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Photo of Blaine Martin, a Class of 2020 alumnus

Alumni Spotlight: Educators’ passion for topic important for Blaine Martin (’20)

Hometown/Sending School

Arkansas High School, Texarkana

College and Area(s) of Study

Tulane University, B.S. in Environmental Biology

Current profession and company. Tell us what you do.

I am a Research Assistant at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama. I work in

the field of fungal ecology, understanding how fungi play a role in maintaining tropical forest diversity and their interactions with plants. I collect field samples of diseased plant tissues, culture and store fungi, and complete DNA analysis. I lead a project that analyzes the effect of seasonality and rainfall on leaf fungal pathogen communities and the implications for seedling survival. Additionally, I am applying to Ph.D. programs to start in fall 2024.

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Alumni Spotlight: Learning stress management key for Mara Campbell ('16)

Alumni Spotlight: Learning stress management key for Mara Campbell (’16)

Hometown/Sending School

Little Rock/North Little Rock High School

College and Area(s) of Study

Hendrix College: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology major, Asian Studies minor.

Current profession and company. Tell us what you do.

I am a M.D./Ph.D. student at UAMS. I’m currently in the fourth year of my PhD, and my lab studies S. aureus osteomyelitis (staph bone infections).

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Alumni Spotlight: Allen Eason (’96) still appreciates values learned at ASMSA

Hometown/Sending School

I lived many places in Arkansas as my father was a Methodist minister. I was in Magnolia when I was admitted to ASMSA.

College and Area(s) of Study

BA in Psychology with minors in Music and Religion from Hendrix College in 2000

PhD in Educational Psychology with an emphasis in Counseling Psychology from Oklahoma State University in 2008

Current profession and company. Tell us what you do.

I have been a professor, researcher, and practitioner across my career. I was recently Supervisory Psychologist/Team Coordinator for the PTSD unit at Veterans Healthcare System of the Ozarks where I supervised 15 therapists and the care of more than 10,000 veterans. I am currently an independent scholar and occasional wisdom teacher, mentor, and healer.

What made you choose ASMSA?

I was excited about being challenged with rigorous learning opportunities, especially the variety of mathematics courses offered.

What are your fondest memories of the school?

My fondest memory is engaging with fellow students committed to learning and growing together, often outside of the classroom. Despite my higher education pursuits, ASMSA is perhaps the most diverse and valuable learning community I have ever experienced. I also loved the afternoons and evenings that we played basketball for hours and hours.

What do you feel was the most important thing that you learned?

Independent thinking and open-mindedness were the most important values I learned. I never again accepted information at face value, especially without evidence of subject matter expertise.

Share a favorite quote and/or your favorite book.

One of my many favorite books is The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World by Lewis Hyde. The book emphasizes selflessness over self-expression and focuses on the process of creating gifts, no matter the form. One of my favorite quotes from Angela Davis is: “I am no longer accepting the things I cannot change. I am changing the things I cannot accept.” I believe too many people underestimate their ability to influence local communities and sometimes view critical issues as beyond their control. I also love learning about traditional Lakota ways of knowing, including stories, rituals, songs, etc.

What do you feel are the most important tools for an educator to have in today’s classroom?

It is vital for an educator to nurture profound curiosity for new learning. Students benefit from developing the skills to recognize subject matter experts and eventually become experts themselves. My favorite educators encourage transdisciplinary knowledge and the examination of multiple perspectives and evaluation methods.

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Alumni Spotlight: Rocky Tsang (’00) has a heart-felt care for children

Hometown/Sending School

Bald Knob, Ark./Bald Knob High School

College and Area(s) of Study

Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.), Biological Science/Physiology

Current profession and company. Tell us what you do.

Pediatric cardiologist and cardiac intensivist at Texas Children’s Hospital. I am a dual-boarded pediatric cardiologist and cardiac intensive care physician. I take care of children with congenital heart diseases in the ICU and the outpatient clinic. I am also the medical director of the single ventricle program at the Heart Center in Texas Children’s Hospital – the number one pediatric heart center in the U.S. and the largest children’s hospital in the country.

What made you choose to attend ASMSA?

I attended a small high school in a town with a population of no more than 3,000 at the time. I knew I was interested in a field in STEM.  My parents and I felt that ASMSA (called ASMS at the time) offered me the best education in preparation for college as I was also interested in applying to highly competitive universities.

What are your fondest memories of the school?

My fondest memories are the friends that I made my two years at ASMSA and the teachers who were fully dedicated to my education who also became lifelong friends. Folks like Corey Boby, Melanie Nichols, Donna Hutchison, the late John Harrison, and so many other teachers and counselors made a lasting impact in my life. I would not be where I am today without them.

What do you feel was the most important thing that you learned at ASMSA?

I learned that learning is a lifelong process. The importance of community and friends. Success is only possible with a village behind you.

Share a favorite quote and/or your favorite book.

“What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

Book – In the Shadow of the Almighty by Elizabeth Elliot

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Alumni Spotlight: Patricia King ’97 chose ASMSA for advanced opportunities

Hometown/Sending School

Sulphur Rock, Ark. Sulphur Rock High School. The school I attended before ASMSA only had 20 students in my 10th grade.

College and Area(s) of Study

Purdue University, B.S. Management, with a minor in International Business & Economics

Indiana University, M.S. Finance

Indiana University, Master of Business Administration

Current Profession and Company

Business Integration Executive, Bank of America

As many people may remember, Bank of America acquired Merrill Lynch in 2008. The combination of these two firms was the opportunity to create an integrated, one-stop-shop financial services company, offering banking, wealth management and financial planning to clients at all levels of wealth. I lead a team that manages and executes the cross line of business referral programs for the firm’s clients and prospects across our different lines of business, including wealth management, commercial banking, investment banking, global markets, and consumer banking. Even 15 years later, there remains so much opportunity to deliver for our clients leveraging our extensive capabilities. The role allows me to use a broad set of skills, including strategy, finance, accounting, sales, project management, and marketing. No day is the same, which keeps it interesting and fun.

What made you choose ASMSA?

I really have to credit my mother for encouraging me to consider ASMSA. Having grown up in a very small town (population 200), opportunities were limited, and I wasn’t exposed to anywhere near the educational resources as ASMSA. Keep in mind that this was 1995—I was in the third graduating class. Things were so different back then because it was all so new. It was the first time I had ever had an email account!

While academics were important to me, so was athletics. Being able to play competitive basketball through Hot Springs High School made the decision easier. The hours were intense—I was at the gym by 6 a.m. every day. And it was a unique experience to play on a team where I didn’t actually attend the school. But I loved every minute and still have the ring from when we won the State Championship my senior year.

What are your fondest memories of the school?

How much time do I have? I could write a book just on this one question.

First and foremost, some of my best friends today were people I met on my first day at the school. We’ve known each other for 26 years—through college, marriages, kids, (some divorces), careers, the passing of our parents, COVID, and just life—and we are all still so close, and I have ASMSA to thank for that. I just want to put a plug in for Andy Cirelli. I might not have made it though life without him, but he probably wouldn’t have passed French without me. Decades later, we still talk every week. During COVID, and every week since, Andy and I FaceTime to watch football games together! Just last month, I took my daughter skiing in Colorado with Bonnie Hernandez, my ASMSA roommate from my senior year.

Other memories? Tuesday night math lab with my TI-82. The smell of microwave ramen on the 5th floor. The 2nd floor bridge between the residential and academic buildings. Talking to the guys at the double doors because it was past floor curfew. Donna Hutchinson, the greatest humanities teacher ever, who was one of the first teachers who challenged me to think critically. All-you-can-eat pizza buffet at CiCi’s pizza. DolphinStock. Coffee House. The marine biology field trip. Midnight fire drills in the hotel lobby down the street. Checking out of school to hang out in the park. Maybe skipping a class or two for horse racing at Oaklawn. Science Fair. Senior Thesis. The excitement of coming back to campus on Sunday afternoons and seeing everyone after the weekend home.

 

What do you feel was the most important thing that you learned?

Life is all about the people in it. And it goes faster than you think.

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Alumni Spotlight: Montae’l Williams (’19) aspires to law, political career

Montae'l Williams is a 2019 ASMSA graduate. He is a senior studying English and Pre-Law at Tougaloo College in Tougaloo, Miss. He also serves as a member of the Holly Grove City Council and is an officer candidate in the Army National Guard.

Q: What profession or careers are you considering? 

A: As I am currently an officer candidate in the Arkansas Army National Guard, I am definitely working towards becoming an officer and continuing my service for several decades. However, I am also interested in practicing law in hopes of specifically becoming a JAG officer. Furthermore, I aspire to one day branch into politics on a national level, in service to my state or my country. Most of all, I aspire to be a fulltime change agent for the underrepresented.

Q:  What was the biggest motivating factor in your decision to attend ASMSA?

A: The biggest motivating factor for my decision to attend ASMSA was the access to adequate education, resources and networking opportunities. Prior to my matriculation through ASMSA, I went to school in the Delta region of Arkansas, which is one of the poorest regions in the country. As such, the education I received in the region heavily reflected the lack of resources. While I did make efforts to change this, I acknowledged that such change wouldn’t occur as fast as I had liked and decided to go to ASMSA instead.

Q: Many young people have a disdain for politics. How can we change that?

A: I believe that a lot of younger people have disdain for politics because they may not know much about it, or what they are familiar with is the mudslinging and dishonesty that candidates often employ to win favor. I think that we change this by not sitting on the sidelines and waiting for things to get better. I believe that we should take up the torch that those before us have laid down.

Q: What is the best piece of advice you have ever been given?

A: The best piece of advice that I’ve been given was from a phenomenal counselor who did everything in her power to ensure I was equipped and prepared for college and the real world. Ms. Penny Lock was my guidance counselor during my time at ASMSA and encouraged me to never give up. I would not be where I am today, if it were not for all her kind words and encouragement.

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Alumni Spotlight: Dr. Marlene Battle (’97)

Dr. Marlene Battle (’97) has joined the Arkansas Pharmacists Association in the newly created role of Health Equity Coordinator. Battle's role was created in an effort to provide a meaningful impact in health disparities and social determinants of health across Arkansas. As Health Equity Coordinator, she will help direct programs to benefit Arkansas’s most underserved and vulnerable populations and will work in tandem with the Arkansas Department of Health Equity to further the state’s goals and objectives.

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Class of 2011 alumna’s efforts helping boost AAFA activities

Amy (Anderson) Stvartak graduated from ASMSA in 2011 and currently serves as the Executive Committee Chair and Administrative Liaison for the Association for Alumni and Friends of ASMSA. She completed her Bachelor of Science in Psychology (2015) at the University of Minnesota and her Master of Science in Nursing (2017) at Vanderbilt University. Amy works as a nurse practitioner with CHI St Vincent, specializing in family medicine with an emphasis on rural practice and geriatric management. She and her husband, Tony (Class of 2010), live in Mount Ida with their 1-year-old daughter, Ava, and their heeler mix, Elwood.

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