Monday, September 16, 2019

Welcoming New Faculty


 

Feiyan Zhao, Instructor of Chinese:

I am the exchange professor from Xi’dian University in China. I received my Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees from Xi'an International Studies University (Xi'an, China) with a focus on applied linguistics. I have been teaching at Xi’dian University for 13 years. I have even received the teaching prize. My daughter and I will be here for the academic year. I like teaching, and I love my students.  I feel really energetic to be with them. 

 

Dr. Daniel Gilden, Instructor of Spanish:

I completed my PhD in Spanish Literature at the University of California, Irvine and have taught literature and coordinated Spanish language programs at Pitzer College and USC, and more recently at the University of Denver. I specialize in Latin American narrative as well as second-language pedagogy. I also have interests in interdisciplinary teaching, and in 2010 the Fulbright Distinguished Awards in Teaching Program allowed me to study the intersection between higher education and organic farmers in northern Argentina and produce a documentary about local farmers and educators in Bella Vista (Corrientes). I also have extensive experience teaching Spanish to native speakers at the high school level.


Dr. Rocío Rubio Moirón, Assistant Professor of Spanish:

I am from Galicia (Spain). I earned degrees in Latin and Greek as well as in Hispanic Studies from the Universidad de Santiago de Compostela. My PhD in Spanish is from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and my MA is from the University of Colorado-Boulder. My research focuses on Medieval Iberian Literature. More specifically, my work analyzes the connections between humor and the human body in thirteenth century poetry, including productions in Galician-Portuguese, Catalonian and Castilian. I most recently taught at the University of Denver. I also taught Spanish Literature and Language in Bulgaria for Spain’s Ministerio de Educación.


Florion Pichon, Fulbright Instructor of French:

I am from Saint Etienne. I recently completed my Master's degree in English speaking studies with my master's thesis entitled "James M. Cain's Double Indemnity and The Postman Always Rings Twice: A Neo-naturalistic Diagnosis." I am fascinated by the American literature, cinematography and civilization. I also enjoy travelling and treading the boards as often as possible. This experience as a teacher in the Midwest is a very interesting opportunity before starting my PhD and to approach the American way of life from a one-of-a-kind perspective.

 

Jennifer Jackson, Instructor of English:

I am originally from Frankfort, IL. I earned a BA in English and a BA in Political Science at Blackburn College in Carlinville, Illinois in 2009 and my MA in Writing and Rhetoric from Missouri State University in 2011. Since then, I have taught in colleges in Arkansas and Mississippi before finally landing right back in Missouri with my husband David and son Henry. I enjoy presenting at regional and national conferences on issues of rhetorical pedagogy, gender, feminism, and pop culture. Most recently, I presented at the College English Association conference in New Orleans this past spring on a multimodal DIY magazine (aka “zines”) project that I assign in my classroom; I will be presenting on the exploration and rejection of toxic masculinity in the horror film Mandy at the Southwest American Culture/Pop Culture Conference this February. Finally, I am constantly reading something (and enthusiastically give and take recommendations), love Bruce Springsteen, and am excited to be back in the Midwest after a long absence.


Tomas Garcia Rico, Fulbright Instructor of Spanish:

I hold a BA in English education from the Benemérita y Centenaria Escuela Normal del estado de San Luis Potosí. I have worked as an English teacher for a public high school and at the Universidad Autonoma de San Luis Potosi for the past 7 years. In 2016, I traveled to the USA as a member of a teaching assistant program in Arizona State University. I love technology and like to find ways of implementing various technological tools in the classroom to foster motivation amongst students. 

 

Kelly Lock McMillen, Instructor of English:

Seriously, I’ve been recycled. 
In 1996, when I finally graduated from MWSU, people joked that I deserved tenure. I had 164 credit hours under my belt; I was a non-traditional student, graduating college 10 years (gasp) after high school graduation. Let’s just say, I’ve taken Robert Frost to heart.  My friends would tell you I had a penchant for masochism rather than following those less traveled roads. 
I loved taking classes from  Dr. McCay. There was nothing better than listening to her read Chaucer as it originally would have sounded and nothing more terrifying than hearing her voice call me, at home, my last semester of college, because my best friend couldn’t complete an assignment, and I pinky swore that I’d stand in solidarity with her against the evils of yet another outrageous McCay assignment. Don’t tell my friend, but hearing Dr. McCay on the other end of the phone convinced me solidarity was overrated. 
I also believed that the diaries of women could be viewed as literature (I know, that’s blasphemy as the men in History Department called it), so I took every class about women’s diaries, and I traveled to England to sit in a graveyard so I could commune with Vera Brittain and her WWI diaries. 
As a student worker in the department, I anointed Dr. Karen Fulton my queen and Dr. John Gilgun my spirit animal. My office door is laced, yes, laced with the drug of Fulton and Gilgun. I saved every postcard they ever sent me in hopes that I would someday have an office in Eder (aka SSC) 222M. 
Who makes their goal a non-tenure track instructor position? I do. I did. My college advisor cringes every time I post something on Facebook about getting my “dream job.” I can hear him take his hands and run them over the top of his head (he is nearly bald because of this repetitive motion) and say, “Kelly, dream bigger.” 
I did dream bigger. I’ve spent the last 24 years teaching every English class in 7-12 education, plus ENG 100, 104, 108, 210 (another blasphemous thing). And graduate courses for teachers. I’ve encouraged and forced and coerced students to read and write, and because of that I’ve been voted most influential or best teacher of the year multiple times. When I worked full time on campus, I was the College101 coordinator--aka University 101. Sorry if you’all hate that one, but my vision landed in a poppy field outside of Oz.  I’ve devoted my life to public education, and now, I have my dream job: I can actually teach, like real life teach. On top of that, I can wear jeans without donating money to receive a “Jeans Ticket.” I can go to the bathroom at will, and I have an office with a door that will shut, but I haven’t shut it yet because the postcards my queen and spirit animal gave me are taped there. I want to see them every day as a reminder of Gilgun handing me a Monet’s Haystack postcard because I had a poem that was accepted to Alaska Quarterly and that edition’s cover was haystacks. I want to remember my queen sending me Pre-Raphaelites every few days as she was on sabbatical in London because she understood that to a young mother like me, attending college years after she should have been, MWSU was like my Goblin Market. 
I’m recycled (except for the wrinkles and extra pounds that are brand spanking new), but I’m as good as new. 

 

 

No comments: