk.


Registration for Spring 2026 semester now open

sfcc logo

Registration for the Spring 2026 semester opened to all from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, November 4. Encourage students, friends and family members to register as early as possible to get the best selection of classes. Employees consider using your EEB Benefit.

For information on how to apply or register visit sfcc.edu/get-started/apply-and-register/ or call 505-428-1270.


SFCC Library to host a Banned Books Club

Come join us to read and discuss historically banned books. Meetings will be monthly, with dates and times TBD. If you are interested, please fill out this interest form and SFCC Library will be in touch: https://forms.office.com/r/j6nPBUzM1M.


Medical Assisting Program accepting applications

SFCC’s Medical Assistant program is now accepting applications for the Spring semester.

To get information and to download the application, either use the QR code in the flyer or visit https://www.sfcc.edu/programs/medical-assistant/.

  • Complete certification faster with accelerated courses.
  • Gain practical experience, and real-world scenarios, with clinical practicum hours
  • Assistance with job placement in the medical field.
  • Accredited program
  • Experienced instructors
  • Financial Aid Eligible
  • Enrollment Fall and Spring Semester

Questions? Email jessica.balladeras@sfcc.edu

or call 505-428-1926.

Either use the QR code on this flyer or visit https://www.sfcc.edu/programs/medical-assistant/ to read more about the Medical Assistance program or to download the application.

Register for The Rewriting Room session on Dec. 19

Santa Fe Community College’s Wellness Center invites everyone to The Rewriting Room, a monthly hybrid experience that blends writing, reflection and well-being. The next session is from 4 to 5:15 p.m. Friday, December 19 in the SFCC Wellness Center, Room LL312 in person or online. RSVP encouraged at https://luma.com/sfccswc. To get a virtual link, participants must pre-register.

This monthly non-guided session offers an opportunity to write without writing prompts. Writers of all levels are welcome. Participants can write anything. Each session is a calm, welcoming space to reflect, write, and reconnect with yourself—no pressure, just presence. The free event is hosted by LaNysha Adams, Ph.D. Call 505-428-1349 for assistance registering.

The Rewriting Room is open to students, employees and the public.


Let Campus Weekly share your news!
Let us know about your accomplishments and other news that you’d like to share. Please remember that the deadline is 5 p.m. Wednesday to get an item in the next week’s issue. Submit here.


Relax and recharge with Wellness Wednesday December 10

Take a break and recharge during Wellness Wednesday from 12:15 to 1:15 p.m. on Wednesday, December 10, at the Student Wellness Center. Sponsored by Title V, the event offers free snacks, a welcoming space to connect with classmates, and simple wellness activities designed to reduce stress and boost well-being. Wellness Wednesday provides a supportive environment where students can pause, breathe, and prioritize their health.


Register for Campus Cupboard Cook Kits

Use the QR code on the above graphic or visit https://luma.com/sfccswc to register for the December Campus Cupboard Cook Kit.

One bag, one meal for your family! Each cook kit includes all the ingredients and a simple recipe to help you create a delicious dish with minimal stress and maximum flavor. These kits are designed with students and families in mind, making cooking affordable,
accessible, and fun.
December Cook Kit:

A simple, sweet, and healthy Pumpkin Rice Pudding with almonds and raisins.
Available for pick-up: December 8

You’ll need to RSVP to reserve your free kit. Spots are limited and go fast!
SFCC Students Only.

Location: West Wing, Campus Cupboard, Room LL 305

Use the QR code in the graphic or visit https://luma.com/sfccswc to register online for a kit.
Also, be sure to check out Campus Wellness Center upcoming events!

Campus Cupboard

Rock the Resume, Ace the Interview
Workshop for student parents Jan. 12; register by Jan. 7

Whether you’re preparing for your post-graduation job search or looking for a job while you’re in school, this workshop is here to help you prepare. We’ll talk about negotiating a salary, understanding benefits, and job seeking as a parent, as well as common mistakes we see from applicants. We’ll also help student parents create or update a resume, draft a cover letter that can be adapted for different applications, and practice interview skills. Register today for our next workshop on Monday, January 12th 10 am – 2 pm.



SPAN 2121 will explore Music in Latin America

Instructors Aileen El-Kadi and Joseph Klemens.

The SPAN 2121 class in Spring 2026 will focus on Music in Latin America. The class will explore the origins of selected musical genres and dive into related literary works, history, and, of course, ¡mucha música!

The class meets every Tuesday from 12:30 p.m. to 2:15 p.m.
Also, students who complete Spanish 1-4 can apply for the Spanish Certificate. This Certificate can be used for any job application as proof of your proficiency in professional Spanish.

Register at https://www.sfcc.edu/get-started/apply-and-register/Please note: Heritage and Advanced Spanish speakers may take a test in the testing center to see if they can be admitted into this class without the required pre-requisite class. For details visit: https://www.sfcc.edu/assessment-exams-english-and-spanish/#spanish. After your assessment, please reach out to Aileen El-Kadi at aileen.elkadi@sfcc.edu.


Focus on Photography in Spring semester

Use the QR code in graphic to see class listings.

The Photography program is offering a wide range of classes in Spring 2026. All Photography classes are in the SFCC Registration drop down link (Search for Credit Courses) under the heading ARTS – Arts Studio. See those classes here. The Photography program offers state-of-the-art-digital facilities as well as incredible analog darkrooms.

Get information about registering at SFCC at https://www.sfcc.edu/get-started/apply-and-register/


Rocío Rodríguez’s exhibition, ‘Revealing,’ continues through Jan. 1 at Center for Contemporary Art

A file photo of Rocío Rodríguez from a previous SFCC exhibition.

SFCC student, Rocío Rodríguez, solo exhibition at the Center for Contemporary Arts (CCA) opened on November 19 and continues through January 1, 2026.

“Revealing” | Rocío Rodríguez (solo exhibition)
Location: CCA | Cinema Gallery
Address: 1050 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM

Revealing

“Revealing” showcases the latest work from the Santa Fe–based artist Rocío Rodríguez. She uses canvas and acrylic paint to create sculptures that adapt to the space. In her pieces, Rocío celebrates the architecture of the canvas by removing the stretcher. Both sides of the material are important. The nails add a restriction to the canvas, and brings both, a construction industry reference as well as a religious note to the work. The folds of the fabric reveal intimate spaces allowing the viewer to see the most expressive side of the canvas interacting with the contrast of the steel. By removing the restrains of the stretcher, in her work the canvas is free and reveals a side kept hidden until now.

Rocío Rodríguez was born in Chihuahua, Mexico, and she is currently based in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She has a Master of Architecture degree from UNM and an Associate in Fine Arts degree with a focus on sculpture from the SFCC. She has five years of experience as a portrait photographer. Her multidisciplinary background is reflected in her work.

Instagram: @rociorodriguezstudio
Website: https://rociorodriguez.studio

The exhibition continues through January 1, 2026.


Intro to Information Literacy class for spring semester

The information in the graphic is below. Photo credit: Freepik.com — “business people using internet”

The new Information Literacy Class (first offered in the 2025 fall semester) is being offered again in the spring semester.

Level up your research game and make sense of today’s information landscape!

  • Learn to spot misinformation
  • Boost your critical thinking
  • Decode media bias
  • Master research & fact-checking skills
  • Understand AI & research
  • Fully online. Perfect for any major.
  • Skills for school and life!

Register for Intro to Information Literacy: LIBR 1111 CRN 30824. This 3 credit class is offered in the spring 2026 semester.

Questions? Contact sarah.hood@sfcc.edu.


Storytime in SFCC Library Family Study Room from 10:30 – 11:30 a.m. on Dec. 13

Children accompanied by their student parents/caregivers are invited to Storytime at SFCC’s Library Family Study Room on Saturday, December 15. Storytime is sponsored by SFCC Libray, SFCC Student Parent Success Program, Santa Fe Public Library and Friends of the Santa Fe Public Library.


Katie Besser Student Awards accepting submissions through March 1, 2026

Showcase your creativity in writing or art for a chance to win prizes, be published in Accolades, and present your work at Meow Wolf. Categories include image/photography, fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, academic essay, en español (any genre), and instructor-nominated. Students enrolled in at least 3 credits may submit up to six pieces (5 pages max for writing; jpg/pdf for images). Especially consider submitting in art, academic essay, and en español. SFCC Employees are not eligible.

Email submissions from your SFCC account to genevieve.betts@sfcc.edu with your name, titles, categories, phone number, and A#. Deadline: March 1, 2026. Submissions must not contain identifying information.


Student Parent Success Program available to help parenting students anytime

Students who are juggling parenting and school are encouraged to reach out anytime to the Student Parent Success Program by calling 505-428-1036 or by sending an email to parentingstudents@sfcc.edu.

  • Discuss your concerns as a parent
  • Learn about resources and support as a parent
  • Get help finding childcare
  • Get help assessing developmental assessments for your child
  • Find out about family activities and parenting classes

Students: Need childcare? Make sure you’re on the Kids Campus waitlist

When a spot comes available at the Kids Campus, students get priority placement. Kids Campus wants to support student parents and hopes that those needing childcare will get on the waitlist.

Children of degree-seeking SFCC students, SFCC employees, and full-time students at the Higher Education Center are prioritized for placement to support a two-generation philosophy of education at the college.

Visit the Kids Campus website for more information. Students receive a 10% discount on the cost of Kids Campus and N.M. Early Childhood Education and Care Development offers Child Care Assistance to income-eligible students.



Spring 2026 Convocation January 8-16, 2026

Spring 2026 Convocation Week will take place from January 8-16, 2026.

President Rowley’s Welcome is scheduled for 9 a.m. on January 14 and will be held in-person in the Jemez Rooms and online. For employees attending in person, breakfast will be available beginning at 8:30 a.m. If you require any food accommodations, please contact Lucia Lucero.

Visit the Spring Convocation Schedule 2026 for the list of individual sessions and professional development opportunities. Please use the link for the most current schedule, which updates frequently.  

Upon reviewing the schedule, you’ll notice that some events will be held on campus, others will take place in a hybrid format, and some will be conducted in person. Please review the schedule carefully and talk to your supervisor or deans if you have additional questions.


English and Communications Winter 2025 Newsletter

The latest SFCC English and Communications Department Winter 2025 Newsletter is now available — packed with updates on this semester’s projects, faculty achievements, and exciting new offerings.

Read the full newsletter online: https://www.sfcc.edu/english-and-communications-winter-2025-newsletter/.


Academic Advisors Nicole Ferreira and Jonathan Harrell presented at the Annual Conference of the National Academic Advising Association

Ferreira and Harrell were selected to give an hour-long presentation titled, “Can Community College Students Save the Soul of Higher Education?”

SFCC Academic Advisors Jonathan Harrell and Nicole Ferreira

On October 28, SFCC Academic Advisors Nicole Ferreira and Jonathan Harrell presented at the Annual Conference of the National Academic Advising Association (NACADA) in Las Vegas, NV. Academic Advisor Cahalan Fiddes and Advising Director Reynaldo Maestas were also in attendance and helped represent Santa Fe Community College at this national conference.

This year’s NACADA conference hosted over 3,000 academic advising professionals from around the world. Out of a competitive pool of applicants, Ferreira and Harrell were selected to give an hour-long presentation titled, “Can Community College Students Save the Soul of Higher Education?” Their presentation was a response to a talk given at last year’s annual conference by Dr. Marc Lowenstein of Richard Stockton College of New Jersey, “Can Advising Save the Soul of Higher Education?” In this talk, Lowenstein spoke on the rise of the “transactional” view of higher education and the threat that this view poses to higher education’s “soul,” or its teaching and learning mission.

Inspired by Dr. Lowenstein’s presentation, and by conversations they’d had with their students, Ferreira and Harrell developed a set of reflection activities to better understand SFCC students’ goals and their views on work, life, and education. They brought these activities to a handful of first-year Composition classes and led the students through a series of writing prompts followed by a group discussion.

While participation in the discussion was voluntary and the written responses were collected anonymously, Harrell and Ferreira were impressed that nearly all the students they visited chose to participate and share their responses to the questions.

“Students were eager to talk with us and share their views,” Harrell said. “We asked them questions about what they hoped for from their lives and from their work and about how they viewed the purpose of higher education in their lives. They had so many thoughtful things to say and many of them told us that they had never really been asked these kinds of questions before.”

Several themes emerged from the activity, including students’ desire to make a positive impact, a desire for personal growth and fulfillment, and the need for meaningful work that fits with their values and interests.

“The students we heard from are definitely concerned about jobs and money,” the advisors explained. “They want to be able to support themselves and their families and to not have to live from paycheck to paycheck. But they also want those jobs to be meaningful. They want careers that allow them to contribute to the community. They are also expressing anxiety and pressure to choose a path right away, and the fear of getting stuck in a job or career that they don’t like, or that’s not a good fit.”

Some students mentioned the range of interesting classes that SFCC has to offer, their desire to explore different interests at the college, and the hope that attending college would equip them with the knowledge and experience to become a better person.

“It felt really meaningful to share our students’ words and thoughts with the conference participants. People were genuinely moved by the things that SFCC students had to say,” Ferreira commented.

Attendees of the presentation gave overwhelmingly positive feedback, writing: “the advisors’ talk made me tear up (genuinely and in a good way) hearing their quotes. It gave me so much hope.” Another said, “Truly enjoyed this session. Both Jonathan and Nicole did a fabulous job. They were well prepared and shared incredible findings and knowledge.” Another mentioned that the presentation “brought them back to their ‘why.’”

“Beyond the rewards of uplifting our students’ voices, it was heartwarming and validating to see the impact this had on other advisors!” Ferreira added. “It was a wonderful experience of connection and community. We are thrilled that we could bring some hope to academic advisors and remind them of the impact they can make not only through their advising sessions, but through research and sharing their knowledge with the campus community.”

Attendance at this year’s NACADA conference was supported by funds from the SFCC Title V EXITO Grant. The academic advising team is especially grateful to Title V Program Director Julie Gallegos and Senior Administrative Assistant for Student Affairs Loretta Lopez for their warm support in getting us to the event!

Academic Advisors Cahalan Fiddes, Nicole Ferreira, and Jonathan Harrell and Academic Advising Director Reynaldo Maestas attended the conference.

Defensive Driving Certification
8 a.m.-1 p.m. Friday, January 16, 2026

As per policy 5-10, everyone is required  to take a Defensive Driving Certification Class prior to operating SFCC vehicles.

The next Defensive Driving Certification Class has been scheduled for Friday, January 16, 2026 from 8 a.m. – 1 p.m in West Wing room 212. (Please arrive promptly or it will cause the class to run long.)

To receive full credit for the class, you must arrive promptly at 8 a.m. and attend the full 4-5 hours.

Please register by calling or emailing:

jackie.Gutierrez@sfcc.edu   X 1756              
steve.silva@sfcc.edu  X 1403

Please provide the following information when you call or email us to make a reservation for the class:

  • Full name of individual attending.
  • Individual’s New Mexico driver license number; and a copy of the individuals driver’s license if not already on file
  • Department Name

Fleet vehicles are a great cost-effective way for employees to travel for work related reasons without incurring any personal vehicle expense and having to wait for a reimbursement.

If you have any questions about the program or the classes, please call Jackie or Steve at the numbers listed above.


Invitation for Retirement Party for Evelyn Gonzales and Debbie Collins from 2 to 4 p.m. Dec. 18 at HEC

Everyone is invited to the Retirement Party!

Dear Friends and Colleagues,
After years of dedication, hard work, and countless memories, Debbie Collins and Evelyn Gonzales are retiring! We would love for you to join us as we celebrate their incredible career and the lasting impact they’ve made on all of us.

Debbie Collins & Evelyn Gonzales’s Retirement Party
December 18,2025
at 2-4 p.m.
Higher Education Center Santa Fe Community College
1950 Siringo Rd.
Santa Fe, NM, 87508


Math adjunct Adrian Dolinay shares podcast on free Open Educational Resources

SFCC Math adjunct Adrian Dolinay recently recorded a podcast interview with an executive from OpenStax, a leading provider of free Open Educational Resources (OER). OpenStax offers no-cost, peer-reviewed textbooks and learning materials used by colleges and universities across the country.

In the interview, Dolinay discusses how OER can reduce financial barriers for students while giving instructors flexible, high-quality teaching tools. The conversation also highlights the importance of OER at SFCC and ongoing efforts to expand access to free learning resources.

You can listen to the interview on your preferred platform:
YouTube: https://youtu.be/d0njrFln-O4?si=vTqhmmj8kCFUOI9_
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/5JmCEA5YL6wHgJ0ciNaMP9
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/open-educational-resources-with-anthony-palmiotto/id1765996824?i=1000738139053


Updated Roles and Processes for Course Scheduling, Room Requests, and Events

sfcc logo

The following message from Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs Margaret Peters was sent to employees via email on Friday, November 8.

Dear SFCC Employees-
As we continue to improve our scheduling processes and implement the new Ad Astra software, we want to ensure that everyone is informed about the updated procedures and points of contact for scheduling courses (for Credit, Adult Education, and Continuing Education/Contract Training), requesting rooms, and planning events. Given recent changes in personnel and role assignments, this message aims to provide clarity on responsibilities. The attached document outlines the steps to follow, ensuring that our operations run smoothly and efficiently across all departments.  Moreover, the new Ad Astra Scheduling Software includes two modules that align with the job duties of various individuals on campus. 
The description of the responsible individual, by request type, is provided on the attached document.
If you have a question that this email does not answer, please reach out to Amanda Harner, who will route you to the appropriate person to assist you in your request.
Best-
Margaret
Margaret A. Peters
Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs

Follow-up note: Please see or download the document here. Amanda Harner can be reached either at 505-428-1040 or amanda.harner@sfcc.edu.


Sage Paisner’s Foto Forum Santa Fe gallery features “Sin Miedo” through Jan. 30

Image from “Sin Miedo” exhibtion

Photography Lead Faculty Sage Paisner’s gallery Foto Santa Fe is featuring a photo exhibition with Tasmin Sara and Tatja Lucía. Sage Paisner is executive director of Foto Forum Santa Fe. During the opening reception on November 7, Tatja Lucía gave a poetry reading and both artists gave an artist talk. The exhibition continues through January 30

SIN MIEDO ARTIST STATEMENT

SIN MIEDO

Sin Miedo is a multi-faceted story rooted in New Mexican culture. This project was born from the visions of Photographer Tasnim Sara and Poet Tatja Lucia. Through the marriage of our unique interpretations of living is birthed a rich telling of generational longing, connection, heartache and rapture. It is a collection of narratives gathered from within the fringes of our loyal haunt and refuge – of ancestors, neighbors, lovers and friends. Both from New Mexico, our cherished devotion to Home is reflected in every breath and in every work of art. This is our love letter to New Mexico, a gathering around the hearth. The plain where the soul lives on forever, with cadence and echo, in the absence of fear.

Each a storyteller in our own right, our goal with this project is to propagate a sentiment that strikes a chord with both the local collective heart and the outsider looking in. It brings to light a diverse spectrum of New Mexican spirit that is layered to become the foundation of this unique, eternal landscape.

It is the link between generations, an anchor that unites. A certain ache that home causes, a mystic space where pain and purpose go hand in hand to create a form of pride that is unique to this land. Our art speaks to this ever-persistent, underlying thread of spirit here; we tell stories of ghosts coming out of the hills as we watched from the back seat, and we dance the same rhythm from over-exposure to the sun.

Warm citric light.

Acidity, humility and passion.

Polarity in everyday life.

Wet wood, laid to dry in the New Mexico sun.

Tasnim Sara is a photographer and film-maker from Santa Fe, New Mexico. She is a storyteller who works to create dimensionality by unifying the real with the make-believe. Through her exploration of the present moment combined with myth, she deeply understands the delicacy of ghe human form and its organic and innate relationship to the land. She prioritizes community and sovereignty, and hopes to empower through her work; viewing the erotic as a life force that can be an antidote for death.

Tasnim earned a BFA in photography from Parsons School of Design. She has shown at the Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Gallery in New York City. Her photobook, The Image as Nutrition, came out in 2022 and explores the dualities of human existence, the feast and famine of life. Her first solo show Where I am from, we need calloused feet exhibited in 2024 at The Hollander gallery in Santa Fe, NM.

Tatja Lucía is a Santa Fe native and indigenous poet/performer/musician. Her work focuses on the melding of art and myth, ancestry and nostalgia, food and prayer, glamour, frivolity and time. She comes from a long lineage of storytellers and honors this tradition.

Moving beyond English, Spanish, and the blood memory of the Plains people, she expresses a boundless identity, often using the alias Tatja Lucía. She holds numerous awards including the Lena Todd award for poetry and recently was nominated for the Pushcart Prize, Best of Small Presses. Her debut poetry collection, Silver Box from Finishing Line Press, has garnered praise and esteem across the board.

Some new creative ventures include a second poetry collection, a cookbook, a delve into a new chapter of cooking and curating, and “Homesteading.” A mommy to a toddler, and with another baby on the way, she spends her time alchemizing in the space between life and art and dreams. Always creating and collaborating. She lives on a small farm with her family in Coyote, NM.


CHESS Connection Newsletter – December 3, 2025

The December CHESS Connection highlights the project’s transition from Workset C to Workset D—an implementation milestone that advances Workday Student toward major student-facing functions, including advising tools, graduation tracking, and financial aid integration. The issue also features the newest CHESS Superstar, guidance for all employees to verify personal information in Workday, reminders about upcoming CHESS Chat sessions returning in February, and a call for volunteers to join the Change Agent program, which helps support Workday Student adoption across member colleges.

Read the full issue here.


Duplicating Center accepting photos for SFCC Pet of the Month

Mr. Darcy and Miss Lizzie.

Send pictures of your pet to DuplicatingCenter@sfcc.edu. Each month a pet will be chosen, and notepads will be available with their picture. The proud owner will receive a 36×36 poster of their pet.

The Duplicating Center hopes to collect enough pictures to create a 2025 SFCC Pet Calendar.

Requirements:

  • Must be a your own photo, no professional portraits
  • Must be submitted by the last week of each month

Contact Michael at the Duplicating Center with questions.



WOW awards – nominate an outstanding coworker today!

The Office of Human Resources recognizes WOW recipients for their dedicated work and commitment to Santa Fe Community College.

Please be sure to nominate someone who you think is doing a great job here at SFCC.


The award is a $25.00 gift certificate from Amazon.
The submission form can be found at the SFCC Connect portal, Home » Online Forms/Surveys/Tests » Online Forms » Office of Human Resources or nominate by reaching out to Donna Castro at donna.castro@sfcc.edu.


New employees: We’d like to get to know you!

Staff Senate is encouraging new staff employees to come to an upcoming Staff Senate to introduce yourselves.

Campus Weekly would also love to introduce new staff and faculty members. Please send us your name, job title, when you started at SFCC, brief bio and photo (it can be a selfie!) to Submit News.

If you’re new to SFCC, we’d love to introduce you to the our community. We’re happy you’re working with us at SFCC!


Feature

SFCC celebrates Graduate Nurse Pinning Ceremony


Recognizing academic achievement and the transition to professional nursing

Santa Fe Community College honored its newest nursing graduates during the Graduate Nurse Pinning Ceremony at 11 a.m. on December 4 in the Jemez Rooms. Family, friends, faculty, and supporters gathered to celebrate the students’ hard work, perseverance, and commitment to entering the nursing profession.

The pinning ceremony—a cherished tradition in nursing programs across the country—symbolizes the graduates’ transition from students to professional nurses. SFCC Nursing Program faculty presented each graduate with a nursing pin, recognizing both their academic achievements and their readiness to serve the community with skill and compassion.

ADN Level IV Graduates

  • Marissa Baker
  • Yaneth Irigoyen
  • Melanie Jaime
  • Yoselin Lopez
  • Lorena Rodriguez

BSN Graduates

  • Hailey Council
  • Darrell Gomez
  • Laura Hatchett
  • Michelle Salazar
  • Monique Sedillo

Congratulations to all the graduates on reaching this milestone and best wishes as they begin their careers in the healthcare field. Thank you to MPR’s Ben Lauer for the photos.

Writing Generation videos of James Thomas Stevens’ Oct. 22 reading and Oct. 29 creative session available

Above is a video of the October 22 reading by James Thomas Stevens for SFCC’s Fall Wri-Gen Series.

SFCC’s Library and Creative Writing program offered the free online Fall 2025 Writing Generation (Wri-Gen) Series featuring esteemed authors. Each author read at an introductory session. In a follow-up Zoom meeting the author engaged the participants in a writing exercise/creative session. The sessions began at 6 p.m. on Wednesdays and featured these writers: Chip Livingston (Aug. 20 reading; Aug. 27 creative session), Rowena Alegría (Sept. 17 reading; Sept. 24 creative session) and James Thomas Stevens (Oct. 22 reading; Oct. 29 creative session).

Series attendees will have a reading on Nov. 19.

Read more about the full fall writing Generation Series in this press release. SFCC Library Director Valerie Nye and Professor of English and Creative Writing Austin (Stanley) Eichelberger are coordinating the series.

James Thomas Stevens

Bio: James Thomas Stevens (Akwesasne Mohawk) was born in Niagara Falls, New York and grew up between Six Nations Reserve in Ontario (the birthplace of his grandfather), the Akwesasne Mohawk Reservation in upstate New York (birthplace of his grandmother), and the Tuscarora Reservation in western New York (where his grandparents settled). He attended the Institute of American Indian Arts, Naropa University’s Jack Kerouac School of Disembodies Poetics, and Brown University’s graduate C.W. program. Stevens is the author of eight books of poetry, including, Combing the Snakes from His Hair, Mohawk/Samoa: Transmigrations, A Bridge Dead in the Water, The Mutual Life, Bulle/Chimere, and DisOrient, and The Golden Book. He is a 2000 Whiting Award recipient and a 2005 finalist for the National Poetry Series Award.  He teaches in IAIA’s undergraduate and graduate Creative Writing Programs. He teaches Poetry, Creative nonfiction, Native American literature, and literary world survey courses. He lives in Cañoncito, New Mexico.

Above is the video of the October 29 creative session led by James Thomas Stevens.

Writing Generation videos of Rowena Alegría’s reading and creative session now available

The above video was from Rowena Alegria’s September 24 creative session.

SFCC’s Fall 2025 Writing Generation (Wri-Gen) series featured author Rowena Alegria in two online sessions. Her reading was on September 17 and her creative session was on September 24.

SFCC’s Library and Creative Writing program is offering the free online Fall 2025 Writing Generation (Wri-Gen) Series featuring esteemed authors. Each author reads at an introductory session. In a follow-up Zoom meeting the author engages the participants in a writing exercise/creative session. The sessions begin at 6 p.m. on Wednesdays and will feature these writers: Chip Livingston (Aug. 20 reading; Aug. 27 creative session), Rowena Alegría (Sept. 17 reading; Sept. 24 creative session) and James Thomas Stevens (Oct. 22 reading; Oct. 29 creative session). Series attendees will have a reading on Nov. 19.

Read more about the full fall writing Generation Series in this press release. SFCC Library Director Valerie Nye and Professor of English and Creative Writing Austin (Stanley) Eichelberger are coordinating the series.

Rowena Alegría

Bio: Rowena Alegría served as Chief Storyteller for the City & County of Denver, founder and director of the Denver Office of Storytelling, from 2019 to 2024. The world’s only storytelling, cultural preservation and narrative change project created nine documentary films and about a hundred short films, made about four million impressions on social media and hosted more than seventy community events in which story opened into conversations about our collective history, challenges and triumphs.

Under Alegría’s leadership, the team brought resident voices and histories out of the shadows and onto big and little screens for more than half million people. The work was selected for five film festivals, nominated for six Heartland Emmy Awards and honored with some 27 different awards, including History Colorado’s Josephine H. Miles Award for a major contribution to state history.

Alegría has spoken around the world about the power of storytelling, including before the National Civic League, Georgetown University Center for Social Impact, American Planning Association, Smart Cities Connect, Center for Public Safety Excellence, and at a one-day symposium inspired by the Office of Storytelling and organized by Sorbonne University. She was Naropa University’s 2024 Cobb Peace Lecturer and among the urban thought leaders at the first Bruner Debates on Urban Excellence. She once moderated an evening with the amazing Rita Moreno.

Alegría was the 2021 Ricardo Salinas Scholar in Fiction at Aspen Words and has been the recipient of art-making fellowships and residencies. She earned an MFA in Fiction from the Institute of American Indian Arts and is a member of Sandra Cisneros’ Macondo Writers Workshop. Her creative writing has appeared in publications including The Rumpus, the Mississippi Review, the Hennepin Review and a 2023 anthology titled We Are the West. A filmmaker, career journalist, communications executive and speech writer, she is writing a novel that plays with form and the history of the Southwest. She was adopted and raised in Denver. For more, see http://www.RowenaAlegria.com

Rowena Alegría Artist Statement: Adopted at birth, inheritance and identity fascinate me. I knew the woman who gave me light only in the sharing of fluids and nutrients. For nine months, I experienced her tears, her rabia, her indecision. I heard her words in languages I would learn long afterward. I imagine her intimations wait like timed bombs in my consciousness and go off as whispered intuition. From her, I inherited a love of learning and a passion for words and justice. Surrendered at birth, I marvel at how I know so little of her in artifact or experience, as she walked on before my search, but how so much of her – learned from her poems and dissertation, from her survivors, those who loved her but didn’t know her well enough to know I existed – survives in my genes.

My work in progress, a novel titled “500 Springs,” takes a particular interest in these ideas coupled with the legacy of colonialism on the indigenous and mestizo peoples of what is now Mexico and the southwestern United States, which includes my home state of Colorado. The novel explores the potential of souls carrying over generations the unresolved pain of the past as well as unfulfilled love and promises.

For more information about the Writing Generation series, contact SFCC Library Director Valerie Nye at valerie.nye@sfcc.edu or 505-428-1506.

Video of Rowena Alegría’s reading on September 17.

‘Adventures of Odysseus’ exhibition continues through Jan. 7 in Main Hallway

Photos above are from the September 25 opening of “Adventures of Odysseus” featuring the art of Artemis Jegart (1927-2015). Click to enlarge.

Odysseus, 1968
Seashells, paint, and cement, 24 x 24 inches

Santa Fe Art on Campus is pleased to present Adventures of Odysseus by Artemis Jegart (1927-2015) in the Main Hallway exhibition space near the Main entrance (across from the Cashiers). The exhibition opened with a reception on September 25 and continues through January 7, 2026.

The exhibition focuses on twelve individual works created in 1968.  The work was publicly exhibited at Watergate Galleries, Inc., Washington D.C. in 1972. Subsequently, Adventures of Odysseus remained privately on view in the home of the artist until her death in 2015. 

Special thanks to the artist’s daughter, Rudi Artemis Jegart, as well as Academic Director of School of Art and Design Shane Tolbert and Director of Art on Campus Linda Cassel who helped make this exhibition possible.

Text below is by Katya Kirilloff.

I am five or six years old.  I have come to dinner with my parents and sister to the house of a family friend.  It’s a typical 1970’s style suburban home in Frederick, Maryland, seemingly no different from the neighbors along the street.  We park and walk up the concrete walkway to the front door where we are greeted by our host Artemis Jegart.  The foyer is dark and dramatic.  My sister and I are guided down the stone floor hallway to a room full of vintage clothing.  We are given bathing suits to change into that feel like costumes (hand-me-downs from Artemis’ two daughters).  We shed everything from the outside world and are completely under Artemis’s spell.  Now that we are appropriately dressed for dinner, we are led into the dining room.

I am floating on my back in a deep emerald pool in Artemis’s dining room.  I lift my head up and I hear the soothing noises of my parents and our hosts talking, laughing, silverware and glasses clanking gently.  Behind them is an entire wall covered in oyster shells, each with the mother of pearl metallic inside exposed.  Sporadically throughout the wall a shell is turned to create a shelf. There are lit candles on all these little shelves.  The wall dances with candlelight.  It is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen.  I dip my ears back under water and turn my back to the dinner scene and there, high up on the opposite wall in a row, is the Adventures of Odysseus.

Twelve squares of concrete embedded with shells each depicting a character or piece of a story like an ancient comic book. This is my introduction to The Odyssey. There is Polyphemus, the towering cyclops, dominating the square with his massive chest and shoulders, while Aeolus with puckered lips and full cheek seems to blow forth a mighty wind. What strikes me most is Penelope, weeping tears for her long-lost husband, tears so endless that with a touch of humor, Artemis added a spigot.

As Circe welcomes Odysseus,

She opened her gleaming doors at once and stepped forth, inviting them all in, and in they went, all innocence.  Only Eurylochus stayed behind—he sensed a trap…She ushered them in to sit on high backed chairs, then she mixed them a potion—cheese, barley and pale honey mulled in Pramnian wine—but into the brew she stirred her wicked drugs to wipe from their memories any thought of home. Once they’d drained the bowls she filled, suddenly she struck with her wand, drove them into her pigsties, all of them bristling into swine—with grunts, snouts—even their bodies, yes, and only the men’s minds stayed steadfast as before. So off, they went to their pens, sobbing, squealing as Circe flung them acorns, cornel nuts and mast, common fodder for hogs that root and roll in mud.

The Odyssey as translated by Robert Fagles.

Artemis Jegart brief bio

Artemis Jegart earned her BA (1949) and her MA (1953) from Florida State University. In 1956, Jegart was named an outstanding new talent by Art in America.  She created a mural of the Capitol Center for Tallahassee’s original Municipal Airport which was dedicated April 23, 1961, a mural later re-created and exhibited at Tallahassee International Airport. In 1969, Jegart moved to Frederick, Maryland. In 1993, the artist relocated to Lamy, New Mexico. She died in 2015.


Watch videos of Chip Livingston Wri-Gen Aug. 20 reading and Aug. 27 creative session

The video is from Chip Livingston’s reading on Wednesday, August 20. The Wri-Gen-Series is produced by SFCC Library and SFCC Creative Writing program.
The above video is from Chip Livingston’s creative writing session on August 27.

If you missed the inaugural reading and creative session with Chip Livings of the SFCC Fall Writing Generation (Wri-Gen) series you can watch the videos above.

Participants need to pre-register just once for any part of the fall series at https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/WriGenFall2025.

Read more about the full Fall Writing Generation Series (Wri-Gen) in this press release. SFCC Library Director Valerie Nye and Professor of English and Creative Writing Austin (Stanley) Eichelberger are coordinating the series.

Chip Livingston

Bio: Chip Livingston is the mixed-blood Creek author of six books: three collections of poetry, a novel, a nonfiction children’s book, and a story and essay collection. He’s also the editor of Love, Loosha: The Letters of Lucia Berlin and Kenward Elmslie. His writing has appeared in Ploughshares, Prairie Schooner, Poem-A-Day, and other literary journals. Livingston teaches in the MFA program at the Institute of American Indian Arts. He lives in Montevideo, Uruguay.

Chip Livingston’s description of his writing: Livingston writes from the margins, mixing genres and forms with an aim to combine the best elements of poetry and prose to surprising results.

Chip Livingston’s creative session: Livingston will provide prompts and examples applicable to all genres (or mixing genres) in a creative session intended to provoke new approaches.

For questions about the series, contact SFCC Library Director Valerie Nye at valerie.nye@sfcc.edu or call 505-428-1506.

Author Chip Livingston

Fire Alarm System Upgrades & Renewal

Fire Alarm System Upgrades & Renewal at SFCC

SFCC is undergoing a large Fire Alarm system upgrade and renewal. There will be no impact to current Fire Alarm systems or normal daily activities. You may see our vendor, Intraworks, working in various areas over the next few months.

For questions please contact: Andrea Mueller, SFCC Assistant Director, Facilities and Operations, c. 505-930-9781 w.505-428-1873, andrea.mueller1@sfcc.edu


Video of Miriam Sagan’s reading “Herding Poems” now available

Enjoy the video recording above of Herding Poems an Online Reading with Miriam Sagan presented by the SFCC Library on July 31.

When Miriam Sagan was approaching 70 she started to sort her files of “uncollected” poems. These poems had been published in magazines, but not in books. Did they merit being collected? The answer was that most did not, but there was a book-length manuscript that could be assembled. These poems begin in the mid 1970s and run to the present. They are quirkier, perhaps more eccentric, her more publicly accessible writing.

In this presentation viewers were invited to share in the experience of excavating poetry, memory, landscape, and a life in New Mexico. The event began with a half-hour reading by Sagan from WHAT SOLITUDE SEES IN ME: Uncollected Poems 1976-2023 from Casa Urraca Press in Abiquiu. Then there was an open discussion on how to put a poetry manuscript together. This editorial process can be daunting for both beginners and established poets, but there are numerous handy strategies that create a readable and enjoyable book of poetry.


SFCC in the news

The following stories or radio shows either featured or mentioned SFCC or one of its employees. Some stories also are related to NM higher education.


10/29/2025, Santa Fe Reporter, “3 Questions with photographer/activist Shayla Blatchford”

10/27/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, “Smartboard, Oct. 27, 2025-SFCC hosts reception for ‘Cirque du Celestia’ exhibit”

10/27/2025, Los Alamos Daily Post, “SFCC’s Clay Club Ceramics Sale To Be Held Nov. 19 & 20”

10/22/2025, Albuquerque Journal, “Santa Fe Community College to train aspiring moviemakers with backlot film set”

10/21/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, “New Mexico film industry officials tout new set, training project at Santa Fe Community College”

10/21/2025, KRQE, “First-of-its-kind city backlot coming to Santa Fe to expand film industry and training”

10/20/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, “Smartboard, Oct. 20, 2025-SFCC offers free digital design, 3D printing course; SFCC student glass art sale will feature handmade items; SFCC exhibition explores art and environment”

10/19/2025, Los Alamos Daily Post, “SFCC To Host Glass Club Sale Nov. 12-13”

10/18/2025, Los Alamos Daily Post, “ABC Suicide Prevention Partner Class Oct. 20”

10/15/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, “Out There! FOR WRITERS & READERS-Reveling in the Review”

10/05/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, “Early voting opens Tuesday at Santa Fe County Clerk’s Office”

09/29/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, “Smartboard Sept. 29, 2025-SFCC to close for Indigenous Peoples Day”

09/22/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, “Smartboard Sept. 22, 2025-SFCC launches ‘College Ready’ workshops for parents”

09/17/2025, KUNM, KUNM News Update, Santa Fe mayoral candidate forum set for Wednesday

09/15/2025, Los Alamos Daily Post, SFCC Offers Free Fiber Optic Technician Bootcamp

09/15/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, ‘New Mexican,’ other Santa Fe media outlets to hold mayoral candidate forum Wednesday

09/14/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, Santa Fe area food service inspections, Aug. 12-15

Santa Fe New Mexican, 09/11/2025, “Reactions mixed on New Mexico’s universal child care proposal”

09/08/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, “Smartboard Sept. 8, 2025-SFCC to hold fair in support of mental health, SFCC to hold fall career fair featuring employers”

09/05/2025, Santa Fe New Mexican, “Out There! EXHIBITIONISM-Teacher Talent”