The College of Communication and Information joins ֱ State University in recognizing National Hispanic Heritage Month by shining spotlights on CCI friends and students who are part of Hispanic and Latino/a/x communities.
Friends of the College - Alma Flor Ada and F. Isabel Campoy Student - Miranda Sepúlveda
National Hispanic Heritage Month recognizes and celebrates the heritage, culture and contributions of Hispanic and Latino Americans. Hispanic Heritage Month begins on Sept. 15 to commemorate Independence Day for five Latin American countries: Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua. Hispanic Heritage month began in 1968 as National Hispanic Heritage week. In 1988, it was expanded to a monthlong celebration.
Friends of the College of Communication and Information: Alma Flor Ada and F. Isabel Campoy
Children's authors and educators Alma Flor Ada and F. Isabel Campoy first became connected to ֱ State through the Virginia Hamilton Conference on Multicultural Youth Literature in 2012. That year, Alma Flor Ada received the prestigious Virgina Hamilton Literary Award. In 2019, the authors gifted the Ada-Campoy Collection which resides in the Reinberger Children's Library Center (part of the School of Information). The collection enhances the Reinberger's celebration of multicultural literature for children and faciltitates a deeper understanding of Latine communities. The Ada-Campoy collection currently stands at 1,500+ items including memoirs, audiobooks, plays, poetry, educational materials and books.
Learn more about the collection and the authors in the video below.
Junior Visual Communication Design Major Miranda Sepúlveda
In celebration of National Hispanic Heritage Month, we are shining a spotlight on visual communication design (VCD) student Miranda Sepúlveda. Sepúlveda says her Latina heritage has helped influence her design work by giving her a different perspective and a chance to celebrate her heritage visually.
(Design created by Sepúlveda for an illustration class)
Sepúlveda is also the President of SALSA, the Spanish and Latino Student Association, at ֱ State. The organization has given her the opportunity to learn more about her community and educate others about it.
“I am the President of SALSA because I fell in love with creating and maintaining a strong Latinx community here at ֱ.”
Sepúlveda says her identity has also been influenced by her Latina heritage and has built her into who she is today.
“My roots have taught me to respect my family and community which is an integral part of who I am as a student, designer, friend, sister and Latina.”
(By Isabelle Stewart, '21)