Textron Aviation coming to Innovation Campus
Wichita State University and Textron Aviation, a Textron Inc. company, have announced
the next step in ongoing collaboration efforts to develop the future of the aviation
industry and next generation of employees when the company signed a long-term lease
at the Wichita State Innovation Campus.
Asian fusion restaurant opening in Braeburn Square
The owners of popular Wichita restaurant Malaysia Café have signed a lease to open a new Asian fusion concept, Journey East Asia Grill, in the Braeburn Square retail complex at Wichita State University.
Journey East will open in a 2,840-square-foot space on the south end of the south building in Braeburn Square, next to Meritrust Credit Union.
Wichita State alumnus Fitzgerald Tsen, who is opening the restaurant alongside Celine Koh, says he anticipates opening sometime this fall.
Shocker Summer Series to host STEAM night
Wichita State organizations will be volunteering their time to teach and excite future Shockers about STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math). Finish a STEAM activity at every table to fill up your STEAM passport and win a prize!
This is family friendly event for kids of all ages will be held from 5-8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 8, on the sidewalk between the Food Truck Plaza and Partnership 2 Building.
Enjoy dinner at the food truck plaza with LumpiaPalooza and Coco's Kitchen!
More information on Shocker Summer Series STEAM night.
Badges offer more courses for working professionals
Wichita State University continues to offer courses for working professionals through its online badge program.
Badges are self-paced, online courses conveniently designed for students looking to develop new skills and gain new competencies related to their job. They can also be stacked over time and applied toward degree completion.
Offerings range from topics such as “Human Resources” to “The Skeletal Muscle as an Endocrine Organ.” Go to Badge Catalog to see a full list.
Scholarship Information
Students who enroll in a badge course by Monday, Sept. 9, will have the tuition and fees waived for one badge course for the fall semester. To learn more, visit badges.wichita.edu or 316-978-7579.
WSU's badge program started in 2015 with one badge. With more than 80 badge offerings now, the program continues to meet community and industry demand.
Workforce education is among one of the highest priorities in today's higher education landscape. At Wichita State, that includes empowering working individuals with for-credit education that meets employer needs and matches the schedule of a busy life.
Unlike other online nondegree courses, WSU's badges are tied to credit hours and are subject to all Higher Learning Commission regional accreditation standards.
Badge coursework is part of a student's permanent academic record and will appear on an official transcript. Licensed professionals can also earn contact hours toward relicensure, as well as college credit. Courses are taught by experienced faculty who are subject matter experts.
The courses provide a structure that allows WSU to work with employers to develop curriculum specific to industry needs. This key distinction allows employers to know that the information learned in a badge course is valuable and relevant.
When a student completes a badge course, it can be shared on social media, such as on LinkedIn, and displayed on a digital resume with a link for employers / potential employers to see the details of that course.
Men's basketball Open House gives fans the chance to ‘scout’ their seats
Current and prospective men's basketball season ticket holders can get a first-hand
look at potential seat locations during a free open house at Charles Koch Arena. Wichita
State Athletics staff will be on hand from 4-7 p.m. today (Tuesday, Aug. 6) to assist
fans and answer questions.
Any available chairs will be marked throughout the arena. Current season ticket holders
may also use this opportunity to explore potential upgrades or move to a new section.
2019-20 season tickets are now on sale to the general public. For more information
or to purchase, call 316-978-FANS (3267) or stop by the Shocker Ticket Office at the
southwest corner of Charles Koch Arena. Normal business hours are 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
Driving and safety caution alert!
University Police has issued a safety and caution alert. This alert especially applies to those who are familiar with campus and haven’t noticed the new stop signs on the west side of campus coming off of Hillside at the football memorial, Memorial Drive and Perimeter.
There’s a saying that familiarity breeds contempt. Insurance companies will tell you that most accidents occur within a mile of our homes and workplaces, because we don’t pay the same attention to those areas as we do with unfamiliar roadways.
This has become a genuine safety concern, as school is in session in two weeks. Since announcing the change on July 10, University Police are averaging 10 stops a day warning drivers of where to stop.
Grant helps museum share five decades of art from permanent collection
The Ulrich Museum of Art will dig deep into its vault during the next five years and share with the public selected works it has acquired since its opening in 1974, thanks to a grant recently awarded to the Museum by Humanities Kansas.
Last month, the Topeka-based independent nonprofit Humanities Kansas announced that the Ulrich Museum of Art on the Wichita State University campus will receive a Humanities for All grant worth $10,000. The grant supports projects that draw on history, literature, and culture to engage the public with stories that spark conversations.
The Ulrich will use the grant to support its “Voices from the Vault” series of programs, which will showcase pieces from the museum’s permanent collection from every decade that it has been in operation. Each year between now and 2024, the museum will spotlight a different decade, beginning this year with pieces from the 1970s and ending with a look at the 2010s in 2024, the year the museum will celebrate its 50th anniversary.
Ulrich Director Leslie Brothers said the grant would allow members of the WSU and Wichita communities to enjoy some of the artistic treasures the museum has acquired in its nearly five decades of operation. Brothers said the five-year series will also help people see how art is of its time yet can also remain timely and relevant today.
“By focusing on five decades of the collection we are able to share a very diverse range of stories as well as the questions we are asking about works of art in their time,” Brothers said.
The first installation in the series, “Voices from the Vault: The1970s,” will consist of five events taking place between November 2019 and May 2020. The series’s inaugural speaker will be Catherine Morris, senior curator at the Sackler Center for Feminist Art at the Brooklyn Museum, who will deliver her talk at the Ulrich on Tuesday, Nov. 5.
Morris will discuss works by women artists from the museum’s collection, the collection’s roots in 1970s art historical sensibilities, and the ways in which the holdings of smaller institutions that have historically existed on the periphery of the art world can become invaluable resources for telling the previously unexplored and undervalued “minor” histories that contemporary audiences increasingly want to hear.
Morris’ talk and all other “Voices from the Vault” programming will be free and open to the public.
‘Democracy on Tap: Riverfront Legacy Master Plan’
Join KMUW for the next Engage ICT event at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 13, at Roxy’s Downtown, 412 ½ E. Douglas. The title of the program is “Democracy on Tap: Riverfront Legacy Master Plan.”
Wichita community organizations have created a comprehensive vision and master plan for future development on the east bank of the Arkansas River, with a focus on the area south of Douglas Avenue to Kellogg and east to Main Street. Hear from a variety of voices about what the plan could mean for surrounding communities and Wichita's future generations, and how you can share your input at KMUW’s Engage ICT: Democracy on Tap. It’s always free to attend, and appetizers are provided. Learn more at engageict.org or contact info@kmuw.org or call 978-6789.
Junior Spiker event set for Aug. 11
Wichita State University volleyball will hosting an event for Junior Spikers Sunday,
Aug. 11. Boys and girls in grades 4-8 can come to Charles Koch Arena and learn how
to ball shag in order to become an official ball shagger for the 2019 volleyball team.
The event will run from 4:30-5:30 p.m. and will feature a pizza party and autograph
session with the team. The $30 fee includes a T-shirt and free entry to all home volleyball
matches during the 2019 season.
For more information, contact the volleyball office at 316-706-7411 or email volleyballga@goshockers.com.