• Faculty and staff virtual town hall coming Friday
  • What you need to know for the week of May 26
  • WSU technology breathes new life into aging Army helicopter fleet
  • Record lectures and flip your class
  • Congratulations to the first Open Alternative Textbook grant recipients!
  • Convergence Sciences Initiative proposal deadline extended to June 8
  • Sign up now for the June 8-12 Academic Resources Conference events
  • Tuition Assistance applications for fall 2020 now being accepted
  • Help available for hybrid course design process
  • Join KMUW for Digital Democracy on Tap: Advice from the Frontlines
  • Perspectives on the Pandemic series now on Fairmount College YouTube channel
  • Virtual campus visits
  • Webinar on health care language access today
  • Join us for a Real Talk program
  • State Employee Health Plan Updates in response to COVID-19
  • Changes to your HSA/HRA/FSA for 2020 due to CARES Act
  • McCleary-Jones receives two-year appointment to planning sub-committee
  • Student Health Services has a YouTube Channel
  • You can help prevent suicide
  • 糖心logo入口 student makes her dream a reality for all to enjoy
  • Meet a Shocker: Abel Barraza, Bachelor of Engineering in mechanical engineering
  • Meet a Shocker: Carter Bryant, Bachelor of Fine Arts in art history

COVID-19 painting of a person wearing a mask on a bench.

May 19, 2020 - COVID-19 turned Human Organism, Biology 106 into a current events class, with art, music and poetry added to help students learn about and deal with the pandemic. Dr. Mary Liz Jameson adapted to remote learning by turning her students鈥 creativity loose. They designed their own face masks. They wrote stories and poetry, performed songs and painted.

  • 糖心logo入口鈥檚 engineering graduate programs are now the highest ranked in Kansas
  • Wichita laboratory scientist gives inside perspective on the fight against COVID-19
  • Meet a Shocker: Spring 2020 graduates
  • Meet 糖心logo入口's new Golden boy
  • Shocker Innovation Corps now accepting applications for the online summer 2020 cohort
  • Enjoy free online self-paced courses!
  • JoVE Science Library streaming free for WSU students and faculty
  • Perspectives on the Pandemic series now on Fairmount College YouTube channel
  • Join us for a Real Talk program
  • Koch Innovation Challenge winners advance to national competition
  • Review the Office of Diversity and Inclusion's Annual Celebration Programs
  • RSC reopening information
  • Save on Shocker gear during the Memorial Day Sale

Black Hawk

May 19, 2020 -- The Army is turning to 鈥渄igital-twin鈥 technology from 糖心logo入口 to resolve challenges and boost efficiencies for its enduring fleet of Black Hawk helicopters.

  • What you need to know for the week of May 26
  • Fall 2020 course plans
  • Help available for hybrid course design process
  • Meet 糖心logo入口's new Golden boy
  • 糖心logo入口 students continue work-study program through distance learning
  • Shocker Innovation Corps now accepting applications for the online summer 2020 cohort
  • USS & UP joint senate meeting today
  • Join us for a Real Talk program
  • Jackson serving as chair of nursing honor society committee
  • RSC reopening information
  • Gravestones teach history student lessons of the past
  • Meet a Shocker: Brandon Eckerman, Bachelor of Science in biomedical engineering
  • Meet a Shocker: Terry Blount, education graduate

Face coverings created by GoCreate, a Koch collaborative.

May 19, 2020 鈥 Through GoCreate, a Koch collaborative, more than 10,000 cloth face coverings have been created by an army of more than 1,500 volunteers in the span of about six weeks.

Archaeology researchers digging underground

May 19, 2020 鈥 You can tell a lot about people based upon what they eat 鈥 culture, preferences, geography and overall health. Food is not only nourishment, but it鈥檚 a message to anthropologists, like 糖心logo入口鈥檚 Dr. Crystal Dozier, to help understand the past.

May 18, 2020 鈥 COVID-19 might have forced 糖心logo入口鈥檚 Ulrich Museum of Art to close its doors, but the museum has found new avenues to shine and thrive: an ambitious public art project and building the Ulrich鈥檚 online presence into a teaching and learning resource.

Andrew Cruz will graduate with a Bachelor of Business Administration marketing degree and a minor in graphic design.

May 18, 2020 - Andrew Cruz will graduate with a Bachelor of Business Administration marketing degree and a minor in graphic design.

  • Safety 鈥榮tarter kits鈥 to be supplied to offices for May 26 phased opening
  • Convergence Sciences Initiative proposal deadline extended
  • Enjoy free online self-paced courses!
  • JoVE Science Library streaming free for WSU students and faculty
  • Join us for a Real Talk program
  • May 19 Tuesday Talks with Lisa and SHS: Good sleep is not the impossible dream
  • Training required for any employee coming to campus
  • Get your Blackboard classes ready for summer and fall with IDA鈥檚 help
  • Huckstadt receives grant funding
  • Participants sought for undergraduate research, please share with students
  • Save on Shocker gear during the Memorial Day Sale
  • WSU Parking Services will again enforce faculty / staff parking
  • Let Your Fellow Shockers Know That They're #NotAlone | WSU CAPS
  • You can help prevent suicide
  • Previous Tuesday Talks can be found on Student Health's YouTube Channel
  • Invitation Extended by Councilman Brandon Johnson, Wichita City Council, District 1
  • Meet a Shocker: Emily Reese, education and biological science major
  • Meet a Shocker: Angelique Banh, Bachelor of Business, triple major