A photo of Terry Nooner holding up a Shocker jersey with President Rick Muma and Kevin Saal, director of athletics inside Charles Koch Arena.

While a new basketball coach is a statement about the future of a team, Terry Nooner emphasized the importance of the present on Thursday at Charles Koch Arena.

During his public introduction as Wichita State University’s women’s basketball coach, he spoke to the current Shockers seated in the front row. That group, he said, is part of what comes next.

“I’m your head coach, and you guys are my team,” he said. “You’re my players now. We’re about to be in for a great ride.”

Photo of an athletic training major wrapping the ankle of another student sitting on a taping table platform.

The Department of Human Performance Studies in the College of Applied Studies was granted the maximum period of 10 year continuing accreditation to the Athletic Training Program by the Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education (CAATE). The university was officially informed of the vote on April 10. Compliance with CAATE accreditation standards facilitates quality outcomes, continuous improvement, innovation and diversity to enhance athletic training education.

The CAATE accreditation standards have recently evolved to require all athletic training degrees to be master’s level. WSU has taken the steps to develop a Master of Science in athletic training (MSAT) in anticipation of the revised standards and guidelines.

The MSAT degree was approved during the fall 2021 semester and will launch in June 2023. It will replace the currently offered undergraduate degree in athletic training—the first year will overlap with the final year of the undergraduate program as it is phased out.

The 62 credit-hour degree plan consists of athletic training education, applied learning clinical experience, research/statistics and board certification. Students will rotate through various clinical settings including college and high school athletics, general and family medicine, physical therapy, industrial and occupational workplace, and emergency care.

A photo of students and staff at the Media Resources Center working on a livestream.

Putting a live sports event on camera is an experience like no other for students thinking about a career in video. Sports are unpredictable and create imagery that tells the story through action and emotion.

Rowing produces all that against the backdrop of the river and the weather.

That is the story Coach Calvin Cupp wants to tell about his Wichita State team and the Plains Regional Regatta. It takes place Sunday on the Arkansas River in downtown Wichita over a mile-and-a-half of water between the Lincoln Street and First Street bridges.

The Media Resources Center (MRC) will livestream the regatta for the third year, using MRC staff and students for all aspects of the production.

The National Cyber League competition is a biannual cybersecurity competition for high school and college students throughout the nation. More than 6,000 students competed in the spring 2023 event.

The Wichita State students below who competed are all computer science majors:

  • Garret Wahlstedt, ranked 29th
  • Hyacinthe Howell, ranked 31st
  • Khang Tran, ranked 107th
  • Quentin Nelson, ranked 141st
  • Tung Wai Yip, ranked 153th
  • Don Alfaro, ranked 179th
  • Prem Kumar Reddy Muvva, ranked 45th in the graduate division

Additionally, WSU had six other students place in the top 500 and two place in the top 1,000.

Wichita State sign on 21st and Oliver.

Wichita State has launched an online portal for our Innovation Campus partners. The portal offers a “one-stop shop” for the resources available on campus.

With the portal, you can find more information on the resources available to our partners:

  • Where to find news and events at WSU
  • How to access the weekly Campus Connection newsletter and where to submit posts
  • What dining options are available on campus
  • How to sign up for emergency communication through Shocker Alerts
  • Where to park on campus
  • What is happening in Shocker Athletics
  • And more

For additional information, or to suggest items to include in the partnership portal, reach out to Kristin Beal at kristin.beal@wichita.edu or 316-978-6957.

Aerial photo of Braeburn Square.

The Innovation Campus hosts many dining options open to not only Shockers, but the entire Wichita community, including the newly open Jersey Mike’s:

And coming soon to Braeburn Square:

Wichita State has launched an online portal for our Innovation Campus partners. The portal offers a “one-stop shop” for the resources available on campus.

Some of the resources listed include campus dining options, news and events at WSU, Shocker Alerts and many more.

Photo of the Shocker men's and women's bowling teams.

Wichita State’s bowling teams are in Las Vegas this week for the United States Bowling Congress Intercollegiate Singles and Team Championships at South Point Bowling Plaza. Team play begins Thursday with the singles and team finals on Saturday. The taped televised finals will air at 6 p.m. on April 25, May 2, 9 and 16 on CBS Sports Network.

The Shockers finished second in both the men’s and women’s competition in 2022 after winning both titles in 2021. 

Photo of Shocker baseball players celebrating during the game against Kansas State University.

Wichita State launched six home runs in a game for the first time in 25 years and got six scoreless innings from the bullpen, knocking off Kansas State 10-4 April 18 at Tointon Family Stadium.

The win snaps an eight-game losing streak for the Shockers in Manhattan, giving WSU their first victory at Tointon Family Stadium since the 2012 season. The six round-trippers are the most for the Shockers in one game since April 26, 1998 against Indiana State.

Photo of a Shocker softball player behind an OSU player.

A pair of freshmen lifted the 23rd ranked Wichita State to an extra inning win, 3-1, against third-ranked Oklahoma State on April 18 at Cowgirl Stadium.

Sami Hood hit the go-ahead two-run home run in the top of the eighth inning with two outs and Alex Aguilar held the potent Oklahoma State offense to just one run on eight hits.

Wichita State (37-8) completed the regular season sweep of the Cowgirls with Tuesday’s win in eight innings after earning an 8-7 win just two weeks ago in Wichita. It marks WSU’s highest ranked road win in school history, backing up the win against OSU at home.