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WT Nursing Graduates Celebrate Pinning Ceremony

Nursing Pinning25
Chip Chandler May 19, 2025
  • Featured
  • Nursing

WT Nursing Graduates Celebrate Pinning Ceremony

Copy by Chip Chandler, 806-651-2124, cchandler@wtamu.edu

 

CANYON, Texas — The newest class of West Texas A&M University nurses officially was welcomed to the profession in a special pre-commencement observance.

WT’s Laura and Joe Street School of Nursing’s annual pinning ceremony—held May 16 in Legacy Hall inside the Jack B. Kelley Student Center on WT’s Canyon campus—recognized 36 students who graduated later that day.

Pinning ceremonies are an opportunity to recognize the students’ hard work and dedication in their clinicals and in classwork, marking the transition from student to nurse, said Dr. Holly Jeffries, dean of the College of Nursing and Health Sciences and the Ware University Distinguished Professor.

“WT’s pin is one of the most striking, and it’s worn with pride by those who earn it,” Jeffreys said. “By presenting these pins, professional nurses warmly welcome graduates into the profession of nursing, and WT alumni welcome these graduates into the ever-growing family of WT nursing graduates.”

Of the 36 graduates, all but four will remain in the area in jobs across the Texas Panhandle, said Dr. Collette Loftin, head of the Street School of Nursing. Additionally, many will return to WT to begin work on graduate degrees.

Students take the Nightingale Pledge, named for Florence Nightingale, known as the mother of modern nursing.

May 2025 graduates in the bachelor of science in nursing program who were pinned are (with hometowns):

Tammy Abbott, Shattuck, Oklahoma; Jessie Barraza, Plainview; Xasia Benavidez, Amarillo; Anyssa Black, Amarillo; Gabriela Calderon, Lorenzo; Lily Cochran, Childress; Marti Cruse, Post; Sarah Dennis, Canyon; Alexa Dolezal, Amarillo; Jade Edwards, Claude; Maria Esqueda, Dimmitt; Godsfavour Fatoki, Houston; Rafaela Garcia Vela, Amarillo; Lauren Gaston, Saint Jo; Savannah Gutierrez, Coppell; Brianna Helbig, Andrews; Chima Iwuagwu, San Antonio; Nadiyah Johnson, Amarillo; Landry Lindley, Borger; Esmeralda Lucio, Plainview; Christopher Nevarez, Amarillo; Coryn Perkrul, Canyon; Jennifer Perez, Hereford; Marshall Pjesky, Canyon; Ramon Reyes, Farwell; Ted Richard, Amarillo; Grant Richardson, Midland; Eavia Ryan, Rye, Colorado; Baylee Sides, Bushland; Elizabeth Skelton, Hereford; Devini Tipton, Amarillo; Maribel Tovar, Sweetwater; Meredith Weddington, Amarillo; Rylee Wilkinson, Canyon; Kenzie Williams, Amarillo; and Nikki Youngblood, Amarillo.

WT nursing graduates, over the past five years, have averaged a 92 percent score on the National Council Licensure Examination, required by the National Council of State Boards of Nursing to test the competency of nursing school graduates in the United States and Canada. Nationally, the average is 85 percent; in Texas, it’s 87 percent.

Educating nurses is a key component of WT’s mission to address regional challenges, as set out in the University’s long-range plan, WT 125: From the Panhandle to the World.

That plan is fueled by the historic One West comprehensive fundraising campaign, which reached its initial $125 million goal 18 months after publicly launching in September 2021. The campaign’s new goal is to reach $175 million by 2025; currently, it has raised more than $165 million.

 

About West Texas A&M University

WT, a Regional Research University, is redefining excellence in Canyon, Texas, on a 342-acre residential campus, as well as the Harrington Academic Hall WTAMU Amarillo Center in downtown Amarillo. Established in 1910, the University has been part of The Texas A&M University System since 1990. WT, a Hispanic Serving Institution since 2016, boasts an enrollment of more than 9,000 and offers 66 undergraduate degree programs, including eight associate degrees; and 44 graduate degrees, including an integrated bachelor’s and master’s degree, a specialist degree and two doctoral degrees. The University is also home to the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum, the largest history museum in the state and the home of one of the Southwest’s finest art collections. The Buffaloes are a member of the NCAA Division II Lone Star Conference and offers 14 men’s and women’s athletics programs.

 

Photo: Chima Iwuagwu, a senior nursing major from San Antonio, is pinned by his mother, Stella Iwuagwu, during the May 16 nursing pinning ceremony held by the Laura and Joe Street School of Nursing at West Texas A&M University.

 

—WT—