• Learn more about study abroad programs
  • ZOOM appointments with the Office of Financial Aid
  • Dell Back to School Special at the Shocker Store
  • The College of Applied Studies stands with those affected by injustice
  • Wichita State professor, health care professional reflects on COVID-19 changes
  • University Libraries provides online checkouts
  • The Heskett Center is open!
  • Share your story
  • Announcing the next Common Read book!
  • Ulrich Summer 2020 exhibition preview
  • Ulrich app is perfect for self-guided tours
  • Father's Day Sale in the Shocker Store
  • Wanted: Volunteers to help with 2020 bicycle and pedestrian count event

Wichita State cloth face masks

June 15, 2020 鈥 The College of Health Professions donated 2,500 cloth face masks to the 麻豆传媒 community for the campus reopening May 26.

Alina Keow

June 12, 2020 - 麻豆传媒 graduate Alina Keow is one of 137 people who earned the 2019 Elijah Watt Sells Award, which recognizes outstanding accomplishment on the CPA Exam. Nearly 75,000 individuals sat for the CPA Exam in 2019 with 137 candidates meeting the criteria to receive the Elijah Watt Sells Award. Keow graduated Summa Cum Laude in 2018 with a bachelor of business administration with dual majors in accounting and information technology & management information systems, and a minor in economics.

Students putting together PPE

June 11, 2020 -- 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Office of Tech Transfer and Commercialization has received a $37,000 grant that will go toward making more personal protective equipment (PPE) to health care workers with low supply caused by the COVID-19 outbreak.

  • Two finalists named for CIO position
  • USS & UP joint senate meeting set for June 16
  • Stay up-to-date with University Libraries
  • ZOOM appointments with the Office of Financial Aid
  • Campus visits resume June 15
  • State Employee Health Plan updates in response to COVID-19
  • Employee Assistance Program (EAP) offers wide variety of services to employees at no charge
  • Changes to your HSA/HRA/FSA for 2020 due to CARES Act
  • Clinical Placement Coordinator position open to 麻豆传媒 employees only
  • Bonus Discount Fridays for Rewards members
  • Shocker Sports Grill & Lanes extends hours and opens for play

Ashley Purdum in personal protective equipment

June 11, 2020 --聽Ashley Purdum, an associate clinical professor at 麻豆传媒, works as an acute care speech-language pathologist at Wesley Medical Center. Because of the ongoing pandemic, her work life has changed quite a bit.

  • IRB develops guidelines to restore human subject research involving person-to-person interactions
  • Summer library hours
  • Political Science professor participates in a digital program about democracy in post-pandemic Latin America
  • Campus gas line replacement work start delayed one day
  • Dell Back to School Special at the Shocker Store
  • Announcing the next Common Read book!
  • Wanted: Volunteers to help with 2020 bicycle and pedestrian count event
  • Wichita State partnership allows high-schoolers to build airplane in hands-on program
  • Admissions deploys text messaging to communicate more effectively

  • NSF I-Corps program at Wichita State helps launch Kansas City biotechnology startup
  • Grad certificate in data science created to meet industry demand
  • Wichita State helps produce stethoscopes for COVID-19 patients
  • KMUW's digital event will address how the upcoming elections will continue amid the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Wichita State professor uses Minecraft to create virtual field camp
  • Porcaro鈥檚 expertise featured in story about online learning
  • Shocker grad: 'We know Wichita State always will be there for us'
  • Stay up-to-date with University Libraries
  • University Libraries provides online checkouts
  • Room reservations in the Rhatigan Student Center
  • Wanted: Volunteers to help with 2020 bicycle and pedestrian count event
  • Shocker Sports Grill & Lanes extends hours and opens for play
  • Extra discount on clearance merchandise in the Shocker Store

Wichita Campus

  • Final candidate to be interviewed for Health Professions dean position today
  • University Libraries provides online checkouts
  • Room reservations in the Rhatigan Student Center
  • Tuesday Talk to discuss the Real You and masculinizing hormones
  • KMUW's digital event will address how the upcoming elections will continue amid the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Employee Assistance Program (EAP) offers wide variety of services to employees at no charge
  • Main gas line replacement project begins today
  • Try the Burger of the Month

  • Faculty and Staff Virtual Town Hall today
  • Golden welcomes new senate presidents, expresses appreciation to outgoing presidents
  • Correction to Wednesday鈥檚 message from President Golden
  • Convergence Sciences Initiative proposal deadline extended
  • Wichita State helps produce stethoscopes for COVID-19 patients
  • IRB develops guidelines to restore human subject research involving person-to-person interactions
  • Virtual support offered by university subject librarians
  • Keith Pickus returns to his first love: being a history professor
  • Legislative update
  • Counseling and Prevention Services stands with the black members of our community
  • Tuesday Talk originally planned for June 2 now on YouTube
  • KMUW's digital event will address how the upcoming elections will continue amid the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Porcaro鈥檚 expertise featured in story about online learning
  • Extra discount on clearance merchandise in the Shocker Store
  • JoVE Science Library streaming free for 麻豆传媒 students and faculty
  • Shocker Sports Grill & Lanes extends hours and opens for play

  • Town Hall recap
  • Grad certificate in data science created to meet industry demand
  • NSF I-Corps program at Wichita State helps launch Kansas City biotechnology startup
  • Wichita State helps produce stethoscopes for COVID-19 patients
  • Announcing the next Common Read book!
  • KMUW's digital event will address how the upcoming elections will continue amid the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Counseling and Prevention Services stands with the black members of our community
  • Fairmount College issues statement on our current social climate
  • Porcaro鈥檚 expertise featured in story about online learning
  • Stay up-to-date with University Libraries
  • University Libraries provides online checkouts
  • June 9 Tuesday Talk to discuss the 鈥楻eal You and Masculinizing Hormones鈥
  • Room reservations in the Rhatigan Student Center
  • Wichita State professor uses Minecraft to create virtual field camp
  • Tuesday Talk originally planned for June 2 now on YouTube
  • Shocker grad: 'We know Wichita State always will be there for us'
  • Dell Back to School Special at the Shocker Store
  • Shocker Sports Grill & Lanes extends hours and opens for play
  • Extra discount on clearance merchandise in the Shocker Store
  • Bonus Discount Fridays for Rewards members
  • Try the Burger of the Month
  • Wanted: Volunteers to help with 2020 bicycle and pedestrian count event

Chris Wyant

June 8, 2020 -- In the recent partnership among 麻豆传媒, Airbus and Tango Flight, the sky is the limit. Tango Flight, a program that launched in 2016 in Georgetown, Texas, provides students the tools to build a two-seat airplane. The young learners are given applied-learning experiences before graduating high school.

  • Shockers United information now combined with COVID-19 Response pages
  • Faculty and Staff Virtual Town Hall on June 8
  • Third candidate to be interviewed for Health Professions dean position today
  • Grad certificate in data science created to meet industry demand
  • Convergence Sciences Initiative proposal deadline extended
  • 麻豆传媒 Foundation End of Fiscal Year Schedule
  • Sign up now for the June 8-12 Academic Resources Conference events
  • Stay up-to-date with University Libraries
  • Fairmount College issues statement on our current social climate
  • Shocker grad: 'We know Wichita State always will be there for us'
  • MGC to host Candlelight Vigil this evening
  • Real Talk - Intersection Dialogues 鈥楧ebriefing Recent Racial Events鈥 (2nd Session)
  • Tuesday Talk originally planned for June 2 now on YouTube
  • Reminder about designated holidays for State of Kansas employees
  • Employee Assistance Program (EAP) offers wide variety of services to employees at no charge
  • Distribution and return of mifi devices have changed
  • CARES Act reflection
  • Please use Student Health's main entrance
  • Wanted: Volunteers to help with 2020 bicycle and pedestrian count event

  • Faculty and Staff Virtual Town Hall on June 8
  • Real Talk - Intersection Dialogues 鈥楧ebriefing Recent Racial Events鈥 (2nd Session)
  • NSF I-Corps program at Wichita State helps launch Kansas City biotechnology startup
  • Virtual support offered by university subject librarians
  • Local newsrooms and community partners launch Wichita Journalism Collaborative
  • Announcing the next Common Read book!
  • MGC to host Candlelight Vigil - June 5
  • Employee Assistance Program (EAP) offers wide variety of services to employees at no charge
  • State Employee Health Plan updates in response to COVID-19
  • Changes to your HSA/HRA/FSA for 2020 due to CARES Act
  • Distribution and return of mifi devices have changed

Data science graduate certificate

June 4, 2020 鈥 Responding to industry demand for workers with specialized skills, Wichita State is now offering a graduate certificate in computational data science.

  • Suffering from meeting fatigue? Let鈥檚 take Friday meeting breaks.
  • Organizational updates and preliminary task force recommendations
  • Second candidate to be interviewed for Health Professions dean position today
  • Sign up now for Academic Resources Conference June 8-12
  • Convergence Sciences Initiative proposal deadline extended to June 8
  • Wichita State professor uses Minecraft to create virtual field camp
  • Announcing the next Common Read book!
  • Distribution and return of mifi devices have changed
  • Summer library hours
  • Real Talk: Debriefing the recent racial events
  • KMUW's digital event will address how the upcoming elections will continue amid the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Participants sought for undergraduate research, please share with students
  • 2021-22 admissions application opens July 1
  • Meet a Shocker: Kayla Deines, communication graduate

Nurse with stethoscope

June 2, 2020 - In March when Ascension Via Christi needed stethoscopes, its usual supply chains had dried up. 麻豆传媒 engineers, working as part of the newly formed Ad Astra Coalition, quickly established a new supply chain to address the urgent need.

  • June edition of president's newsletter, First Tuesday, set for today
  • NetApp breaks ground for building on 麻豆传媒 Innovation Campus
  • Real Talk: Debriefing the recent racial events
  • Stay up-to-date with University Libraries
  • Tech updates keep Shocker Studios on cutting edge for applied learning
  • Pizza Hut Museum open by appointment only through June 30
  • Black & Yellow Day - June 12
  • University Libraries provides online checkouts
  • Continued need to share reliable health information with students during COVID-19 pandemic
  • Congratulations to KMUW's Stephan Bisaha, recipient of a Regional Murrow Award for excellence in journalism
  • Summer 2020 E-Launch
  • Campus visits resuming soon
  • Shocker Store curbside service moved
  • Extra discount on clearance merchandise at the Shocker Store

  • Shockers United information now combined with COVID-19 Response pages
  • June edition of president's newsletter, First Tuesday, set for today
  • Reminder about designated holidays for State of Kansas employees
  • Real Talk: Debriefing the recent racial events
  • Fall 2020 Tuition Assistance deadline approaching
  • University Libraries provides online checkouts
  • Campus visits resuming soon
  • Focused funding opportunities
  • Tuesday Talk with SHS will discuss 鈥楾ransgender Health & The Real You鈥
  • Distribution and return of mifi devices have changed
  • Meet a Shocker: Theresa Le, communication graduate

NSF I-corps lab

June 2, 2020 -- A Kansas City biotechnology startup company is getting a boost thanks to 麻豆传媒鈥檚 National Science Foundation (NSF) Shocker Innovation Corps (I-Corps) program.