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KU News: KU law, medical schools among nation’s best in latest U.S. News & World Report rankings

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

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Contact: Joe Monaco, Office of Public Affairs, 785-864-7100, [email protected], @UnivOfKansas
KU law, medical schools among nation’s best in latest U.S. News & World Report rankings
LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas’ law school and medical school are among the best in the nation, according to U.S. News & World Report rankings released today.
The School of Law entered the overall Top 50 for the first time in history with a No. 40 ranking among all law schools, as well as a No. 18 ranking among publics. These rankings reflect a notable jump from last year – 27 spots among all schools and 18 spots among publics – and can be attributed in large part to the School of Law having some of the highest bar passage and employment rates in the nation.
The KU School of Medicine has two programs – medicine-primary care and medicine-research – ranked in the top 50 among publics. Additionally, U.S. News & World Report publishes a ranking of institutions with the highest percent of medical school graduates practicing in rural, primary care and health professional shortage areas. KU Medical Center is ranked No. 5 among publics in the percent of graduates practicing in rural areas, No. 9 among publics in the percent of graduates practicing in primary care and No. 11 among publics in the percent of graduates practicing in health professional shortage areas.
Today’s announcement from U.S. News & World Report follows the organization’s initial April 25 announcement, which didn’t include law and medical school rankings. In that announcement, KU had 37 programs ranked in the top 50. With today’s release of the law and medical school rankings, KU now has 51 graduate programs in the top 50 among public universities, including nine programs in the top 10.
Below is a full list of KU graduate programs ranked in the top 50 among public universities:
1. Local Government Management
1. Paleontology
1. Special Education
5. Public Management and Leadership
6. Physical Therapy
6. Speech-Language Pathology
9. Occupational Therapy
10. Audiology
10. Education
11. Nursing-Midwifery
13. Dispute Resolution
13. Petroleum Engineering
13. Public Affairs
14. Medicine – Primary Care
14. Nursing-Anesthesia
15. Clinical Child Psychology
18. Full-Time Law
20. Curriculum and Instruction
20. Public Finance and Budgeting
22. Social Work
23. Pharmacy
26. Healthcare Management
27. Environmental Law
30. Clinical Psychology
31. Biostatistics
31. Legal Writing
32. Aerospace Engineering
32. Constitutional Law
32. History
33. Psychology
34. Contracts-Commercial Law
35. Fine Arts
38. Business-Corporate Law
39. Chemistry
40. Earth Sciences
40. English
40. Environmental Engineering
40. Mathematics
40. Sociology
41. Civil Engineering
41. Full-Time MBA
41. International Law
41. Political Science
43. Medicine – Research
46. Tax Law
47. Economics
47. Intellectual Property Law
47. Physics
48. Clinical Training (Law)
49. Biology
50. Public Health.

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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: Native fungi amendment shows promising results in organic crops

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

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Native fungi amendment shows promising results in organic crops
LAWRENCE — Over the past two growing seasons, University of Kansas researcher Liz Koziol has measured the harvest of tomatoes, peppers and other crops to see if adding locally native mycorrhizal fungi to the soil makes a difference. Her work has demonstrated how such local fungi boost growing systems and can transform landscapes.

Scholars expand documentation of endangered African language
LAWRENCE — Since becoming interested in endangered languages, University of Kansas linguist Philip Duncan has tried to use his “outsider” status to support communities in their language reclamation and revitalization efforts, whether they are from rural Mexico or, as in his latest publication, in West Africa. The assistant teaching professor in KU’s Department of Linguistics is co-editor and co-author of a new book titled “Ikpana Interrogatives,” part of the Oxford University Press series of Studies of Endangered Languages.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Kirsten Bosnak, KU Field Station, 785-864-6267, [email protected], @KUFieldStation
Native fungi amendment shows promising results in organic crops
LAWRENCE — Can fungi used in restoring native landscapes boost organic crop production, too?
Over the past two growing seasons, University of Kansas researcher Liz Koziol has measured the harvest of tomatoes, peppers and other crops to see if adding locally native mycorrhizal fungi to the soil makes a difference. She’s about to enter season three.
“These fungi are beneficial microbes that spend all their time collecting soil nutrients that help plants grow more quickly, produce more fruit, survive water stress and even defend themselves against pests,” Koziol said.
“But not all mycorrhizae are the same, and some agricultural soils are lacking in beneficial fungi. In this study, we amend organic cropping soils with super-beneficial mycorrhizae to see if they can be used as a tool to make farmers’ work easier.”
Koziol, assistant research professor at the Kansas Biological Survey & Center for Ecological Research, has spent more than 12 years collecting mycorrhizal fungi, which live around plants’ root systems, from nature and isolating them in the lab. Her studies cover dozens of inoculation trials in different settings, including native restoration trials, cropping systems and greenhouses.
Her work has demonstrated how local mycorrhizal fungi boost growing systems and can transform landscapes.
In Koziol’s current crop study, she’s teamed up with local growers Scott Thellman of Juniper Hill Farms and Chris Black of Kaw Valley Cannabis.
Results so far are encouraging. Field and greenhouse trials at Juniper Hill showed consistently improved performance across organic crop varieties inoculated with the native fungi. Testing of 15 varieties in the field showed a weight increase of 13 to 54% in tomatoes and 3 to 12% in peppers. Greenhouse chard, basil and peppers all benefited, too.
Thellman said his crew was so impressed with the findings of the trials that they’d begun to incorporate more mycorrhizae into their starter fertilizers in the greenhouses and in the field.
“We hope to collaborate more with Liz in the future and bring more native mycorrhizae into all of our production systems, both organic and conventional,” he said.
Hemp plants inoculated with the mycorrhizal mixture showed an overall 15% improvement in the concentration of CBG (cannabigerol)—a nonpsychoactive compound that some medical studies indicate may have therapeutic potential in treating various diseases.
The project is supported by a $250,000 grant from the National Science Foundation Partner in Innovation program, which encourages entrepreneurship. Koziol’s startup, MycoBloom LLC, created before she came to KU, produces native mycorrhizal fungi as a soil amendment and provides them to prairie restoration practitioners.
Given the success of the current research trials — along with the interest of ag producers in the products — Koziol is likely to commercialize a product specific to organic crop growers. She would work with KU’s Center for Technology Commercialization via Mycobloom and sign a commercial license with the center.
Mycorrhizal fungi already are used in agriculture, but Koziol said there are drawbacks to the products on the market. Typically they contain the same one to five species, which represent a very small fraction of the total species pool. Individual fungi species vary in their effect on nutrient uptake and other benefits, such as disease resistance and alleviation of drought stress.
In addition, these fungi can be locally adapted to their home soil nutrient and precipitation levels, so they may not be as effective where they are introduced.
Another downside to the current fungi products is that the industry standard for producing them is cultivation in the lab, on Petri plates under sterile conditions — which means they don’t experience soil for many generations of cultivation. Koziol said that recent evidence indicated that this method of culture can result in fungi being less able to help crop nutrient uptake or becoming “weedy” and parasitic, actually harming the crop.
Two KU faculty members are part of Koziol’s study in a supervisory capacity. Jim Bever, Foundation Distinguished Professor of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and a senior scientist at the Kansas Biological Survey & Center for Ecological Research, is co-principal investigator on the grant and supervises the research. Wally Meyer, director of the KU University Center and senior research associate at KU’s Institute for Policy & Social Research, supervises the entrepreneurial training that the grant supports for Koziol.
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Contact: Rick Hellman, KU News Service, 785-864-8852, [email protected], @RickHellman
Scholars expand documentation of endangered African language

LAWRENCE — Since becoming interested in endangered languages, University of Kansas linguist Philip Duncan has tried to use his “outsider” status to support communities in their language reclamation and revitalization efforts, whether they are from rural Mexico or, as in his latest publication, in West Africa.

Duncan, who is an assistant teaching professor in KU’s Department of Linguistics, is co-editor and co-author of a new book titled “Ikpana Interrogatives,” which is part of the Oxford University Press series of Studies of Endangered Languages.

Ikpana is a language within the Kwa family, spoken by about 7,000 people in southeast Ghana. It can also be classified as one of the Ghana-Togo Mountain Languages spoken in that region.
The book documents the typical grammar and intonation of question phrases in the language, documentation which can be of use for Ikpana community members as well as the broader linguistics community.
By extensively documenting Ikpana questions in this way, the author/editors wrote, they are also working to broaden “our understanding of the nature of human language.”
Duncan and his colleagues spent the bulk of their time over two summers working with Ikpana speakers in two of the eight Ghanaian townships and settlements in which they are concentrated. They talked about how questions are formed and iterated, working together to detail grammatical properties and contexts of use.
When asked if he speaks Ikpana, Duncan said, “I think it is very important for a linguist not only to study languages but also to learn how to use them, because I think you engage with it differently. But as an outsider who is a non-Indigenous person, trying to be an ally and working with Indigenous communities on their language efforts, I believe it’s not my choice to say, ‘I’m going to learn this language simply because I’m studying it.’ So I take it as an invitation … because I see language as tied to sovereignty. It’s not my sovereign right to speak the language in that way. It’s an invitation as an outsider to be able to interact with the language in ways that community members deem appropriate. … Good scholarship is essentially predicated on things like respect, relationship and reciprocity.”
Duncan said he and his colleagues consulted with the now deceased Ghana-born scholar Kofi Dorvlo and built upon his previous efforts to document Ikpana.
Initially based in the regional capital city of Ho, the scholars fanned out each day during their fieldwork. Eventually the team relocated to Logba Alakpeti and Logba Tota.
“We would meet as a group and plan out the stuff that we wanted to get, datawise — typically starting out to orient us to the language in simple words and phrases, and then building into more complex structures like questions over time,” Duncan said. “We also asked if people were willing to share Anansi stories, which are folk tales about a spider, trickster figure that are very common across communities in West Africa.”
It was during these conversations, Duncan said, that the researchers’ outsider perspective sometimes proved useful.
“We were learning so much from the speakers who are giving us their time and their knowledge and expertise,” he said. “Sometimes it’s fun when we ask something, and we don’t know what’s going to happen … People might say, ‘Oh, no, that’s not going to be possible.’ And then it’s like, ‘Wait a minute! Actually, that sounds perfectly fine … let me think about that a little bit more.’
“It was great, because then we would get several speakers conversing with one another … going back and forth … like, ‘We can totally say that. I remember I said this the other day.’ It’s great to have those kinds of moments where we’re practicing what … we’re trying to document.”
Duncan said he is pleased with “Ikpana Interrogatives.”
“One goal is hopefully to provide materials and descriptions that people within the community can potentially latch onto, to build other materials that might be relevant for pedagogical materials or other kinds of things … that really promote the continued use among community members. That’s one thing that I feel is important about our project — that even though we’re coming in with goals as outside researchers, hopefully we are producing some stuff that will respect and also be of benefit to community members.”
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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: Four KU students, alumni awarded Fulbrights

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

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Four KU students, alumni awarded Fulbrights
LAWRENCE — Four University of Kansas students and alumni have received prestigious Fulbright U.S. Student Awards to study, conduct research and teach English abroad for the 2023-2024 academic year. An additional student was named as an alternate. The KU recipients include a graduate from Pittsburg.

Reasons for talent gap in procurement field examined in new business analysis
LAWRENCE — A new article from a University of Kansas School of Business faculty member looks at why there is a talent gap in the procurement industry, which can be traced to what future supply chain managers and procurement professionals are learning in college. The work appears in the Journal of Supply Chain Management, Logistics and Procurement.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Christine Metz Howard, International Affairs, [email protected], @KUintlaffairs
Four KU students, alumni awarded Fulbrights
LAWRENCE — Four University of Kansas students and alumni have received prestigious Fulbright U.S. Student Awards to study, conduct research and teach English abroad for the 2023-2024 academic year. One additional KU student was named as an alternate Fulbright recipient.
The year’s Fulbright grantees come from the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences and the Schools of Education & Human Sciences and Music. Melissa Terrall will travel to Mexico to conduct research in piano, and Kate Crnkovich, Maya McDaniel and Chloe VanBecelaere will teach English in Armenia, Spain and Colombia, respectively.
The Fulbright program is the flagship international educational exchange program sponsored by the U.S. government and is designed to increase mutual understanding between Americans and people of other countries. The U.S. Student Fulbright program operates in more than 160 countries worldwide.
Since the program’s inception in 1946, KU has had 492 students, including this year’s recipients, selected for Fulbright awards. KU International Affairs coordinates the applications for Fulbright grants.
Recipients of Fulbright grants are selected based on academic or professional achievement, as well as their record of service and demonstrated leadership in their respective fields. Fulbright grants provide funding for round-trip travel, maintenance for one academic year, health and accident insurance and, where relevant, tuition.
“Each of these students and alumni developed an outstanding proposal to contribute to the Fulbright mission of cultural exchange through their teaching and research,” said Rachel Sherman Johnson, director of internationalization and partnerships at KU International Affairs. “Their planned projects exemplify citizen diplomacy and will strengthen the relationships between the United States and their respective host countries.”
The 2023-2024 Fulbright recipients and alternate:
1. Kate Crnkovich was selected for a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship in Armenia. From Watertown, Wisconsin, Crnkovich will graduate in May with a master’s degree in Slavic languages & literatures, which she earned her bachelor’s degree in two years ago. Her parents are Wes and Julie Crnkovich.
2. Maya McDaniel was selected for a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship in Spain. From Denver, McDaniel will graduate in May with a bachelor’s degree in secondary history and government education. Her parents are Derren and Carol McDaniel.
3. Melissa Terrall will travel to Mexico to study and conduct research in piano. She will study piano at Conservatorio Nacional in Mexico City. Her research will focus on Mexican classical piano repertoire as she works to publish an anthology of music from this era. While abroad Terrall will also perform recitals featuring the work of Mexican and American composers. From Portland, Oregon, Terrall graduated in 2022 with a master’s degree in piano performance. Her parents are Jeffrey and Valerie Terrall.
4. Chloe VanBecelaere was selected for a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship in Colombia. From Pittsburg, VanBecelaere graduated in 2022 with bachelor’s degrees in global & international studies and Spanish. Her parent is Diane VanBecelaere.
5. Yasmine Adrian was selected as an alternate. She had proposed to travel to Germany to pursue a master’s degree in international affairs at the Hertie School in Berlin. Her research would have focused on the integration of Turkish immigrants into Germany and how Turkish and German perspectives of immigration in Germany shape the integration experience. From Arlington, Virginia, she graduated in 2022 with bachelor’s degrees in global & international studies and German studies. Her parents are Steve and Allyson Adrian.

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


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Contact: Jon Niccum, KU News Service, 785-864-7633, [email protected]
Reasons for talent gap in procurement field examined in new business analysis
LAWRENCE — Everybody is a student of “procurement,” whether they realize it or not.
“It’s really what we do every day,” said Joe Walden, associate teaching professor of business at the University of Kansas.
“When you go to the grocery store, you’re there to do procurement. You’re finding suppliers, negotiating with them on quality terms and delivery price, then receiving and paying for it.”
Walden’s new article “What are we teaching our procurement students?” looks at why there is a talent gap in the industry, which can be traced to what future supply chain managers and procurement professionals are learning in college. The paper analyzes what these professionals are expected to know and what hiring officials are seeking, then offers recommendations for how this can be addressed by academic programs. It’s published in the Journal of Supply Chain Management, Logistics and Procurement.
The Institute of Supply Management (ISM) defines procurement as “the identification, acquisition, access, positioning, management of resources and related capabilities an organization needs or potentially needs in the attainment of strategic objectives.”
While the definition of this subset of supply chain is pretty well-acknowledged among professionals, Walden said there are still key areas that are undervalued within the career field.
“One of the most important parts of procurement is understanding quality,” he said. “We’ve learned through so many experiences that the lowest price doesn’t guarantee the best quality. Sometimes lowest price equals lowest quality, which is really why a lot of companies have gotten away from going to the lowest bidder and finding what they’ve started to call the ‘best supplier.’”
Ethics is another aspect that Walden said is critical to not overlook.
“Dealing with ethical suppliers. Dealing ethically with the suppliers. Going through the process of finding quality vendors with quality products that can deliver it when you need it — that combination of quality and ethics are probably the two most important pieces,” he said.
Walden said one of the fundamental misunderstandings about the field is that it’s easy. Simple, even.
“People assume, ‘We all buy stuff, so we all understand procurement.’ But it’s extremely difficult. You’ve got to locate the suppliers, especially if it’s a new product. You’ve got to go find people who actually have those materials you need. And you’ve got to make sure it comes when you want it. Plus, it needs to be the right quality at the right price,” he said.
Those who viewed procurement as easy may have experienced a change of attitude after the COVID-19 pandemic. One of the byproducts of the event, Walden said, is it forced individuals to realize products didn’t just magically appear. The so-called “Amazon effect,” in which a purchase is expected to show up two days later, often proved no longer reliable or stable.
“Everyone expects that if you buy an item, it will be there on your doorstep. Well, if the procurement guy didn’t forecast to buy enough, it’s not there. I can throw all the money I want at it, but it’s not going to make stuff get to you faster,” he said. “The beauty of the pandemic is it forced folks to look at supply chain and procurement through a magnifying glass.”
Raised in North Carolina, Walden spent 26 years in the U.S. Army, with an additional five working as a contractor. There, he developed his expertise in warehousing and distribution, which included designing a 4.2 million-square-foot distribution center in Kuwait for Operation Iraqi Freedom. He retired as a colonel.
He said he hoped his assessment of the procurement talent gap would convince those in supply chain academia to reexamine their curriculum.
“Even the top schools with the top supply chain programs in the world aren’t necessarily teaching all the critical skills,” Walden said.
“So if students want to go into the procurement field when they get out, I want to make sure they’re taught ethics, negotiation, supplier selection and supplier evaluations — things that aren’t always being taught right now. We need to get academia to realize what they need to start doing so that our students are more competitive.”
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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: KU experts write guide to transforming schools based on research in education, disability

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

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KU experts write guide to transforming schools based on research in education, disability
LAWRENCE — When University of Kansas researchers were invited to write a book for a W.W. Norton & Company series focused on inclusive education for students with disabilities, they worked with the editors of the series to rethink the concept of “inclusion” itself. “Build Equity. Join Justice: A Paradigm for School Belonging,” by Amy McCart, Wade Kelly and Wayne Sailor of SWIFT Education Center, a part of the KU Life Span Institute, is now available.

KU announces new 2023-2024 Self Memorial Scholars
LAWRENCE — Nineteen students have been selected to receive the University of Kansas Madison and Lila Self Memorial Scholarship for the 2023-2024 academic year. The merit-based scholarships provide each recipient with a $10,000 scholarship award, $1,000 professional development award, leadership and career development training and an opportunity to take part in an interdisciplinary cohort of graduate students. Recipients include Kansans from Leavenworth, Lindsborg, Olathe, Overland Park, Paola, Pittsburg, Roeland Park, Topeka and Wichita.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Christina Knott, Life Span Institute, [email protected], @kulifespan
KU experts write guide to transforming schools based on research in education, disability
LAWRENCE — When University of Kansas researchers were invited to write a book for a W.W. Norton & Company series focused on inclusive education for students with disabilities, they worked with the editors of the series to rethink the concept of “inclusion” itself.
For decades, educational leaders have worked to make education more inclusive, yet these efforts have ultimately not produced sufficiently meaningful change for many students who have historically been excluded from the general education classroom, the researchers said. These conclusions led Amy McCart, Wade Kelly and Wayne Sailor of SWIFT Education Center, a part of the KU Life Span Institute, to frame their contribution to the series as “Build Equity. Join Justice: A Paradigm for School Belonging,” published recently by Norton.
Rather than focusing solely on disability, the book explores ways that race, socioeconomic status and other social hierarchies intersect, resulting in systems that regularly exclude certain students and fail to provide a sense of true belonging. By broadening the focus to include all the systems that place certain students on the margins of their schools, the authors hope to inspire a more ambitious goal for education than simply including students in a dominant culture that was not designed for them. The book offers 10 principles, or points, designed to promote equity and justice in education. These points are primarily inspired by the writings, research and lived experiences of centuries of Black, brown, Indigenous and queer people of all genders.
“The book hopes to inspire a deeper thinking and a fundamental redesign in the way we as educators understand and support students and the structure of our schools,” said Amy McCart, SWIFT co-director, noting that it also reflects how SWIFT Education Center has undergone its own transformation.
“At SWIFT, we knew if we wanted to lead schools across the nation in their efforts to support students who have been pushed to the margins, we had to first deepen our own understanding of the role of race and disability in education. At SWIFT, we have committed ourselves to understanding the intersectional nature of student lives and have designed a way for schools to work toward building spaces that create student wholeness,” McCart said.
The center’s work, which is foundational for the book, supports schools in implementing a practice referred to as “Equity-based Multi-Tiered System of Support (MTSS),” a framework for organizing student support which combines data sources with knowledge of context, science, and systems in education to benefit all students, not just those with disabilities. It is a mechanism through which schools determine how they will support each of their students.
The book outlines strategies for ensuring that implementation of Equity-based MTSS in schools is done with equity as the driving force and the measure of success. This is, in part, a response to the prevalence of educational systems that routinely segregate by placing into separate classrooms or schools those students who learn or behave differently from the dominant culture.
“We as educators must challenge ourselves to personally understand the harm that is occurring to Black and Brown children across our nation and commit to changing our system of education, including special education, to do better. We believe we have created a resource to help guide that work,” McCart said.
In the book, the authors argue that a paradigm shift is needed to address the inequities embedded in many aspects of the educational system. The book’s 10 Point Paradigm presents different facets of equity that need to be considered to move toward an ecosystem in education that prioritizes the needs of students who have historically been excluded.
“Although we developed the 10 Point Paradigm in the context of education and wrote this book with a mind toward those that educate and advocate for students, it is at its essence an invitation to all people to use education as the lens through which we can dream a new vision of life in this country and society as a whole,” said author Wade Kelly, assistant director, content creation, at SWIFT. “The principles nested within the 10 Point Paradigm are meant to recalibrate our moral compass in such a way that it points toward liberation, validation and solidarity rather than marginalization and the tired, senselessly punitive strategies and practices of the past.”
The book is intended to provide educators and administrators at all levels several entry points to redesign schools into “equity-advancing, justice-centered institutions,” ones that address the learning needs and well-being of students while joining the larger struggle toward justice for many of those who are marginalized.
“Build Equity. Join Justice: A Paradigm for School Belonging,” part of the Norton Series on Inclusive Education for Students with Disabilities, is edited by KU Life Span Institute researchers Michael Wehmeyer, chair of the KU Department of Special Education and director of the Beach Center on Disabilities, and Jennifer Kurth, associate professor of special education.
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Refollow @KUNews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.


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Contact: Daniel Rivera, Self Graduate Fellowship, 785-864-7249, [email protected], @Selfgraduate
KU announces new 2023-2024 Self Memorial Scholars
LAWRENCE – Nineteen students have been selected to receive the University of Kansas Madison and Lila Self Memorial Scholarship for the 2023-2024 academic year.
The Self Memorial Scholarship is a merit-based scholarship that is awarded to outstanding seniors from the University of Kansas who will be transitioning into their first year of a master’s or doctoral degree program at KU in the fall semester. Students who were selected demonstrated achievement in leadership and scholarship, capable of envisioning and attaining goals that require energy and tenacity. The Self Memorial Scholarship provides each recipient with a $10,000 scholarship award, $1,000 professional development award, leadership and career development training and an opportunity to be a part of an interdisciplinary cohort of graduate students. The leadership and career development training, titled the Scholar Development Program, complements the specialized education and training provided by the graduate programs.
The new Self Memorial Scholars for 2023-2024:
1. Gracelynn Bradbury, Topeka: bachelor’s degree in speech-language-hearing with a minor in Spanish; incoming master’s student in speech-language pathology
2. Mackenzie Bravence, Overland Park: bachelor’s degree in speech-language-hearing; incoming master’s student in speech-language pathology
3. Carolina Medina Castellanos, Tegucigalpa, Honduras: bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering with a minor in French; incoming master’s student in computer engineering
4. Claire Cox, Paola: bachelor’s degree in history; incoming master’s student in history
5. Alaura Custard, Overland Park: bachelor’s degrees in mathematics and physics; incoming master’s student in geology
6. Martel Ellis, Romulus, Michigan: bachelor’s degree in ecology & evolutionary biology; incoming doctoral student in ecology & evolutionary biology
7. Parker Ford, Edmond, Oklahoma: bachelor’s degree in sociology with a minor in creative writing; incoming master’s student in city and county management
8. Brody Gatza, Olathe: bachelor’s degree in aerospace engineering; incoming doctoral student in aerospace engineering
9. Hope Hanlen, Leavenworth: bachelor’s degree in speech-language-hearing; incoming master’s student in speech-language pathology
10. Natalie Hanrahan, St. Louis: bachelor’s degree in speech-language-hearing; incoming master’s student in speech-language pathology
11. Braeden Huslig, Wichita: bachelor’s degree in biochemistry; incoming doctoral student in medicinal chemistry
12. Hannah Jones, Sioux Falls, South Dakota: bachelor’s degree in social work; incoming master’s student in social work
13. Anna Kostecki, St. Louis: bachelor’s degree in social work; incoming master’s student in social work
14. Zach Misic, Overland Park: bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary computing; incoming doctoral student in computer science
15. Joseph Nordling, Roeland Park: bachelor’s degree in computer science; incoming master’s student in computer science
16. Vivian Orta, Bartlesville, Oklahoma: bachelor’s degrees in psychology; human sexuality; and women, gender & sexuality studies; incoming master’s student in higher education administration
17. Andrew Riachi, Pittsburg: bachelor’s degree in computer engineering; incoming master’s student in computer science
18. Ava Taylor, Overland Park: bachelor’s degree in speech-language-hearing; incoming master’s student in speech-language pathology
19. Rachel Weis, Lindsborg: bachelor’s degrees in business analytics and information systems with a minor in supply chain management; incoming master’s student in business analytics.
Madison “Al” and Lila Self were deeply motivated by the idea that developing and investing in young leaders was vital for a successful future. The Selfs began their legacy of supporting graduate students in 1989 with the establishment of the Madison and Lila Self Graduate Fellowship. Since 1991, the Self Graduate Fellowship has supported over 200 doctoral students. The Self Memorial Scholarship was launched and permanently endowed in 2014. The first Scholars were awarded in 2018. Since 2018, the Self Memorial Scholarship has supported 82 graduate students. The overall mission of Self Graduate Programs is to provide funding and development opportunities for exceptional graduate students who demonstrate the promise to make significant contributions to their field of study and society as a whole.
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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: KU seniors honor high school educators with Wolfe Teaching Excellence Awards

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

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Editors: Note honorees from Emporia, Lawrence and Olathe.

Contact: Aspen Grender, School of Education & Human Sciences, [email protected], @KUSOEHS
KU seniors honor high school educators with Wolfe Teaching Excellence Awards
LAWRENCE — Three outstanding high school teachers will be recognized with the Wolfe Teaching Excellence Award this graduation season.
“For those in the teaching profession, perhaps the highest honor that can be bestowed is to have former students recognize the impact great teachers had on their lives,” said Rick Ginsberg, dean of the School of Education & Human Sciences. “The Wolfe Teaching Excellence Award does just that, arguably the most valuable evaluation any classroom teacher will ever experience.”
Nominations are submitted by KU seniors. Students from any major can nominate their former teachers, and the winners can be high school teachers from anywhere in the world. The 2023 award recipients:
1. Lorranda Baldridge, Olathe Northwest High School
2. Matt Ellis, Lawrence High School
3. Erica Huggard, Emporia High School.
Baldridge was nominated by Andrew Ost, a senior in KU’s School of Business. Ost first had Baldridge as a teacher at Mission Trail Middle School in Olathe before taking several French classes under her instruction during high school. In the nomination, Ost wrote: “Her classroom was my safe place. That is because of the leadership and the genuine care she emitted to students every single class, even at the rough points in the semester … She will go down as the best teacher I have ever had in 22 years. I will always be in debt to her for the possibilities she opened up and helped me realize.”
Ellis was nominated by Halle Marett, a senior in architectural engineering at KU; Anna Parnell, a senior in aerospace engineering at KU; and Cole Shupert, a senior in aerospace engineering KU. Marett, who took mathematics classes with Ellis from Algebra II through Calculus BC, wrote: “He built up my confidence in my math skills and encouraged me to pursue engineering in college,” while Parnell, who took precalculus and calculus courses taught by Ellis, in addition to serving as his student aide during her senior year, said “I believe my friends and parents would agree that he is the one who truly inspired my love of math.” Shupert, who also took Ellis’ calculus classes, said of Ellis: “In addition to being an excellent teacher, Mr. Ellis cultivated and maintained a positive, welcoming and friendly environment in his classroom.”
Huggard was nominated by Lena Mose, a senior in American studies and in women, gender & sexuality studies at KU. Mose, who took Huggard’s biology, anatomy and physiology classes and participated in Emporia High School’s Female Empowerment Club, founded by Huggard. In the nomination, Mose said: “Though I am a humanities scholar, Mrs. Huggard is living proof that the right teacher can make any subject engaging.”
Recipients each receive a cash award of $3,000, and their respective high schools each receive $1,000. The award winners were selected from a large pool of outstanding nominees by a committee of faculty, administrators and students from KU’s College of Liberal Arts & Sciences and School of Education & Human Sciences.
The award recipients are honored during commencement weekend at the KU School of Education & Human Sciences convocation ceremony May 13, along with a dinner held in their honor. Award recipients will receive a plaque in honor of their accomplishment.
The Wolfe Teaching Excellence Award was created in 2006 with a $250,000 gift from R. Dean Wolfe, business administration, ’66, and juris doctorate, ’69, and Cheryl Wolfe, Spanish education, ’69, Clayton, Missouri, through the Wolfe Family Foundation. The award fund is managed by KU Endowment, the official fundraising and fund-management foundation for KU. Founded in 1891, KU Endowment was the first foundation of its kind at a U.S. public university.

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