THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Spotlight on FLC Student Veterans

Spotlight on FLC Student Veterans

Story by Shandiin Ramsey Photos by Crystal Ashike

Author: Bodine, James/Monday, April 17, 2017/Categories: Home, Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

Editor’s Note: This article is the third story in a 4-part-series of profiles highlighting veterans at Fort Lewis College.

 

Rhoda Skeet

 

Skeet served in the Marine Corps for four years.  She worked for a three star general working with classified materials at the Marine Corps headquarters in Washington D.C.

 

“I actually worked in a vault,” she said. “It had a huge combination just to open my office.”

 

She joined after high school in 1987 so that she could get her college education paid for.  

 

“During Desert Storm I had some really crazy work shifts,” Skeet said. “We would work 12 hour shifts seven days a week for two weeks straight, then we would get a day off.  We had drivers that would take us home and to our office.”

 

When she got out of the military, Skeet attended Michigan and got a degree in film.  

 

“My brother went to school at FLC,” she said. “I never would have wanted to come here because I like the midwest better, but Fort Lewis does have a good marketing program.”  

Skeet has always been a non-traditional student, she said. But now it’s even harder because of her age.  

 

“Because I am older it’s hard fitting in here,” she said.  “Now that i’m older, the learning process is a lot different for me. As i’ve gotten older it’s been harder to build relationships. I don’t know what the children are thinking.”

 

There is also no real support for non-traditional students, she said.  

 

“There are a lot of walls you have to jump over,” Skeet said.  “Financial aid is very strict with me about the classes I’m taking.  Everyone else has been learning for the past 12 years and they have an idea of the technology, but I haven’t been in school since 2003, so I had to kind of catch up but no one was willing to help.”   

 

She thinks the stamina and the opportunity to become a leader within the military has helped her in school.  

 

“One of the Marine Corps main quotes is ‘Semper Fi’ which means always faithful,” she said.  “When things get really hard it’s hard to gauge if you can’t really believe in something that you’re doing, and I think that’s what the military provided.  That you can believe in yourself and get the job done.”

 
 
Print

Number of views (3765)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Renovations cause housing overflow

By Meritt Drake

Some residents in on-campus housing have been placed in rooms not typically used for housing, like lounges and study rooms, due to an overbooking of housing caused by Cooper Hall being closed for renovations during the 2018-2019 school year. 

Some residents in on-campus housing have been placed in rooms not typically used for housing, like lounges and study rooms, due to an overbooking of housing caused by Cooper Hall being closed for renovations during the 2018-2019 school year.    Housing has placed students in rooms that would be similar in size to a traditional double occupancy room, said Margaret Watts,...

New President Begins Tenure by Engaging with Campus Community

By Ben Mandile

Tom Stritikus, the new president of Fort Lewis College, wants to make students a priority in his work to ensure their success.

Tom Stritikus, the new president of Fort Lewis College, wants to make students a priority in his work to ensure their success. People around campus, including student and faculty leaders, say they feel that he is open to listening and understanding the campus community and that they are excited to see what happens during his tenure.    The President’s...

416 Fire Offers Educational Opportunities For FLC Faculty and Students

By Mandy Lorenson

The 416 Fire, which broke out 10 miles north of Durango and burned over 55,000 acres impacted Fort Lewis College in numerous ways. 

The 416 Fire, which broke out 10 miles north of Durango and burned over 55,000 acres impacted Fort Lewis College in numerous ways.    The wildfire broke out on June 1 and subsequently burned over two months, leaving hundreds of people evacuated .   However the trouble didn’t stop when the fire was fully contained. The flooding that came after the fire is the...

Q&A: Root Routledge

By Max Rodgers

Root Routledge is a Durango resident who has audited eight different classes at Fort Lewis College from 2012-15.

Root Routledge is a Durango resident who has audited eight different classes at Fort Lewis College from 2012-15. A class audit is when a resident who isn’t registered for classes sits in on lectures and keeps up with the readings, but isn’t graded on assignments or exams. He received a bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering from Washington State University in 1968; a...

Animal Activity on Campus has Decreased Since Last Year

Meritt Drake

Despite consistent raccoon activity around trash cans, there has been less animal activity on campus compared to years past.

Despite consistent raccoon activity around trash cans, there has been less animal activity on campus compared to years past. There have been raccoons nightly around the football field and the dumpsters around the dorms, Fort Lewis College grounds supervisor Carl Gregg said. The raccoons also like to eat some type of bug that lives in the grass, so they’ve been digging at night as...

First4546474850525354Last