Blue background with gaypril logo and spectrum logo on top left corner. Pride shirts with spectrum place largely on right side of graphic. While supplies last above 12-2 p.m., Tuesday April 16, RSC North patio.

Enjoy an afternoon of creativity and fun with the Office of Diversity and Inclusion (ODI) and Spectrum: LGBTQ & Allies while creating a one of a kind PRIDE shirt, expressing unique identities and solidarity with the LGBTQIA+ community. The event is from noon to 2 p.m. Tuesday, April 16 on the RSC north patio.

Including yard games, music and T-shirt making from PromoSolutions, the event will celebrate individuality and inclusivity at Wichita State.

Interested, worried or excited about AI’s impact on education? There’s an online class discussing just that.

CI 751GI: Disruption, Change, and AI in Education will be an online/asynchronous class offered in July. The course will cover generative AI’s impact on traditional educational practices and unpack what is known so far about generative AI with an eye toward understanding what might be on the horizon for educators.

The course is suitable for all staff and instructors.

Reserve Your Seat - Place Season Ticket Deposit for as little as $50

Place your deposit today for 2024-25 men’s basketball season tickets. Existing season ticket holders will receive renewals in the mail this week and new season ticket holders can reserve their place right behind them on the priority list.

Faculty and staff are eligible to purchase season tickets at a discounted rate. Call the Shocker Ticket Office at 316-978-3267 for more information or fill out the online form.

Fresh off a sweep over Rice, the Shockers sit atop the AAC standings with two midweek matchups on deck at Eck Stadium. The Shockers host Oklahoma at 6 p.m. Tuesday, April 2 and Kansas the next night at 6 p.m. Wednesday, April 3.

Faculty and staff can purchase discounted tickets on the day of the game at the Eck Stadium Box Office when they present their Shocker ID.

Zachary Brown with his daughter and WuShock in Charles Koch Arena

Hear from Zachary Brown, director of strategic enrollment and student services in the Barton School of Business and a current employee at Wichita State who went to college as a first-gen student, about the first-gen experience.

Wichita State is home to nearly 5,000 first-generation students, individuals whose caregivers weren’t able to complete a college degree and who lack the firsthand experience to tackle college life. To help with their transition, Wichita State offers a number of resources to first-gen students to support them during their time in college, including F1RST GEN SHOCKERS.

Photos of Richard Sack and Nick Vasilescu

A professor and graduate student from Wichita State University have been awarded the 2024 John A. See Innovation Award.

The John A. See Innovation Award is given each year as a way to recognize novel ideas that have the potential to meet a market need and attract further funding once they have advanced through the early prototyping phase. Examples of supported costs are prototype development, design, product testing and market analysis.

The 2024 winners are as follows:

  • Richard Sack, lab manager of the Project Innovation Hub in the College of Engineering. His winning research project is titled “manufacturing conductive nano-scale fibers by combining electrospinning with ultrasonic phased arrays.”
  • Nick Vasilescu, a graduate student in innovation and design, was awarded for his biotech startup TestKey.
Decorative graphics with the text, What's hot this Summer: Educators Involved in Wichita. April 15, 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM, Wichita State Connect, and the WSU College of Applied Studies, Corbin Connect and Credit Union of America logos

Join Corbin Connect for an evening focused on summer engagement opportunities for students and educators from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Monday, April 15 at Wichita State Connect.

The event, What’s Hot This Summer: Educators Involved With Wichita, is free for educators, education students and community organizations, and complimentary cookout style dinner will be served.

Local organizations with summer educational programs will share opportunities for local P-12 students and volunteer opportunities for educators.

WSU PD police badge

Charles “Chuck” Rummery passed away on March 27 at the age of 85. Chuck served in law enforcement for 38 years, retiring as deputy police chief of the Wichita Police Department before becoming chief of police at the WSU Police Department from 1991 to 2003. He also served in the Air Force and Army Reserves. He was born in Wichita on April 23, 1938 to parents Floyd and Eloise.

Chuck is survived by his wife of 62 years, Beverly, son David (Kelly), daughter Cheryl, five grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

A visitation for will be held from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 2 at Resthaven Mortuary, 11800 West Highway 54.

A funeral service will occur at 10 a.m. Wednesday, April 3 at Olivet Baptist Church, 3440 W 13th St N, with a procession leading to a graveside service drom 11:30 a.m. to noon Wednesday, April 3 at Resthaven Gardens of Memory.

In lieu of flowers, memorials have been established with the Kansas Humane Society and Phoenix Hospice.

Summer and fall course schedules are available online. Encourage your students to enroll now to secure their classes.

Students can view the course schedule and enroll by using Banner and logging in with their myWSU information.

Summer classes are a great way for students to catch up on credits and graduate sooner.

  • Financial aid is available for those who qualify.
  • Courses are available in two-, four-, or eight-week schedules with online, hybrid and in-person formats.

Learn more about summer classes.

Students can reach out to their academic advisor with any questions about scheduling summer and fall classes.

Please refer to the timeline for when registration opens for each classification:

  • Monday: Seniors (90+ earned credit hours), Honors College members, student athletes and graduate students
  • Tuesday: Juniors (60-89 earned credit hours)
  • Wednesday: Sophomores (30-59 earned credit hours)
  • Thursday: Freshmen (0-29 earned credit hours)
  • Friday: Non-degree bound students

The third OAK Supercomputing Conference will be held at Wichita State University between May 20-23. Full details are available on the conference website. The program includes scientific talks, poster presentations and hands-on workshops. Special workshops offered include: Deep Learning by NVIDIA and MATLAB by MathWorks.

The conference is being co-organized with the fourth national High-Performance Computing Security Workshop, May 20-21.

The OAK conference and the HPC Security Workshops are open to all level of participants (faculty, researchers, HPC/IT admins and students and industry). The goal is to bring together the HPC users to lower the barrier of entry to HPC for folks who do not have access to it. Topics include High Performance and High Throughput Computing (HPC/HTC), Cybersecurity, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML), Data Analytics and Data Visualization, and Internet of Things (IoT). Slots for podium talks and poster presentations are available (see the websites for more details).

The conference and workshop are available at no charge, but registrations are required (separately for the OAK Conference and HPC Security Workshop). The events will be held in-person on WSU’s campus to promote interaction and collaboration (see conference website for lodging information).

Travel funding available: Limited funding is available to support travel. Participants from emerging/smaller institutions and under-represented groups are specially encouraged to apply.