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Saint Mary's Newsroom

Campus Connection

An update from the president to alumni and parents

Fall semester planning update

As the spring semester ends for our graduate and undergraduate students, we now look to fall 2020. To this end, the university is focusing its attention on preparing for the return of students in the fall.

Please know we plan to resume on-campus classes for the fall 2020 semester while keeping the health and safety of all students, faculty, and staff — as well as excellence in teaching, learning, and student services — as our top priorities. These priorities have been and continue to be central to our Lasallian Catholic mission.

We have developed multiple scenarios for re-opening campus operations based on state and federal guidance, though our various locations may open differently based on student needs. For example, the size of the residential campus and the small-city setting of Winona may make it easier for students to maintain social distancing and avoid the potential for environmentally mediated pathways of exposure to the coronavirus, should an outbreak occur. The lack of residential halls in Minneapolis and Rochester will inform our opening of those campuses. In fact, the life situations of some graduate students may support more online learning and be better suited to such.

Subcommittees comprising faculty and staff representatives are exploring the following areas to determine the varying impact and need in the different areas:

  • Academics and Student Services
  • Student Life
  • Facilities
  • Personnel and Operations
  • Admissions
  • Marketing and Communication

The university will continue to share additional updates in an ongoing manner via Cardinal Update, especially as the university remains informed, as always, by the latest state, federal, and CDC guidelines. Please know we will do all we propose with the health and safety of our students, faculty, staff, and communities at the forefront of our thinking.

Looking ahead

The next issue of CommUNITY will be sent on Thursday, May 28, because of the Memorial Day holiday. Starting in June, CommUNITY will be shared biweekly on Thursdays.

Spiritual offering

Saint Mary’s Campus Ministry continues to share spiritual offerings to provide much-needed perspective and a focus on faith in this time of uncertainty.

“As the Father has loved me, so I have loved you; abide in my love.” — John 15:9

Visit Saint Mary’s Campus Ministry on Facebook.

FGI Scholar spotlight: Junior turns Twin Cities tech internship into academic journey in Winona

FGI Scholar spotlight: Junior turns Twin Cities tech internship into academic journey in Winona

Jimmy Cumbe-Paucar ’21 is a student of few words, but others in the Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota community will be glad to tell you about the positive impact he has made on both the Twin Cities and Winona Campuses.

“He is always willing to help with projects and assignments,” said Peggy Walters, administrative assistant to the president, who supervised him in his student work role in the President’s Office for the past three years. “Jimmy is extremely dependable and competent. He possesses a calm demeanor. I do not ever hesitate to ask for his assistance, no matter the task.”

This is a portrait shot of Jimmy Cumbe-Paucar“Jimmy is a quiet leader,” said Alisa Macksey, dean of Student Success and the First Generation Initiative. “He leads by example through his actions and behaviors. When he does speak, it is well thought out.”

“The first thing — from a distance — one notices with Jimmy is his unique and perfectly coiffed and classy hair style,” said Brother Robert Smith, FSC ’76, Ph.D., senior vice president for university initiatives and special adviser to the president. “The second thing one comes to know about Jimmy is his professionalism, maturity, thoughtfulness, and good-natured personality.

“He is, in his own way, a Lasallian through and through and is the kind of young man who will surely ‘pay it forward.’”

Brother Robert first met Cumbe-Paucar during the student’s sophomore year at Cristo Rey Jesuit High School in Minneapolis. His family came to the City of Lakes by way of Ecuador. Cumbe-Paucar started working on the Twin Cities Campus as part of Cristo Rey’s Corporate Work Study Program (CWSP), being assigned to various instructional technology-related tasks by Bob Andersen, director of instructional technology. 

Cumbe-Paucar said he was interested to learn more about Andersen and his role and came to see him as a mentor. 

“He worked with us one day a week,” Andersen said. “Immediately, he showed an amazing work ethic, aptitude, and maturity. So we hired him in the summer [to work outside the CWSP] and kept giving him more and more work.”

In the two summers he spent as an intern, Cumbe-Paucar set up a multitude of cameras and tripods to record classes, used cameras to record events at the Saint Mary’s University Center, and administered a variety of tasks related to the upkeep of the university’s learning management system at the time, Blackboard.

This is a photo of Jimmy Cumbe-Paucar and Bob Andersen.

Jimmy Cumbe-Paucar ’21 with Bob Andersen, director of instructional technology on the Twin Cities Campus.

Through his work on the Twin Cities Campus, Cumbe-Paucar eventually found out about the First Generation Initiative (FGI), which led to him enrolling at Saint Mary’s as an FGI Scholar after completing Countdown to College.

Cumbe-Paucar, who also plays midfielder on the club soccer team, said he felt happy at Saint Mary’s “since day one,” a feeling he attributes to taking part in the Countdown to College program.

“I know a lot of students feel homesick, but Countdown to College really helped prevent that,” he said. “We were able to adjust to the Saint Mary’s environment beforehand.”

He began his undergraduate journey as a computer science major, but is now pursuing a graphic design major, hoping to find work in the Twin Cities metro area upon graduation. For now, he is looking forward to his senior year in Winona. 

“I’m just thankful for all the people who have donated to us,” said Cumbe-Paucar. “It really means a lot because it shows that people do count on us and they trust that we can, in the end, help make a change here and in the world.”

MCA offers DIY postcard course for older adults

MCA offers DIY postcard course for older adults

WINONA, Minn. — Minnesota Conservatory for the Arts (MCA) is offering a unique home-based program for adults ages 55 and older. In this workshop, Art in a Box: Playful Postcards, participants will receive supplies to create their own postcards using guided lesson plans over an eight-week period.

Students will send the postcards they create to other Winona-area classmates and receive postcards from classmates in return. The class instructor will also check in with participants throughout the program online or by phone.

Each art kit will include blank postcards, stamps, colored pencils, dual tip markers, and more. Students will learn new artist techniques, be encouraged to set aside time for creativity, and feel more connected to others during this challenging time.

This self-paced weekly project-based class will take place June 1 to July 18 and be taught by Brianna Haupt. The cost is $22, which includes the art kit and Winona delivery or pickup. To register, visit mca.smumn.edu.

Art in a Box: Playful Postcards is offered at a discounted fee thanks to the Elizabeth Callender King Foundation.

About MCA

The Minnesota Conservatory for the Arts (MCA), an affiliate program of Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota, is a nonprofit community arts school offering programming in dance, music, visual art, and theatre. Classes, lessons, workshops, and camps are offered for students of all ages from birth through older adults at the Valéncia Arts Center. For more information about MCA or Galleria Valéncia, visit mca.smumn.edu, email mca@smumn.edu, or call 507-453-5500.

Saint Mary’s University presents two faculty/staff awards [video]

Saint Mary’s University presents two faculty/staff awards [video]

WINONA, Minn. — In celebration of its heritage, Saint Mary’s University virtually presented awards to one faculty member and one staff member in honor of Founders’ Day. Visit smumn.edu/virtualevents or play below to view the ceremony.

Karen Hemker, director of access services, received the Bishop Heffron Award. Given by the university every other year, this award is bestowed on an employee who has demonstrated a long-term commitment to the values of the university, is a positive member of the university community as demonstrated by their ability to work successfully across constituencies for the good of the university, and is a model of the Lasallian Catholic spirit. Hemker, who has been part of Saint Mary’s for 15 years, has worked with countless students, parents and guardians, and educators over those years to ensure all students have the needed accommodations to be successful at the university.

Matthew Nowakowski, Ed.D., program director of the Doctor of Business Administration program, core associate professor, and interim vice provost of Academic Affairs, received the Distinguished Lasallian Educator Award. Presented each year, the award recognizes a member of the faculty, staff, or administration whose life of faith and service exemplifies the ideals of Saint John Baptist de La Salle. The award is given by Lasallian institutions like Saint Mary’s in the Lasallian Region of North America of the De La Salle Christian Brothers to honor contributions and commitment to the Lasallian mission of education. Dr. Nowakowski has taught and been an administrator at Saint Mary’s for 12 years and is a mentor, teacher, and scholar who is deeply committed to the success of faculty, staff, and students at Saint Mary’s.

Graduating seniors to be honored virtually May 22

Graduating seniors to be honored virtually May 22

WINONA, Minn. — On Friday, May 22, at 7 p.m., Saint Mary’s will celebrate 198 graduating students during a virtual commencement ceremony. We invite faculty, staff, students, their families, friends, and supporters to take part in celebrating graduating seniors and all of their academic accomplishments.

Watch the ceremony at smumn.edu/commencement2020.

Saint Mary’s partners with program for Latin American Sisters

Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota has entered into a partnership with the Catholic Extension Society to educate nearly 40 Latin American religious sisters over the next five years. These religious sisters will be in mission dioceses in the United States, ministering among Latino immigrant populations while earning their degrees online and in a hybrid format at Saint Mary’s. The program is made possible through Catholic Extension’s partnership with the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, which has the goal of enhancing congregational vitality for religious sisters in the Global South. The program will begin in fall 2020 and conclude by spring 2025.

Saint Mary’s receives high approval from the Higher Learning Commission

On May 5, Saint Mary’s received notification from the Higher Learning Commission (HLC) that our efforts to respond to the coronavirus outbreak “demonstrate the institution’s commitment to the public good and attention to the general well-being of its constituents.” Furthermore, we were informed that the university is approved at the highest level of distance education approval and does not require any waiver or approval to change its offerings.

Our commitment to quality education (whether online or on-campus), a core Lasallian principle, is reflected in this notification from the HLC.

Father James P. Burns

The Rev. James P. Burns, IVD, Ph.D.
President
Saint Mary's University of Minnesota

Comments?

Email: chahn@smumn.edu

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