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Tracey Repp brings a passion for helping others from the street to the classroom

At about 11:30 on a rainy February night, a man with bright yellow cornrows in his hair, a soul patch and silver ear rings stepped into an all-night diner in south Wichita. His eyes shifted quickly to take in the room as he made his way to a booth in the back and slid in. He pealed off a worn green jacket, glared at the cook peaking out the kitchen door, then pulled out a small notebook and began to write . . . lesson plans.

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Tracey Repp today and, at right, in some of his previous roles.

That was Tracey Repp in 2002, an undercover cop waiting to make a drug bust, finishing his last semester of education classes at Newman University, and wrapping up his teaching internship at Pray-Woodman Elementary School in Maize, Kan.

Repp, who has now worked as an educator for nine years, said it wasn’t easy trying to complete his student teaching while working undercover narcotics.

“Getting by with only a few hours sleep each night was challenging,’ he said, “but knowing what my goal was and the support of the people at Newman made it possible.”

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A change in careers
Repp had worked in law enforcement close to 12 years when he made the change to educator. Given his background, it’s not hard to see how he chose his initial profession: His great-grandfather, grandfather, step-father, several uncles and his brother all worked or continue to work for law enforcement organizations ranging from local agencies to the CIA.

After graduating from Valley Center High School, Repp attended Sterling College on a soccer scholarship and earned a bachelor’s degree in behavioral science. Immediately after graduation, he went to the Wichita-Sedgwick County Law Enforcement Training Center, and began his law enforcement career in 1991.

For many years he worked with the Wichita Police Department in a variety of units, including Sex Crimes, Undercover Narcotics, the Gang Unit, the Mounted Unit, the Bike Unit and Field Training. He later left Wichita for El Paso, Texas, where he worked on the U.S.-Mexico border as a special agent with the FBI. He also worked on a drug intelligence squad and was a member of the SWAT Team.

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Repp and his family returned to Wichita, but he soon realized he was looking for something different.

“As a police officer I responded and reacted to problems – that’s the nature of law enforcement,” he said. “I decided I wanted to be on the ‘front end’ for a change.  I saw too many young men without a role model to teach them how to care about things more important than gangs and drugs. I really wanted to help guide kids away from problems.”

Repp decided to be an educator in part because of his wife of 20 years, Lolita, who earned three degrees at Newman in the 1990s. She taught for 17 years in both public and private schools, and now teaches AP classes to students at an online academy. On her recommendation, Repp enrolled in the Teacher Education Program at Newman University.

To help support himself, his wife and his son Garrett while going to school, Repp took a job as an undercover narcotics officer for the Wichita P.D. He worked in the day and took classes at night until his student teaching semester, when his schedule changed to teaching during the day at Pray-Woodman, then working 3 p.m. to 3 a.m. four days a week, often in, as he put it, “places I didn’t want to be in.” Because of his hair, ear rings and general need to look like a junkie, he made his classmates and his students aware of his double role.

Repp completed his education degree in 2002, and continued police work until later that year, when he was hired to teach fourth grade at Pray-Woodman. After a year there, he moved to Andover Central Middle School, where he became an at-risk special education and math teacher.

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He also began a coaching career at Andover High School as head boys and girls soccer coach. In 2003, the boys team won the state title. In 2008, Repp was named Kansas Girls Soccer Coach of the Year by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America.

Perserverence
Repp said his years as a cop gave him definite advantages as a teacher. His first-year teaching evaluation included the remark that, “Tracey’s classroom management is well beyond his years of experience.” What the evaluator didn’t know was that many of Repp’s students – who were in his student internship class the previous year –  still thought he was a cop.

Having worked in neighborhoods where parents have their children sleep on the floor, in the basement, or in a bathtub to shield them from drive-by shootings, Repp also knew how to work with, and understand, at-risk students.

“The challenges faced by these students are real and tremendously difficult, but throughout the good and bad times, seeing their successes is what caused me to persevere,” Repp said. “So many of the students just need someone to believe in them, and I wanted to be that person.”

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Repp said a passion for teaching and helping young people also helped him keep going on those days when his students were difficult to control. Still, he added, “I kept my passion by celebrating all successes that students had regardless of the magnitude. Students always knew that taking risks in my classroom was an expectation and with that, failure might occur. However, we always used those experiences as an opportunity to learn. Failure equals learning!”

Kansas Teacher of the Year
Repp, who returned to Newman and earned a master’s degree in education in 2005, was named Region IV Secondary Kansas Teacher of the Year in 2010. This fall, he was hired as an assistant principal at Campus High School in Haysville, Kan.

Repp said he misses certain aspects of being a classroom teacher, as, “I still feel so protective of my students in class.” He even sometimes misses police work,  although he’s certain his decision to change careers was the right one.

“During my law enforcement career I saw the very best that society has to offer,” he said. “However, I also saw the very worst that society has to offer. Although I do miss law enforcement at times, there is no question in my mind that this is definitely what I was meant to do.”

 

Faculty activity and achievements

Each year, Newman faculty members publish and present a variety of literary and scholarly works. Here is a look at recent activity and other achievements.

Michael Austin, Ph.D., Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs:

  • Reading the World: Ideas That Matter (2nd ed.). New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., March 2010.

Bryan Dietrich, Ph.D., Professor of English:

  • Received “Best Poem” award by readers of Asimov’s Science Fiction magazine for “Edgar Allan Poe,” The 2010 Nebula Awards, Cocoa Beach, Fla., May 15, 2010.

Christopher Fox, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Philosophy:

  • “The Novelty of Spirituality and the Religiosity of Substitution in Emmanuel Levinas,” refereed paper presented at First Annual Southwest Seminar in Continental Philosophy, “Continental Philosophy in the Desert,” University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, N.M., May 28, 2010.

Sue Ellen Gardner, Ph.D., LMSW, Associate Professor of Social Work:

  • Received a 2010 Compassion Kansas Grant for $12,500, in collaboration with several members of the Kansas Mental Health and Aging Coalition, for a project to improve mental health care for older Kansans in nursing homes via a train-the-trainer program for certified nurse aides. Gardner is grant administrator and will develop the training program and conduct process and outcome program evaluations. The grant was awarded in February 2010 and ends Nov. 30, 2010.

Audrey Curtis Hane, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Communication:

  • Selected as a member of Butler Community College’s Advance Kansas Class II program February – June 2010. The program brings together business and community leaders from across Wichita and the region to provide leadership training, building a network of trained business people to address important diversity issues in their communities as they pertain to business.

Don Hufford, Ph.D., Ed.D., Professor of Education:

  • “Polarity Thinking and Teacher Education: A Desideratum,” Proceedings of the Society for the Philosophical Study of Education, Jason Helfer, Ed. Bloomington: AuthorHouse, 2009.
  • “A Hidden Outcome,” Journal of the Society of Philosophy and History of Education, David Snelgrove, Ed. Fall 2009.
  • “Preparing Public School Teachers to be Open-Minded Interpreters in the Religion/Public School Debate,” Critical Questions in Education, Steven Jones and Eric Sheffield, Eds. December 2009.
  • “Public Schools and a Religiously Multi-Expressive Dialectic,” presentation to the Oklahoma Educational Studies Association, Oklahoma State University, April 2010.
  • “Mary Wollstonecraft: The Dialectics of a Life’s Journey,” presentation for Newman University Literary Festival, April 2010.
  • “Public Education and the Democratic Process,” presentation to the Western Social Science Association, Reno, Nev., April 2010.

Carla A. Lee, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor, Nursing and Nurse Anesthesia:

  • Completed four-year term with the American Nurses Association, where she served on the Position Statement Committee and completed a Credentialing Position Statement Paper, a Position Paper on DNP Degree, and reviews of major quality issue documents germane to patient safety.
  • “Conducting Healthy Meetings and Organizing Neighborhoods,” presentation to Neighborhoods USA: Building Stronger Communities, Little Rock, Ark., May 27, 2010.
  • Elected to the American Nurses Association’s Nominating Committee for 2010-2011 at the ANA House of Delegates assembly, Washington, D.C., June 16-19, 2010.

Carla A. Lee, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor, Nursing and Nurse Anesthesia, with Y. Acton, A.A., and A. Beran, B.A.:

  • “Polcycystic Ovarian Syndrome: Aspect of Chronic Pelvic Pain,” research poster presented at the 25th National Conference of the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners, Phoenix, Ariz., June 23-27, 2010.

Teresa L. Raehpour, M.A., Assistant Professor of Communication:

  • Consulted for the Miss Kansas International pageant program and conducted several seminars for approximately 20 contestants for state competition, January – March 2010.
  • Coached Kelsey Phillips, senior at Andover High School, who won the title “Miss Teen Kansas, International” at state competition, Wichita, May 2010.
  • Coached Miss Erica Enstrom, WSU student in Integrated Media, who won the title of “Miss Kansas, International” at state competition, Wichita, May 2010.
  • Coached Kelsey Phillips and Erica Enstron for Miss International competition in Chicago, Ill., July 26-31. Enstrom won the online Voter’s Choice award.
  • Worked as communication consultant on Jim Anderson’s 4th District Congressional campaign team, advising on presentational and debate strategy. Also helped produce integrated social media promotional videos, January through July 2010.
  • “Speech Class 101,” presentation at the Public Relations Society of America (Wichita) meeting, Larkspur restaurant, Wichita, April 27, 2010.
  • “Speech Class 101” workshop for members of various nonprofit agencies funded by United Way, United Way headquarters, Wichita, Aug. 3-4, 2010.

Ron Shipley, MS.Ed, RTR, Assistant Professor of Radiologic Technology, and Janie Ward, MSEd, RTR(M), Instructor of Radiologic Technology:

  • Produced the 73rd Annual Meeting of the Kansas Society of Radiologic Technologists, Newman University, April 15-17.

Amy Siple, MSN, FNP-BC, Associate Professor of Nursing:

  • “Caring for Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease,” presentation at the Oklahoma Geriatric Nursing Association, Tulsa, Okla., June 17, 2010.
  • “Understanding Alzheimer’s,” presentation at Presbyterian Manor, Sterling, Kan., June 24, 2010.
  • “Caring for Patients with AD,” presentation at Golden Living Center, Nebraska City, Neb., July 21, 2010.

Kathy L. Smith, MS.Ed, LRT(R)(M)(ARRT), Clinical Coordinator, Radiologic Technology Program

  • Promoted to Assistant Professor of Radiologic Technology, January 2010.

Meg Trumpp, M.Ed, RRT, AE-C, Program Director, Respiratory Care:

  • “Age-Related Decremental Changes,” presentation at the 73rd Annual Meeting of the Kansas Society of Radiologic Technologists, Newman University, April 17, 2010.
  • Named 2010 President-Elect of the Kansas Respiratory Care Society (KRCS), and serves on the KRCS Board of Directors.