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Your gastrointestinal system – no reason to be grossed out!

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A common lament I hear from my patients as they try to discuss a real concern they have about their body: “I’m sorry; this is so disgusting!” Their cheeks burn with shame as they tell me how their bowels have betrayed them. No matter what the issue is, so many of my patients are mortified discussing their diarrhea, constipation, fecal incontinence. My response, always, is “you can’t gross me out – we talk about poop every day in this clinic!”

Plenty of things can go wrong in the gastrointestinal tract, and even minor issues can be really disruptive in a person’s life. Certain features of bowel dysfunction, like blood in the stool, abdominal pain, and weight loss, might signal more urgency to get a problem diagnosed and fixed. We certainly don’t want to miss things like tumors, ulcers, inflammatory bowel disease, and diseases that might affect absorption of nutrients.

Oftentimes, none of those “red flags” are present, but a patient’s gastrointestinal symptoms are affecting their ability to function at work or socially. In cases when we either have ruled out or have low suspicion for something “bad” we can still offer plenty to help with these symptoms. Sometimes that might mean trials of elimination of food types, dietary changes, addition of fiber, or other medications. GI symptoms might be a side effect of another medication. We frequently have to do some trial and error to find the right combination of things that improve an individual’s function, but usually we can do so. In some cases consulting with gut specialists, dietitians, even physical therapists, can be very helpful.

My point here is this: if you are having gut symptoms that are worrying you or disrupting your day-to-day life, let’s talk about it! Whatever discomfort you have discussing it, I promise, is not shared by your primary care provider or friendly gastroenterologist. We want to help you get answers. And even if there is not a simple diagnosis or fix to the problem, we want to help you be more comfortable leaving the house without worrying about what your gut will do. So please, don’t let feeling grossed out keep you from asking the question.

Kelly Evans-Hullinger, M.D. is part of The Prairie Doc® team of physicians and currently practices internal medicine in Brookings, South Dakota. Follow The Prairie Doc® at www.prairiedoc.org and on Facebook featuring On Call with the Prairie Doc® a medical Q&A show providing health information based on science, built on trust, streaming live on Facebook most Thursdays at 7 p.m. central.

KU News: University Dance Company to present 2023 Fall Concert

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

University Dance Company to present 2023 Fall Concert

LAWRENCE — University of Kansas Department of Theatre & Dance faculty members, along with a regional guest choreographer, will present work in ballet, hip-hop and modern/contemporary dance styles at the University Dance Company Fall Concert next month. Performances will be 7:30 p.m. Nov. 3-4 and 2:30 p.m. Nov. 5. Stage crew and dancers include students from Argonia, Chanute, De Soto, Hesston, Lawrence, Lenexa, Maize, Merriam, Mission, Overland Park, Shawnee, Topeka and Wichita.

KU Law to host inaugural Well-Being Summit

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas School of Law will host a summit with national experts in the field of well-being within the legal profession, both as a resource for KU Law students to learn self-care early on and for the broader legal community. The inaugural Well-Being Summit will take place Nov. 9, including a free CLE evening program and networking reception, open to the public. Registration is required.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Lisa Coble-Krings, Department of Theatre & Dance, 785-864-5685, [email protected], @KUTheatre,

University Dance Company to present 2023 Fall Concert

LAWRENCE — University of Kansas Department of Theatre & Dance faculty members, along with a regional guest choreographer, will present work in ballet, hip-hop and modern/contemporary dance styles at the University Dance Company Fall Concert next month. Performances will be 7:30 p.m. Nov. 3-4 and 2:30 p.m. Nov. 5.

Featured faculty choreographers are Ashley Brittingham, Michelle Heffner Hayes, Shannon Stewart and Maya Tillman-Rayton. They are joined by regional guest choreographer Logan Pachciarz. Several of the works convey unique interpretations of a “mythos” theme buoyed by the department’s award-winning scenography. In total, 47 students will perform, including a large ensemble of tap dancers. The concert features student-choreographed works by Jayhawk Tap Company.

The UDC Fall Concert will be presented in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall. Tickets are available for purchase on the UDC Fall Concert performance web page, by calling 785-864-3982, or in-person at the box office in Murphy Hall noon-5 p.m. weekdays. Additionally, the Nov. 3 and 5 performances will be livestreamed. For livestream tickets and access, see dance.ku.edu/streaming.

“Not all dance has a narrative, but it is fascinating to see what unfolds when story or text is interpreted through dance. Movement contains multitudes,” said Heffner Hayes, UDC Fall Concert producer and choreographer.

Pachciarz is the co-founder and co-artistic director of Moving Arts in Kansas City, Missouri, and previously performed with Twyla Tharp, Boston Ballet and Kansas City Ballet. He choreographed and set his four-part contemporary ballet on students during a two-week intensive rehearsal process earlier this fall. He presents “The Promise” as the concert’s finale. His participation in the UDC Fall Concert is made possible in part by the Janet Hamburg Visiting Artist Fund.

Brittingham is a full-time lecturer in the department and associate producer of the University Dance Company Fall Concert. She has choreographed “Beautiful Decay,” a contemporary ballet on pointe inspired by the emperor butterfly. Brittingham has performed a wide variety of classical and contemporary principal roles by the world’s leading choreographers. As a professional dancer with the Tulsa Ballet, she toured throughout the United States and Europe.

Heffner Hayes presents a restaging of her 2007 modern/contemporary work, “Cradling Persephone,” a retelling of the Greek myth re-envisioned as a survivor narrative. She is a professor of theatre & dance and interim director of dance in the Department and holds a doctorate in critical dance studies from the University of California, Riverside. There, she choreographed solo and group works in both the postmodern and flamenco dance traditions.

Stewart joined the Department of Theatre & Dance in August as a tenure-track assistant professor of contemporary dance. For this concert, she has restaged her contemporary work “Field Notes on Survival” on 10 dancers who use improvised and set material to make their way through a movement landscape with escalating risk. Stewart works interdisciplinarily, collaborating to make work for stages, galleries, film, specific sites and community rituals.

Tillman-Rayton is in her seventh year as a lecturer of hip-hop technique and second year as a full-time lecturer. She set “Sister Nancy,” a hip-hop work based in African folklore and featuring animal gods, on KU students this semester. She debuted her work, titled “Stingy Lulu’s Jumping Juke Joint,” at the 2023 KC Fringe Festival. Her works have previously been shown at KC Fringe Festival and at National Dance Week KC. Her dance teaching career spans 15 years in Lawrence and Kansas City communities.

Professional design team members are Rana Esfandiary, KU assistant professor of design and technology, as scenic designer, and Ann Sitzman, the department’s technical coordinator and multiterm lecturer, as lighting designer. Student designers are Zoe English, junior in theatre design from Mission, and Lacey Marr, sophomore in theatre design from Shawnee, who are both serving as the costume designers. Additionally, Caitlyn Howard, senior in visual art and and dance from Merriam, is projections designer on Tillman-Rayton’s work. Professional freelancer Victoria Frank is serving as guest stage manager.

Student dancers are McKenna Bizal, junior in psychology and dance from Overland Park; Morgan Blanton, junior in dance from Wichita; Riley Brown, a student in business marketing and strategic communications from Houston; Hope Casner, senior in dance and exercise science from Argonia; Alexandria Demps, junior in dance from Kansas City, Missouri; Olivia Dondzila, freshman in strategic communications from De Soto; Sofia Dunkelberger, freshman in dance from Wichita; Cassidy Dunn, sophomore in pre-nursing from Lawrence; Sydney Ebner, senior in dance; Madeline Evenson, freshman in astronomy from Minneapolis, Minnesota; Emma Faulkner, freshman in speech pathology from Springfield, Illinois; Mia Godinez, junior in journalism & mass communications from Chanute; Sophia Harrison, sophomore in dance from Topeka; Kayla Howard, freshman in biochemistry from Leland, North Carolina; Aubree Johnston, senior in dance from Lee’s Summit, Missouri; Nina Katz, sophomore in dance from Lawrence; Cullen Krishna, junior in dance and ecology from Bellevue, Nebraska; Jazmyne Le, junior in strategic communications from Wichita; Abigail Lorenz, sophomore in exercise science from Schaumburg, Illinois; Breck Luedke, freshman in dance from Kearney, Nebraska; Esther Brynn McBride, freshman from Alameda, California; Mahika Meesa, sophomore in political science from Overland Park; Savannah Meier, sophomore in multimedia journalism from Tampa, Florida; Olly Mitchell, junior in theatre in culture & society from Maize; Cailan Niswonger, senior in dance from Flower Mound, Texas; Katie Noll, sophomore in business analytics and dance from Overland Park; Sarah Perez, freshman in psychology from Wichita; Christie Phillips, senior in psychology and dance from St. Louis; Dylan Pope, freshman from Naperville, Illinois; Eliana Rundus, sophomore in dance; Madi Seelye, sophomore in dance from Lawrence; Anna Shelton, junior in dance from Hesston; Sloane Smith, sophomore in dance and exercise science from Littleton, Colorado; Ashley Stone, freshman in dance from Overland Park; Molly Stover-Brown, first-year freshman in illustration and dance from Wichita; Olivia Taylor, senior in exercise science from Lenexa; Nikolette Treadwell, junior in dance from Wichita; Joslyn Vetock, sophomore in dance from Omaha, Nebraska; Steph Wirth, sophomore in dance from Topeka; and Rizzy Xiong, a sophomore in education and psychology from Shanghai, China.

The University Dance Company concerts are funded in part by KU Student Senate. The University Dance Company is a production wing of the University of Kansas’ Department of Theatre & Dance.

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The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.

Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.

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Contact: Emma Herrman, School of Law, [email protected], @kulawschool

KU Law to host inaugural Well-Being Summit

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas School of Law will host a summit with national experts in the field of well-being within the legal profession, both as a resource for KU Law students to learn self-care early on and for the broader legal community. The inaugural Well-Being Summit will take place Nov. 9.

The 2023 Well-Being Summit begins with a Lunch & Learn available to KU Law students, faculty and staff. The summit concludes in the evening with a free CLE program and networking reception, open to the public. Registration is required.

Register and learn more about the Summit.

Speakers include:

· Heidi Brown, author of publications addressing lawyer well-being.

· Shailini George, author of “The Law Student’s Guide to Doing Well and Being Well.”

· Jerome Organ, co-director of the Holloran Center for Ethical Leadership in the Professions at the University of St. Thomas School of Law.

“This summit aims to center on the well-being of attorneys and law students,” said Leah Terranova, dean of academic and student affairs, “with a primary focus on closing the divide between the well-being expectations and needs of law students and the available resources provided by law schools and firms.”

KU Law has invited the Kansas Task Force for Lawyer Well-being, the Kansas Lawyers Assistance Program and local firms who have shown an interest and investment in lawyer well-being to participate as co-sponsors of this event.

 

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

KU News: Book examines history of standardized tests

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Book examines history of standardized tests, why they persist

LAWRENCE — For the past 50 years, standardized tests have been the norm in American schools, a method proponents say determines which schools are not performing and helps hold educators accountable. Yet for the past 20 years, it has become clear that testing has failed to improve education or hold many accountable, according to a University of Kansas researcher and author of the new book “An Age of Accountability: How Standardized Testing Came to Dominate American Schools and Compromise Education.”

 

Katie Sowers will give 2023 Elizabeth Dole Women in Leadership Lecture

LAWRENCE — The Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas will recognize Katie Sowers at the 2023 Elizabeth Dole Women in Leadership Lecture next month. Sowers will give a talk at 7 p.m. Nov. 30 discuss her career as a trailblazer for women in the sports world. Sowers, a native Kansan, made history in 2020 when she became the first woman to coach on an NFL staff in a Super Bowl.

KU Army ROTC excels at 2023 Task Force Leavenworth Ranger Challenge

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas Army ROTC Ranger Challenge teams showcased their skills and determination as they participated in the 2023 Task Force Leavenworth Ranger Challenge competition, which took place Oct. 13-14 at Camp Dodge, Iowa. KU was the only program to bring home two trophies in both competition categories. Cadets included students from Andale, Baldwin City, Cedar Vale, Holton, La Crosse, Leavenworth, Olathe, Overland Park and Shawnee.

Full stories below.

Contact: Mike Krings, KU News Service, 785-864-8860, [email protected], @MikeKrings

Book examines history of standardized tests, why they persist

LAWRENCE — For the past 50 years, standardized tests have been the norm in American schools, a method proponents say determines which schools are not performing and helps hold educators accountable. Yet for the past 20 years, it has become clear that testing has failed to improve education or hold many accountable, according to a University of Kansas researcher whose new book details its history.

“An Age of Accountability: How Standardized Testing Came to Dominate American Schools and Compromise Education” by John Rury, professor emeritus of educational leadership & policy studies at KU, tells the story of how testing became a central focus of American education policy roughly from 1970 to 2020. The book details how it rose to prominence, persisted through generations of leaders and how policymakers routinely ignored evidence that the tests were not improving education for most students.

In the book’s introduction, Rury wrote how testing in American schools dates back to the 1840s but really took hold in the 1970s, when contemporary accountability began with a “minimum competency” high school graduation test in Florida. Other states subsequently adopted a similar approach, especially in the South.

“One of the big questions with these exams,” Rury said, “was setting cut scores. And there was really no scientific way to decide that. In Florida, they set it arbitrarily at 70% because that was the score needed to pass classes generally. The consequence of that was many kids failing, especially African American and poor students.”

The book also covers questions of race and standardized exams. Rury described how tests were called out for racial and cultural bias early on, but the assessment industry responded, and by the 1990s organizations such as the National Urban League backed testing to help address the achievement gap.

Testing has fluctuated in how much attention it gained, and the book outlines how the 1980s became a decade of transition.

“Then testing took a back seat in reform conversations,” Rury said, “and it wasn’t until the ’90s that proficiency became a political priority and testing again became a focal point.”

“An Age of Accountability,” published by Rutgers University Press in its New Directions in the History of Education series, documents how American students scored poorly on international tests, especially compared to Japanese students in the late ’80s. This helped set the stage for standardized testing being used to hold teachers accountable for not educating American students to the levels of certain international peers. Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton both embraced testing in the ’90s and even proposed national tests of proficiency. While both met stiff political opposition, it set the stage for No Child Left Behind, the signature education policy of President George W Bush.

The younger Bush campaigned on tales of a “Texas Miracle,” dramatic claims of improvements in schools when he was governor, despite much evidence to the contrary, Rury wrote. The national legislation that followed his arrival in D.C. required students in certain grades to show proficiency in reading and math. More than 20 years later, testing policy remains central to American education.

“All along, since the 1970s, many psychometricians, the people who build assessments, said, ‘Look, you can’t do this with these tests.’ On exit exams, kids will mess up, miss a couple questions below the cut line and not get a diploma, all for just a few questions on a single test. There are major consequences for that in life. My argument is that politicians consistently ignored that. Some even proposed using norm-referenced tests as gateway exams, which is ridiculous. But it all set the stage for No Child Left Behind.”

In the book’s conclusion, Rury outlines how, despite its troubled history, standardized testing continues to be the norm in American education.

“What accountability often does is it really compromises the validity of the test,” Rury said. “This is the underlying problem. When you have a system where people’s jobs are on the line, many are going to find a way to manipulate the assessment process.”

While there are long-standing problems with standardized testing, Rury said his hope is that readers realize there have always been those saying that standardized testing was never meant to be used in this way and to think twice before advocating returning to overreliance on these measures, such as No Child Left Behind.

“These tests are a very poor measure of what kids are doing in schools. That’s the Achilles heel, since most of the variation in scores is due to non-school factors,” Rury said. “I’d rather see measuring growth. That requires testing at the beginning of the school year and again at the end to see how much students have learned. We hear about failing schools, but even there, students often show growth when it’s examined. Saying that current tests are holding schools accountable thus can be very misleading if they’re only administered once a year. I prefer focusing on changes in achievement and using tests not to punish or stigmatize, but to help schools learn how to better serve their students.”

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The official university Twitter account has changed to @UnivOfKansas.

Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.

Contact: Maria Fisher, Dole Institute of Politics, 785-864-4900, [email protected]

Katie Sowers will give 2023 Elizabeth Dole Women in Leadership Lecture

LAWRENCE — The Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas will recognize Katie Sowers at the 2023 Elizabeth Dole Women in Leadership Lecture next month. Sowers will give a talk at 7 p.m. Nov. 30 discuss her career as a trailblazer for women in the sports world.

Sowers, a native Kansan, made history in 2020 when she became the first woman to coach on an NFL staff in a Super Bowl. Throughout her career, she has been a part of the coaching staff for the Kansas City Chiefs, San Francisco 49ers and the Atlanta Falcons.

“Katie Sowers has blazed new trails for women in sports by rising above the expectations of others to reach the heights of her extraordinary potential. With determination, she committed herself to professional excellence and is showing the rising generation of women that there are no limits to what they can accomplish,” said former U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Dole.

Currently, Sowers is in her third year as director of strategic initiatives at Ottawa University. She also coached the 2021 and 2022 National Champion OU Women’s Flag Football team and now serves as the director of operations and defensive coordinator. As a result of her career, she uses her influence in the sports world to open various doors of opportunity for women’s athletics.

She is responsible for leading the development and fundraising efforts for a state-of-the-art facility for women’s flag football and other OU athletic teams. Sowers will continue to focus on the growth of female athletes and bringing these programs into the spotlight.

“We are excited to recognize our fellow Kansan Katie Sowers at our annual Elizabeth Dole Women in Leadership Lecture,” said Audrey Coleman, director of the Dole Institute. “This signature occasion amplifies the game-changing impact of woman in leadership and distinguishes the Dole Institute as a unique, much-needed platform for discussing meaningful topics on politics, policy and leadership.”

The program is an annual event featuring women in positions of leadership who break down barriers and make a remarkable impact in their fields. The women exemplify perseverance, innovative thinking and resilience and amplify the need for creating a meaningful dialogue about the importance of women in leadership. Some of the past speakers include Elizabeth Dole, military and veteran caregivers, and U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids.

This series is named after former the U.S. lawmaker in honor of her long career in public service. Elizabeth Dole served as commissioner on the Federal Trade Commission, U.S. Secretary of Transportation, U.S. Secretary of Labor, president of the American Red Cross and U.S. senator representing the state of North Carolina. The Elizabeth Dole Women in Leadership Lecture series serves as a tribute to her dedication and contributions to the nation through her public service.

 

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Contact: Lawrence Jenkins, KU Army ROTC, 785-864-1113, [email protected]

KU Army ROTC excels at 2023 Task Force Leavenworth Ranger Challenge

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas Army ROTC Ranger Challenge teams showcased their skills and determination as they participated in the highly anticipated 2023 Task Force Leavenworth Ranger Challenge competition, which took place Oct. 13-14 at Camp Dodge, Iowa.

The Ranger Challenge is the “varsity sport” of ROTC, a two-day competition designed to test the mettle of warrior athletes by challenging them physically and mentally through a series of infantry ranger tasks. This year’s event, hosted by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, drew participation from ROTC programs from across Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska.

At the conclusion of the competition, KU was the only program to bring home two trophies in both competition categories, a significant achievement in the program’s recent history. The KU nine-person team secured third place overall out of nine participating teams, while the KU five-person team finished second place out of six competing teams.

On the first day of the competition, teams covered 17.5 miles while carrying 50-pound rucksacks, fighting load carriers, weapons and helmets. They navigated through a rigorous series of events, including the Army combat fitness test, basic rifle marksmanship, weapons assembly/disassembly, functional fitness, hand grenade assault course, one rope bridge and a grueling 10K timed foot march.

Day two brought a fresh set of challenges as the teams continued to traverse the course with their 50-pound rucksacks, covering 12 miles. The day included events testing Army knowledge, claymore mine employment, camouflage application, knot tying, moving under direct fire, calling for fire, and providing for first aid under fire.

The KU nine-person team (including two alternates) was made up of junior and team captain Jairub Constable, Baldwin City; sophomore Jaden Murff, Overland Park; junior David Spenny, Blaine, Minnesota; junior Emma Hanson, Minnetonka, Minnesota; senior Reagan Warburton, Cedar Vale; junior Mark Stump, St. Louis; sophomore Will Rues, La Crosse; freshman Elijah Mortensen, Fort Gregg-Adams, Virginia; sophomore Nate Lundgren, Olathe; and sophomores Alex and Luke Rogers, Shawnee. Senior and team captain Caleb Megee, Leavenworth; freshman Braxton Camp, Andale; freshman Taylor Reboulet, Olathe; sophomore Alayna Clayton, Holton; junior Sam Kirk, Overland Park; and sophomore Ben Nash, Shawnee, comprised the KU five-person team (including one alternate).

At the conclusion of this 48-hour competition, KU was the only program to have brought home two trophies in both competition categories, a significant achievement in the program’s recent history. The KU nine-person team secured third place overall out of nine participating teams, while the KU five-person team finished second place out of six competing teams.

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

Potential Spam

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john marshal

The Kansas Legislature is on the way to a fat pay increase, courtesy of a special compensation committee created earlier this year by the legislature.

The special committee was created to put distance ‒ at least a smidgen ‒ between legislators and a decision to raise their own pay. Eight of the nine committee members are former legislators.

The committee, after a quick summer study, recommends that legislators’ base compensation be increased from $29,000 to nearly $58,000. The pay plan takes effect in 2025 unless legislators pass a resolution to reject it.

Legislative pay is multi-tiered. Members of the House and Senate are currently paid $88.66 per day plus $157 daily for living expenses during a 90-day session ‒ roughly $22,000. From April through December they receive $354 every two weeks to pay for “constituent services.” (They also get a 56-cents per mile travel allowance.) Base total plus a $7,000 non-session allowance, $29,000.

Committee chairmen and leadership – majority and minority leaders, party whips, Speaker pro-tem and Senate vice-president, the House Speaker and Senate President – are paid more, depending on rank.

Under the new plan, rank-and-file legislators would be paid $43,000 in salary plus a 90-day in-session living expense of $14,940.

Pay for the House speaker and Senate president would increase from the current $36,000 to $70,520, plus $14,490 in-session per-diem. In both chambers, majority and minority leaders would be paid $67,940. Other leadership positions, such as speaker pro tem and assistant party leaders would be paid $57,190 under the proposal.

Other benefits include added compensation for interim committee meetings and other business outside the regular 90-day session.

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The pay increase comes on grounds that our part-time citizen legislature is a myth. Legislating today enjoins more than a 90-day session, given interim committees, political events, speaking engagements, citizen forums, campaign meetings, constituent services, lobbyists’ invitations.

Even decades ago when state politics was local, accomplished legislators sometimes found their public duties had come to impair their private employment or harmed a business they managed. Public responsibilities could squeeze lives and jobs.

The legislature grew older, wealthier, a repository for the retired and well-off, a place for those who had the time and the money to serve.

Mark Hutton, chairman of the compensation committee, said the pay plan was an attempt to fix that. If the pay is good enough, he said, younger people may be interested in serving.

The idea, he said, ” is to develop a compensation package that would not incentivize but support people … that want to serve in the Legislature and not punish them financially for doing it.”

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Money or no money, the larger issue is detachment. Topeka has become a bent geezer in serious need of an ear trumpet. The disconnect from the rest of Kansas is startling. Calls about true local issues of state impact are placed again and again ‒ in polls and surveys, in public referendums, in general elections. What they get is a busy signal; or, dialed up and scrolled, local sentiment appears on the legislative screen as “Potential Spam”.

Meanwhile the legislature lumbers on. Brownback alumni lecture cities and counties about sound budgeting while hoarding the billions owed cities and counties in local tax relief. Their answer to a long cry for Medicaid expansion is another abortion bill while more rural hospitals go broke and close, Herington the latest.

The need for local tax relief is answered with jingoes about trimming fat. Local schools need adequate and equitable financing, not ginned-up bickering about rainbows in the library.

Local issues go unattended while legislators worry about their pay. Which is spam, which the scam?

KU News: US to see more toxic algal blooms in lakes with climate change, study shows

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Research shows climate change boosts likelihood of toxin releases from algal blooms in American lakes

LAWRENCE — A broad analysis of lake water quality across the United States reveals human-driven climate change is increasing risks of high toxin concentrations from algal blooms in U.S. lakes, posing increasing hazards to people and wild and domestic animals, including dogs. The investigation, co-written by a University of Kansas researcher, relies on data from lake-water samples from 2,804 U.S. lakes collected between 2007 and 2017 by the Environmental Protection Agency.

Second dean candidate for School of Engineering to present Oct. 25

LAWRENCE — Adrienne Minerick, the second candidate for the University of Kansas School of Engineering dean position, will give a public presentation on her vision for the school. Her presentation will take place 1:30-2:30 p.m. Oct. 25 in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union, and the event will be livestreamed. Minerick is currently a professor of chemical engineering and affiliated professor of biomedical engineering at Michigan Technological University.

Review of trials comparing depression therapies ACT and CBT may indicate CBT’s superiority

LAWRENCE — A study led by University of Kansas psychologists calls into question whether one common treatment for depression, known as acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), has enough evidence to support its use over the traditional approach of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). That doesn’t make it ineffective, according to Alex Williams, program director of psychology at the KU Edwards Campus, but findings underscore that CBT might be better — and that more funding and research are needed to refine therapies for patients struggling with mental health.

New book provides guide to librarians, scholars on open access, scholarly communication

LAWRENCE — There has been a significant push in recent decades among academic libraries to make information as freely available as possible. So when a group of scholarly communications experts wrote a book on the topic, they didn’t hide it behind a paywall. That book, “Scholarly Communication Librarianship and Open Knowledge,” is an open access text to guide librarians, scholars and students interested in scholarly communications and open knowledge through theory, practice and case studies in the movement.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Brendan Lynch, KU News Service, 785-864-8855, [email protected], @BrendanMLynch

Research shows climate change boosts likelihood of toxin releases from algal blooms in American lakes

LAWRENCE — A broad analysis of lake water quality across the United States reveals human-driven climate change is increasing risks of high toxin concentrations from algal blooms in U.S. lakes, posing increasing hazards to people and wild and domestic animals, including dogs.

The investigation, recently published as the cover story in Nature Water, relies on data from lake-water samples from 2,804 U.S. lakes collected between 2007 and 2017 by the Environmental Protection Agency.

The authors, including a researcher at the University of Kansas, use the EPA’s data to predict the likelihood that a toxin called microcystin, produced by some blue-green algal species, will spike above water quality thresholds in the years ahead. Microcystin can damage the liver in humans and can kill wild and domestic animals.

“We found toxic blue-green blooms thrive under climate change conditions and warmer temperatures, particularly in the optimal temperature range of 20 to 25 degrees Celsius, with the highest levels at about 22 degrees Celsius, or 72 degrees Fahrenheit,” said co-author Ted Harris, assistant research professor with the Kansas Biological Survey & Center for Ecological Research at KU. “It’s clear regions with a history of fewer toxic blooms are likely to experience an increase in such occurrences due to climate change. High-nutrient lakes, which serve as a fuel source for these blooms, are particularly vulnerable to this trend.”

Harris’ collaborators were lead author Julian Merder, along with Anna Michalak and Gang Zhao of the Carnegie Institution for Science, as well as Dimitrios Stasinopoulos and Robert Rigby of the University of Greenwich.

Among the team’s other key findings:

· Climate change forecasts show a northward shift in areas that will be at higher risk for algal blooms, particularly the northern Great Plains and northwestern United States.

· Parts of the U.S. with fewer toxic blooms on record are likely to see more of them because of climate change.

· Many agricultural regions with high-nutrient lakes will see more frequent temperatures ideal for algal blooms, with associated risks for drinking water sources, recreational activities and human and animal health.

Harris said public health officials and lake visitors should be mindful of conditions that foster algal blooms — and dog owners in particular should pay attention to the findings.

“The negative effects of these toxins, particularly those affecting the liver, can lead to death, with rare cases of human fatalities,” he said. “However, more commonly, animals, especially dogs, are adversely affected. Blue-green algae differ from other algae as they can float due to small buoyant structures within them. This behavior causes them to be pushed downwind and accumulate near coasts, often where launching ramps are located, and where people take their dogs. This is also where toxin accumulation is more likely.”

As an example, Harris recounted a significant toxic bloom at Milford Reservoir in Kansas in 2011 that led public officials to warn “complaints after recreational exposure include vomiting, diarrhea, skin rashes, eye irritation and respiratory symptoms. These toxins also caused deaths in pets.”

Harris specializes in studying algal blooms, including work monitoring harmful algal bloom distribution, abundance and toxicity. He also works to develop modeling techniques for predicting and forecasting harmful cyanobacterial blooms. He said the statistical findings in the paper lined up with his experiences doing fieldwork.

“On this paper I served as the bloom expert,” he said. “I made sure our results were robust and that we were saying things that we find in general to be true in the field.”

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Contact: Savannah Rattanavong, Office of the Provost, 785-864-6402, [email protected], @KUProvost

Second dean candidate for School of Engineering to present Oct. 25

LAWRENCE — Adrienne Minerick, the second candidate for the University of Kansas School of Engineering dean position, will give a public presentation on her vision for the school.

Her presentation will take place 1:30-2:30 p.m. Oct. 25 in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. The event will also be livestreamed, and the passcode is 925939.

Minerick is currently a professor of chemical engineering and affiliated professor of biomedical engineering at Michigan Technological University.

The remaining candidates will be announced approximately two days before their respective campus visits. Their public presentations are scheduled for the following times and locations:

· Candidate 3: 1:30–2:30 p.m. Oct. 31, Beren Petroleum Conference Center, Slawson Hall G192

· Candidate 4: 9:30-10:30 am. Nov. 2, Burge Union Forum A

Members of the KU community are encouraged to attend each presentation and provide feedback to the search committee.

A candidate feedback survey will be open for two business days following the conclusion of each finalist’s visit. The survey and a recording of Minerick’s presentation will be available after the presentation on the search page until the survey closes.

Additional search information, including Minerick’s CV, is also available on the search page.

In addition to her professorship, Minerick is the director of ADVANCE, a program promoting faculty retention, career success and STEM equity at Michigan Tech. There, she has served in multiple administrative roles, including as the associate dean for research and innovation in the College of Engineering, assistant to the provost for faculty development, dean of the School of Technology, founding dean of the College of Computing and interim dean of the Pavlis Honors College.

Outside of her duties at Michigan Tech, Minerick has served as president of the American Society for Engineering Education, and she is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, as well as the American Institute of Chemical Engineers.

Minerick has led or helped establish three formal faculty mentoring programs and the Safe Zone workshops at ASEE, which raises awareness for LGBTQ inclusion in STEM fields. She served as chair of ASEE’s diversity committee and as the organization’s president during its “Year of Impact on Racial Equity.”

The AES Electrophoresis Society awarded Minerick the 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award, and in 2014, Michigan Tech recognized her as its Michigan Professor of the Year nominee. Minerick holds a patent and has written or co-written dozens of research and educational publications.

Minerick earned a bachelor’s in chemical engineering from Michigan Tech as well as a master’s in chemical engineering and a doctorate in chemical and biomolecular engineering from the University of Notre Dame.

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Contact: Brendan Lynch, KU News Service, 785-864-8855, [email protected], @BrendanMLynch

Review of trials comparing depression therapies ACT and CBT may indicate CBT’s superiority

 

LAWRENCE — A new study from psychologists at the University of Kansas gauges the quality of the evidence from more than 500 randomized controlled trials of a common treatment for depression, acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT).

 

The research confirms evidence for ACT is “credible” when compared to weak control groups (for example, when ACT is compared with those on a waitlist who receive no treatment at all). But other key findings appearing in the peer-reviewed journal Behavior Therapy are less clear about the efficacy of the therapy, including:

 

· When comparing ACT with other psychotherapies, the trials were often too small to credibly indicate superiority of any treatment over the other.

· When compared to traditional cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), the evidence that existed suggested credible superiority for CBT. But, again, the trials were often too small to draw firm conclusions.

“There have been questions in the last decade or so about the credibility of findings in science broadly, including in psychology, and we’ve been interested in questions about how credible the research findings are for different forms of psychotherapy,” said lead author Alex Williams, program director of psychology at the Edwards Campus of the University of Kansas. “We’ve taken to evaluating quantitatively the credibility of bodies of research in psychology about different forms of therapy. This paper is an in-depth look at acceptance and commitment therapy — where we thought, ‘Let’s find every article we can about it.’”

Developed in the 1980s, ACT’s mindfulness-centered approach has grown in popularity. Today, thousands of practicing psychotherapists offer ACT to clients, while the Department of Veterans Affairs recognizes ACT as an evidence-based therapy for depression. While ACT is considered a form of cognitive behavioral therapy, it differs from traditional CBT in several respects.

“Traditional cognitive behavioral therapy is focused on reframing your thoughts,” Williams said. “So, if you’re depressed and you have thoughts about how bad your life is or how bad you are as a person, it’s focused on helping you develop an alternative, more helpful and accurate thought. But ACT is less focused on changing your mind about the thought and more about accepting that thought and detaching from it. ACT also is focused on helping you take actions congruent with your values in life — there’s more of an emphasis on it in ACT than traditional CBT.”

However, poring over randomized control trials of ACT’s efficacy, the authors found concerning signs regarding credibility (for example, too few participants in the studies to draw conclusions from them). In part, this stems from a lack of financial support in recent decades for up-to-date studies of depression therapies that use modern research and statistical methods.

“This area has been woefully underfunded forever,” said co-author Eugene Botanov of Pennsylvania State University-York. “Now, the only people really funding it is the federal government, but they’re not really interested in funding randomized control trials for depression or anxiety because we had so much research starting in the 1970s. But we know the world now a little differently than we did 50 years ago. Those studies were great for their time — they’re just not so strong now. We need more high-quality studies to really understand which of the possibly effective treatments work better than others.”

Indeed, this lack of strong evidence in studies that directly compare ACT with other treatments, like CBT, has resulted in “ambiguous evidence” that makes drawing definitive conclusions difficult, according to the authors.

“We found with ACT, when compared to traditional cognitive behavioral therapy in treating depression, it was really hard to credibly know, ‘Is one better than the other?’” Williams said. “But to the extent that there was signal amongst that noise, the indications were that CBT is superior as a depression treatment. You could take away from our paper that the best-case scenario for ACT compared to CBT is you throw your hands up and say, ‘Nobody can know.’ But there’s no real way you could look at the paper and say, ‘Oh, ACT is probably better than CBT at treating depression.’”

Williams and Botanov’s co-authors were KU graduate students Annaleis Giovanetti, Victoria Perko and Westley Youngren, along with Carrie Sutherland of Avila University and John Sakaluk of the University of Western Ontario.

The researchers said more reliable trial results would make it easier for patients, therapists and organizations to know which treatments are best. According to the National Institute of Mental Health, 8.4% of all U.S. adults had at least one major depressive episode in 2020.

“These findings matter if we’re therapists or patients or clients considering which treatments to use, or agencies that have concerns about what treatments to fund,” Williams said. “Our paper suggests there’s a lot of work to do to develop more credible evidence, one way or another, about the efficacy of ACT.”

That ACT stacks up well against no treatment or a placebo treatment isn’t a compelling enough case for funding or endorsing the therapy, according to Botanov.

“When we’re looking at weak control groups in studies of ACT, like receiving ACT compared to no therapy at all, those studies do fairly well,” he said. “But really, we don’t care so much about ACT versus ‘no treatment.’ We care about, ‘Should we advise a person to get traditional CBT or ACT for their depression?’ If I’m the Veterans Administration or a university, and I want to hire therapists — which therapy should I be looking for, or training my therapists to do? We need better clinical trials to help us know.”

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Don’t miss new episodes of “When Experts Attack!,”

a KU News Service podcast hosted by Kansas Public Radio.

 

https://kansaspublicradio.org/when-experts-attack

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Contact: Mike Krings, KU News Service, 785-864-8860, [email protected], @MikeKrings

New book provides guide to librarians, scholars on open access, scholarly communication

LAWRENCE — There has been a significant push in recent decades among academic libraries to make information as freely available as possible and as appropriate. So when a group of scholarly communications experts wrote a book on the topic, they couldn’t hide it behind a paywall. That book, “Scholarly Communication Librarianship and Open Knowledge,” is an open access text to guide librarians, scholars and students interested in scholarly communications and open knowledge through theory, practice and case studies in the movement.

Edited by Maria Bonn of the University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana, Josh Bolick of the University of Kansas and Will Cross of North Carolina State University, the book addresses issues in scholarly publishing and open knowledge movements.

Bolick, head of the David Shulenburger Office of Scholarly Communication & Copyright in KU Libraries, said the collaborative book was about seven years in the making and the idea was hatched when he started his position at KU in 2015, then scholarly communication librarian, and became responsible for leading open education initiatives.

“Open education was an area I was less knowledgeable about, so I set about learning as much as I could, as quickly as possible. I saw an intersection of scholarly communication and open education, where they could be a vehicle for learning about both: an open textbook for scholarly communication work,” Bolick said. “Almost everyone in an academic library is engaging in this work in some form, so broader literacy on the issues is important to supporting our mission and having agency in the evolving landscape.”

Open access, which refers to scholarly literature that is digital, free of charge and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions, has roots in the early internet and has accelerated in recent years. The book, published by the Association of College and Research Libraries and available in an open access edition (pdf) examines that concept as well as scholarly communication, open data, open education and open science and infrastructure.

The text is divided into three parts:

· What is scholarly communication?

· Scholarly communication and open culture

· Voices from the field: Perspectives, intersections and case studies

The opening section, written by Bonn, Bolick and Cross, defines topics and explores how the economic, technological, social, and policy and legal forces shape scholarly communication work in libraries. Part one’s chapters also consider how these forces affect higher education and academic publishing more broadly.

“The internet created an opportunity to share knowledge in a new way, and it changed things immediately. Open access arose from a crisis in scholarly publishing, where increasing costs for access to the literature coincided with flat or declining higher education budgets and have sometimes forced reductions of library acquisitions,” Bolick said. “The entire landscape is highly dynamic. We’re looking at how libraries, researchers and publishers are adapting to new realities and how we practice as a result.”

Part two takes a deep dive into open culture and how it is operationalized in libraries, with contributions from librarians and allies in the U.S. and Canada. The section is divided into subsections focused on open access, open data, open education, and open science and infrastructure. Each subsection is edited by an expert in that area who selected authors and framed their chapters according to their expertise.

“We didn’t want to present the field according to Maria, Josh and Will,” Bolick said of his co-editors. “Rather, here is our field according to a broad subset of experts working in it.”

Part three gives features practitioner case studies, perspectives on aspects of scholarly communication work and essays on how scholarly communication intersects with other areas of academic librarianship.

While the book is a collection of knowledge on a rapidly evolving field, it is not neutral, and Bolick said it does take positions, including advocating for greater openness in the higher education landscape and for libraries and educational institutions to participate in the shift to open knowledge. A downloadable PDF version of the book is free, and costs are only associated with an order of the print version. The co-editors do not stand to profit financially from the book, having waived royalties, and said they welcome readers to engage with it broadly by adapting it, improving it and sharing it wherever they wish, all possible because it is published under an open license.

“In the end, we can only write to our knowledge and expertise, but we can’t pretend that is the entirety of knowledge on the subject, or that our way of doing is the only way of doing,” Bolick said.

KU Libraries will mark the celebration of Open Access Week with a special edition of “Fridays on Fourth,” a weekly, collaborative graduate student engagement initiative in Watson Library on Oct. 27. The University of Kansas and KU Libraries are longtime leaders in the field of open access and knowledge, but the new book includes a wide range of perspectives from practitioners at Research I institutions as well as from community colleges, K-12 libraries and others.

“Openness has become something that libraries, in particular, have embraced,” Bolick said. “I often tell researchers that if you’re not making your work open, there is an audience that can’t access it, cite it or learn from it. We saw openness as integral to this project and is a baked-in value of the book.”

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