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Immigration Rights and Resources for the Campus Community

Exercising Your Rights to Free Speech

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Career Assistance Services for Students

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Career Development Center

Thomas King

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Portrait of Thomas King

Advisor

Lisa Tremain

Thomas King, 2018

Thesis:

After graduating from HSU in May 2018, I landed two adjunct English composition jobs in Tennessee: Christian Brothers University and Southwest Tennessee Community College. In 2019, I continued teaching for CBU and began adjunct teaching for Concorde Career College. I worked at both institutions until this August, when CBU offered me a full-time one-year contract. The courses I teach are Composition 1, Composition 2, and occasionally Introduction to Literature. My foot was in the door, when the department head noticed on my curriculum vitae my years of writing center work. I was all the way in because of lots of hard work, persistence, resilience, and flexibleness. When I am asked to teach a class--no matter what day of the week, time of day or year, traditional setting, hybrid, or online--I do not turn it down. I regularly ​reflect on the courses that I took in the MA program because each course provided me with a solid foundation.

Alysia Hegg

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Portrait of Alysia Hegg

Advisor

Lisa Tremain

Alysia Hegg, 2021

Thesis:

I recently accepted the position of Student Development Advisor for College of the Redwoods Adult and Community Education Program. The MA in English helped bump me up to the higher end of the starting pay for this position, which, first and foremost, I believe is important because people often wonder what an MA in English can do for you. In addition to just simply having this degree, the MA program at HSU taught me how to do research, helped me to develop professionally in terms of my desire to pursue a career in academic services, provided me a framework to work as a progressive English and Spanish teacher as a bilingual educator, and finally, helped me become a more nonviolent person through the support I received in doing race work.

Karen Zurita

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Karen Zurita, 2022

Thesis:

I’m Karen Zurita, and I’m a proud first generation Mixtec Xicanx. I grew up in Sylmar, where I attended Los Angeles Mission College and transferred to Humboldt State to complete my Bachelor’s. During that time, I discovered my love for spoken-word poetry and being an essayist. My passion grew, and when I graduated in 2016, it influenced me to enroll in Humboldt State’s english graduate program, focusing on Literature and Cultural Studies. Over the course of my graduate studies, my professors introduced me to many Queer Xicanx writers, which helped me articulate my ideas and decolonize my writing. Living in Humboldt for several years, I had the honor to get to know the Yurok and Hupa community, and they helped me understand how to start healing my writing and how to put my identity into words. In all, I found the language to empower myself and my community, and became a poet who knows how to wield it.
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