Upon being hired as the first faculty in the department with a doctoral degree at the rank of Associate Professor, I had some clout that non-terminal degreed individuals with bachelor’s and master’s degrees did not have. I had taught high school biology for five years, worked as a residential counselor, taught at McKinney Job Corps Center and served as the Dean of Students respectively at a historically Black college (Wiley College) in Texas. In addition, as a graduate student, I had worked as co-director of the Continuing Education Office at East Texas State University (now Texas A&M at Commerce) as well as served as a supervisor of student teachers and helped with the new transitional team in the new state teachers education program in the state of Texas. Thus, I was not a novice.
I took my first graduate class from him [Dr. David Albert Talbot] and got a perfect score on my mid-term exam. He said he thought it was a White student until I held up my hand when he called my name. He was a professor at East Texas State University, now Texas A&M at Commerce. During my tenure as chair of the department, I invited him to be our speaker during Black History Month. He spoke in Galbreath Chapel.