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KU News: Study shows narrative conversion messages boost attitudes about COVID vaccinations among unvaccinated adults

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

 

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Study shows narrative conversion messages boost attitudes about COVID vaccinations among unvaccinated adults

LAWRENCE — New University of Kansas research shows that a specific type of narrative message can directly improve attitudes and indirectly reduce resistance among people who have never been vaccinated for COVID-19. A New Faculty Research and Development Award from KU supported the study, published in the Health Communication journal.

Theatre design students advance to Kennedy Center national festival

LAWRENCE — Two Department of Theatre & Dance students will represent the University of Kansas in April at the national Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival in Washington, D.C., following regional competition. Hana Rose North, from Salina, earned a National Sound Design award for “Collective Rage: A Play in Five Betties.” Edmund Ludlum, from Topeka, earned a National Costume Design award for “Cabaret” and a Representation, Equity, and Diversity Principles in Design award. Other honorees include students and recent graduates from Lawrence and Wichita who received commendations.

KU sociology faculty member honored with 2023 Woodyard award

LAWRENCE — Mehrangiz Najafizadeh, associate professor of sociology at the University of Kansas, is the recipient of the 2023 George and Eleanor Woodyard International Educator Award. She will give a talk on her work at 4 p.m. April 9 in the Kansas Union’s Big 12 Room. The award recognizes Najafizadeh’s extensive collaboration and connection with international scholars in Eurasia and Central Asia, including two Fulbright Scholar awards to Azerbaijan, and her efforts to build institutional partnerships in that region.

 

Full stories below.

 

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

Study shows narrative conversion messages boost attitudes about COVID vaccinations among unvaccinated adults

 

LAWRENCE — Public health communicators have tried numerous methods to encourage people to accept COVID-19 vaccinations and boosters. And while some messages were ineffective, new University of Kansas research discovered a specific type of narrative message — a conversion message — can directly improve attitudes and indirectly reduce resistance among people who have never been inoculated for COVID-19.

The experimental study also found that people were persuaded differently depending on their pre-treatment levels of general vaccine hesitancy beliefs.

Researchers tested two-sided conversion messages — in which a person told a story about how they were initially resistant to getting vaccinated for COVID-19 but eventually refuted these beliefs and changed their mind after infection — against one-sided advocacy messages, in which people said they always intended to get vaccinated after contracting COVID-19. The results confirmed that conversion messages improved attitudes.

Jeff Conlin, assistant professor of journalism & mass communications, led the study, in which participants were randomly assigned one of three conversion messages or one of three advocacy messages. After reading the message, participants answered questions assessing how they perceived the strength of the argument and the extent to which the author of the message was similar to themselves.

“Overall, compared to advocacy messages, conversion messages were more effective in increasing positive attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccines. Since the entire sample was unvaccinated, we were also interested in how conversion messages could reduce their resistance,” Conlin said. “Our findings revealed the route to decreasing resistance was circuitous but also significant.”

The researchers employed an analytical method called structural equation modeling to reduce measurement error and understand the broader relationships, or paths, between the message manipulations and cognitive variables. The analysis showed significant indirect effects of conversion messages on resistance to vaccination through intervening cognitive processes. Results in the final accepted structural equation model showed that resistance was significantly reduced following conversion message exposure through a path that initially included homophily, or participants’ perceived similarity of the author to themselves. It was then tested through argument strength, or participants’ assessment of how convincing the message seemed; and finally, through elevated attitudes about COVID-19 vaccination.

“We wanted to better understand the relationships between intervening variables, or what was happening after message exposure but before people formed their attitudes and resistance intentions, because these constructs represent different mechanisms of cognitive processing — fast and slow thinking,” Conlin said.

The authors’ explanation for the results was that there was likely a high degree of matching between the conversion message author’s perceived psychological state and the beliefs held by the unvaccinated sample. As participants moved from homophily, or from a less effortful mode of fast-processing to argument strength, an effortful slow-scrutinizing process, they may have recognized that their judgment about vaccination was called into question. More effortful processing was needed to compensate for a reduction in their confidence in self-judgments and resulted in a need to more closely evaluate the arguments in the message.

“What’s interesting is that participants were not just relying on a mental shortcut of recognizing similarity between the author and themselves before forming attitudes and intentions — they were also scrutinizing the argument,” Conlin said. “Ultimately, participants found the outcome of the message was acceptable. Along with increasing positive attitudes, these results showed that participants’ intentions to resist COVID-19 vaccines were indirectly reduced.”

The researchers also found different indirect routes to reduce vaccination resistance depending on participants’ self-reported levels of general vaccine hesitancy. Participants who exhibited higher levels of hesitancy (prior to receiving the message treatment) showed reduced resistance through homophily, followed by argument strength. Meanwhile, participants who exhibited lower levels of vaccine hesitancy used only argument strength, not homophily, when processing the message. For this group, however, indirect message effects on intentions to resist were not significant.

According to the authors, the findings lend empirical support to established dual processing theories such as the Heuristic Systematic Model that describe additive and biased serial processing, which also can be applied to practice. Practically speaking, if public health communicators know that both types of processing occur serially, as opposed to simultaneously, and that homophily plays a default role, they can look for matches between a storyteller with a compelling conversion story and the target audience, Conlin said.

“What the author of the conversion message reveals about their former beliefs should overlap with current beliefs held by the target audience. Not only that, but the reasons the author shares about their conversion experience need to be convincing and well-told,” he said.

The study, co-written with Sushma Kumble of Towson University and Michelle Baker and Fuyuan Shen of Penn State University, was published in the Health Communication journal. A New Faculty Research and Development Award from KU supported the study.

The work builds on research Conlin and colleagues previously conducted that showed two-sided conversion messages were more effective in persuading vaccine-hesitant participants than one-sided advocacy messages prior to the mass availability of vaccines.

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Follow @KUnews for KU News Service stories, discoveries and experts.

 

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

Theatre design students advance to Kennedy Center national festival

 

LAWRENCE — Two Department of Theatre & Dance students will represent the University of Kansas in April at the national Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival (KCACTF) in Washington, D.C., following their recent KCACTF-Region V competition.

Hana Rose North, a sophomore in theatre design from Salina, earned a National Sound Design award for “Collective Rage: A Play in Five Betties.” Edmund Ludlum, a senior in theatre design and history of art from Topeka, earned a National Costume Design award for “Cabaret” and a Representation, Equity, and Diversity Principles in Design award.

Outstanding work from the department was also recognized through 13 regional commendations, which were all tied to fully realized University Theatre productions in 2023. The following is a list of those commendations:

For the production of “Collective Rage: A Play in Five Betties” by Jen Silverman

Cast for Ensemble Performance.
North for Sound Design.
Kennedy Tolar, a junior in theatre from Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Stage Management.

“Cabaret” by John Kander and Fred Ebb

Cast for Ensemble Performance.
Ludlum for Costume Design.
Jonah Greene, doctoral candidate in theatre studies, for Dramaturgy.
Leah Mazur, a guest artist, KU graduate and area head of the BFA in Design and Technology for the Department of Theatre & Dance at the University of Texas-Arlington, for Scenic Design.

“Love and Information” by Caryl Churchill

Greene for Dramaturgy.
Sara Baird, an MFA in scenography student from Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Lighting Design.
Kieran Spears, a recent KU graduate from Lawrence, for Sound Design.

“Milking Christmas: A New Musical” written by Friend Dog Studios and Ryan McCall

Connor Maloney, a junior in theatre design from Wichita, for Stage Management.
Brad Mathewson, a freelance writer and recent KU graduate, for Dramaturgy & Lobby Design.
Tara Leigh Burgat, a senior in dance and freelance choreographer and performer based in Kansas City, for Choreography.

“We’re extremely proud of our students’ talent and hard work,” said Henry Bial, chair of the theatre & dance department. “These achievements — the latest in a long line of regional and national recognitions for KU — also highlight the outstanding education and mentorship provided by our faculty and staff.”

Kelly Vogel, head of scenography and associate teaching professor in the department, said getting to share in the growth of the students is always a treat.

“This conference gives them a chance to receive feedback on their work and experience workshops from professionals outside of our region,” Vogel said. “They leave the conference with a new understanding of how to achieve their goals and a new sense of how their work speaks to other artists.”

The KCACTF-Region V annual conference and awards took place in January 2024 in Des Moines, Iowa. Region V includes Kansas, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota. Throughout 2023, KCACTF representatives visited Lawrence to judge the submitted plays and provide responses.

KCACTF is a national theatre program created through the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, which celebrates excellence in university and college theatre programs.

The University Theatre is a production wing of the University of Kansas’ Department of Theatre & Dance, offering public productions throughout the academic year. The University Theatre productions are funded in part by KU Student Senate fees with additional support from Truity Credit Union.

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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/podcast/when-experts-attack

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Contact: Christine Metz Howard, International Affairs, [email protected], @KUintlaffairs

KU sociology faculty member honored with 2023 Woodyard award

 

LAWRENCE — Mehrangiz Najafizadeh, associate professor of sociology at the University of Kansas, is the recipient of the 2023 George and Eleanor Woodyard International Educator Award. She will give a talk on her work in international education during an award presentation and reception at 4 p.m. April 9 in the Kansas Union’s Big 12 Room.

The award recognizes Najafizadeh’s extensive collaboration and connection with international scholars in Eurasia and Central Asia, including two Fulbright Scholar awards to Azerbaijan, and her efforts to build institutional partnerships in that region. In addition, the award honors Najafizadeh’s 30-year association with the Center for Latin American & Caribbean Studies and her work with the centers for Russian, Eastern European & Eurasian Studies and Global & International Studies as well as her excellence in teaching and her commitment to incorporating international and cross-cultural perspectives into the classroom.

“Dr. Najafizadeh has devoted her career to teaching and mentoring, research and service related to international issues. Her commitment to the internationalization of the curriculum and to enhancing the international perspective of students represents the ideals of the Woodyard International Educator Award,” wrote Joane Nagel, University Distinguished Professor of Sociology, in a nomination letter.

Najafizadeh earned her master’s degree and doctorate at KU and began teaching as an associate professor in 1993, the same year she was named associate director of CLACS. She held the position for six years and has been a pillar of Latin American and Caribbean studies and among the center’s top faculty contributors since then, noted Brent Metz, director of CLACS and professor of anthropology.

“She has made a tremendous impact on our center, sacrifices for Latin Americanist students across campus, and has much to do with its Title VI successes over the decades,” Metz wrote in a nomination letter.

International partnerships and research

Over the past 20 years, Najafizadeh’s research has centered on Eurasia, where she traveled to Azerbaijan as a Fulbright Scholar in 2004 and 2022 and as a Fulbright senior specialist in 2005 and 2008.

Saadat Aliyeva, rector of Azerbaijan University, noted that university colleagues were so impressed with Najafizadeh as a recent Fulbright Scholar that they encouraged her to apply for another grant so she could return and are looking to collaborate further with KU.

“Her international and global perspective, teaching style, research activities and her mentoring of our students have enriched our university’s mission of internationalization of the curriculum and educational programs,” Aliyeva wrote in a nomination letter.

Najafizadeh has also led efforts to develop international partnerships with Azerbaijan’s Khazar University and Baku State University and is a founding member of the American Research Institute of the South Caucasus Azerbaijan Research Center.

Recognized by scholars globally, Najafizadeh’s research focuses on gender, religion, culture, and internally displaced persons and refugees from the Nagorno-Karabakh War.

In her nomination letter, Linda Lindsey, senior lecturer at Washington University in St. Louis and professor emerita at Maryville University of St. Louis, noted that Najafizadeh’s ability to speak the Azerbaijani language fluently and her in-depth cultural knowledge has allowed her to connect with women who are refugees in their homeland.

“These women offer narratives that few researchers have uncovered. Dr. Najafizadeh displays the essential cultural sensitivity to effectively dialogue with women on such difficult issues,” Lindsey wrote.

Najafizadeh and Lindsey co-edited the anthology “Women of Asia: Globalization, Development, and Gender Equity,” which contained 32 original chapters from 40 scholars representing countries across Asia. Najafizadeh, as the lead co-editor of the anthology, wrote the chapter “Women in Azerbaijan: Decades of Change and Challenges.”

“I cannot imagine a better partner than Dr. Najafizadeh for academic rigor as we navigated this challenging but successful process,” Lindsey wrote.

Mentoring and teaching

Multiple nominators also highlighted Najafizadeh’s dedication to students. Najafizadeh has been recognized with 15 teaching and mentoring awards during her time at KU and has served as a chair or member of 126 master’s and doctoral student committees.

Najafizadeh has made extensive contributions to KU’s mission of internationalization, Nagel noted, through her teaching of such courses as Comparative Societies for undergraduates and graduate seminars on globalization, development, gender and social change.

“She seeks not only to provide core knowledge but also create a learning environment where students are inspired to explore alternate perspectives and theoretical lenses to examine issues of international significance,” Nagel wrote.

Father Michael Hermes, vicar for Hispanic ministry in the Archdiocese Kansas City in Kansas, believes taking Najafizadeh’s graduate seminar Global Social Change and Development had a profound impact on how he serves the Latin American immigrant community and made him a more effective priest.

“It helped me understand better the push and pull factors of migration and helped me to focus more attention on gender roles and to consider the immense pressure on family life,” Hermes wrote in a nomination letter.

Meredith Church Pipes, former student and current global and civic engagement specialist at Walker College of Business at Appalachian State University, recalled in her nomination letter the essential role Najafizadeh played in guiding her through the thesis process, helping her choose lines of inquiry, narrow her focus and hone in on important themes.

“Dr. Najafizadeh is not merely a teacher; she is a mentor, a guide and a source of inspiration,” she wrote. “Her commitment to fostering international awareness, cross-cultural understanding and academic excellence is noteworthy.”

In a nomination letter Lisa-Marie Wright, former student and current associate teaching professor of sociology, noted that Najafizadeh is one of the most knowledgeable, devoted researchers and educators she has encountered. Wright highlighted that Najafizadeh inspires students to broaden their knowledge and further their understanding of issues at the intersection of gender and global political-economic development.

“I have experienced first-hand the extraordinary amount of labor and effort that she puts into mentoring her students and the deep intellectual and emotional connections she forges with her students,” Wright wrote.

The late George Woodyard, the first dean of international studies, and his wife, Eleanor, endowed the award, which KU International Affairs coordinates. The award includes a $1,000 stipend. A full list of previous recipients is online.

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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 Police Department releases 2023 crime data for Lawrence campus

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

 

Headlines

 

 

Contact: James Druen, KU Police Department, 785-864-5906, [email protected], @KUPoliceDept

KU Police Department releases 2023 crime data for Lawrence campus

 

LAWRENCE — Reported crimes were down last year at the University of Kansas’ Lawrence campus, according to statistics released today by the KU Police Department.

 

KU Police took reports of 514 criminal offenses on campus in 2023, which is a 1.2% decrease from the 520 criminal offenses taken in 2022. When looking at the 10-year average of 596 criminal offenses, the 2023 number is 13.8% below the average number of reported crimes.

 

Property crimes, such as theft and criminal damage to property, continue to make up the greatest number of offenses reported on campus. Violent crimes such as robbery and aggravated battery were also reported but were a smaller percentage of the overall crime total.

 

KU Police Chief Nelson Mosley credits the decrease in reported crimes to more proactive patrols despite lower staffing levels and working with university partners to address their specific needs.

 

“Campus safety is a community effort,” Mosley said. “We are fortunate to work with so many people who are dedicated to our students, staff, faculty and visitors at the University of Kansas.”

 

The university strives to be transparent and inform the community accurately about crime statistics on or near campus. The disclosure of crime statistics in the Annual Security and Fire Safety Report (ASFSR) — often referred to as the Clery Report — may differ from the crime statistics disclosed by the KU Police Department. These differences are the result of the following:

 

The classification of crimes in the ASFSR uses the Uniform Crime Reporting system. The KU Police Department uses state and local statutes to classify crimes.
The crime statistics listed in the ASFSR are collected from a wide range of stakeholders including, but not limited to, campus police, Title IX, campus security authorities, local police departments, etc. KU Police Department statistics record only crimes that were reported directly to the department.
Locations adjacent to, but not part of, the Lawrence campus — such as apartments and sorority and fraternity houses — are served by the Lawrence Police Department.

KU Police Department crime statistics for the last 10 years are available on the department’s website.

 

The KU Police Department would like to share a few crime prevention reminders: Secure all items when leaving them no matter the timeframe you will be gone. Always be aware of your surroundings. Walk in groups, and when you go somewhere with friends, make sure you have a plan to come back together. When consuming alcohol, do so legally and responsibly and not to excess. Please remember that if you see something, say something. KU Crime Stoppers also takes anonymous tips at 785-864-8888.

 

The KU Police Department uses a variety of social media platforms, such as Facebook and X (formerly Twitter), to communicate with the Lawrence campus community regarding crime trends, crime prevention tips and general information. The department also provides training sessions on alcohol education, de-escalation and active shooters, among many other topics. Campus groups or individuals interested in any training topic can contact the KU Police Department at 785-864-5900 to schedule a session.

 

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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 3/18: KU graduate students to present research to legislators, public at state Capitol

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

 

Headlines

 

 

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

KU graduate students to present research to legislators, public at state Capitol

 

LAWRENCE — Twelve University of Kansas graduate students from the Lawrence and KU Medical Center campuses will present their innovative research March 21 at the state Capitol.

Legislators and the public will be able to hear from the students about the potential public and economic effects of their research during the 21st annual Capitol Graduate Research Summit. Their research covers a broad range of topics, including how metabolism affects Alzheimer’s, the integration of artificial intelligence in higher education and the health effects on children who experience food insecurity.

“The KU graduate students presenting at the Capitol Graduate Research Summit are working to develop solutions to society’s greatest questions and challenges,” said Ric Steele, associate vice provost for graduate studies. “They serve as examples of the vital contributions of our student researchers and of the university’s commitment to impactful research that addresses problems of worldwide significance and delivers solutions that make a difference to the state, nation and the world.”

Graduate students from Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburg State University and Wichita State University will also present at the research summit.

The top presenters from each university will earn a certificate and a $500 award.

KU Lawrence participants

Annie Chuning, doctoral student in clinical child psychology, “Rates of Food Insecurity Influence Parent/Child Mental Health and BMI in Rural Kansas.”
Cassie Sutton, doctoral student in psychology, “Ultra-processed, Hyper-palatable, and Energy-dense Foods in the U.S. Food Supply: Prevalence Across 30 Years.”
Kara Hageman, doctoral student in bioengineering, “Preventing Orthopedic Joint Infection by Developing Antibacterial Bone Cement.”
Luke Parker, doctoral student in educational curriculum & instruction, “Transforming Academic Landscapes: A Comprehensive Study of Artificial Intelligence’s Integration in Higher Education at the University of Kansas.”
Merve Akin Tas, doctoral student in educational psychology, “Comparing the Use of Bayesian Network Analysis and Spatial Analysis to Identify the Social Determinants of Health and Education in Kansas Counties and School Districts.”
Mohsen Fatemi, doctoral student in public administration, “Navigating Transformative Change: Insights into City Information Processing and Disaster Preparedness Evolution in Public Management.”
Natalie Lind, doctoral student in chemistry, “Uranium Catch and Release as a Strategy for Nuclear Fuel Recycling.”
Susan Koerner, doctoral student in speech language pathology, “Tiered Virtual Coaching as a Professional Development Model for Speech-Language Pathologists in AAC Intervention Strategies.”

KU Medical Center participants

Riley Kemna, doctoral student in neuroscience, “Energy Metabolism Impacts Alzheimer’s Disease Pathology.”
Kelley Nelson-Strouts, doctoral student in speech-language-pathology, “Supporting Reading Through Developing an Assessment of Meaningful Word Parts.”
Jordan Trant, doctoral student in cell biology and physiology, “A New Factor Involved in Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease Progression.”
Deena Woodall, doctoral student in nursing, “Longitudinal Evaluation of Practice Readiness for a Rural Nurse Residency Program Using an Interactive Computerized Decision Tool.”

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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, FBI cybersecurity conference April 4; KU FNSA Powwow and Indigenous Cultures Festival set for April 13

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

 

Headlines

 

KU, FBI cybersecurity conference April 4 to include keynote from FBI Director Christopher Wray

LAWRENCE — Members of the University of Kansas community and the public are invited to attend an upcoming cybersecurity conference April 4 that will bring together experts in the field from industry and research. Speakers will include FBI Director Christopher Wray and U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran. The event is $25 and is open to the public, but registration is required. Members of the media wanting to cover the conference need to contact Bridget Patton, FBI public affairs specialist, at 816-512-8200 or by email for credentials.

2024 KU First Nations Student Association (FNSA) Powwow and Indigenous Cultures Festival set for April 13

LAWRENCE — For decades, the University of Kansas First Nations Student Association (FNSA) has hosted the Annual KU FNSA Powwow. The event celebrates the diversity of cultures in the community through dancing, singing and honoring the traditions of Indigenous ancestors. The 2024 FNSA Powwow & Indigenous Cultures Festival will take place from 10:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. April 13 inside and outside the Lied Center of Kansas.

Study finds media coverage focused on Katherine Johnson’s achievements, treated discrimination as past problem

LAWRENCE — The 2016 film “Hidden Figures” told Katherine Johnson’s story as a brilliant mathematician, a trailblazer who overcame racism and sexism to succeed at NASA in the 1950s and ’60s. That monumental career was again examined in the media following her death in 2020. A new study from the University of Kansas analyzed newspaper coverage of Johnson’s death, finding that media focused on her achievements first but also tended to depict the race- and gender-based discrimination she faced as a problem of the past.

Full stories below.

 

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Contact: Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, KU News Service, 785-864-8858, [email protected], @ebpkansas

KU, FBI cybersecurity conference April 4 to include keynote from FBI Director Christopher Wray

 

LAWRENCE — Members of the University of Kansas community and the public are invited to attend an upcoming cybersecurity conference that will bring together experts in the field from industry and research.

The FBI & KU Cybersecurity Conference: Bridging the Knowledge of Government, Industry Workforce and Research is scheduled from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 4 at the Kansas Union on KU’s Lawrence campus.

The event is $25 and is open to the public, but registration is required to attend. Members of the media wanting to cover the conference need to contact Bridget Patton, FBI public affairs specialist, at 816-512-8200 or by email for credentials.

Chancellor Douglas A. Girod said that as cybersecurity continues to pose a serious threat to the economy and national security, KU can help address this challenge.

“We are educating the next generation of cybersecurity-minded leaders and continuing our cutting-edge research and tech development in cybersecurity-related fields,” Girod said. “KU has the infrastructure and talent to be a national leader in this space, and this conference is a great way to help us fulfill that role.”

Christopher Wray, FBI director, will be the first keynote speaker at 8:35 a.m.

Conference highlights include:

Keynotes from Wray and Stevan Bernard, chief executive officer for Bernard Global LLC.
Featured speaker U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran.
Remarks from university and FBI leaders.
Top KU researchers discussing the latest research on cybersecurity, including such topics as resiliency, trust and disinformation.
Panel of industry and government stakeholders on best practices and potential threats/attacks.
Breakout sessions on topics like Snake malware and skills for the cybersecurity professional.
Student poster presentations highlighting current KU research.

Additional information is available at the conference website.

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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/podcast/when-experts-attack

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Contact: Melissa Peterson, University Academic Support Centers, 785-864-7267, [email protected]; Laura Kingston, [email protected]

2024 KU First Nations Student Association (FNSA) Powwow and Indigenous Cultures Festival set for April 13

 

LAWRENCE — For decades, the University of Kansas First Nations Student Association (FNSA) has hosted the Annual KU FNSA Powwow. The event celebrates the diversity of cultures in the community through dancing, singing and honoring the traditions of Indigenous ancestors.

This legacy of enriching the local community through Native American traditions and cultural heritage expanded in 2017 with the establishment of the Indigenous Cultures Festival (ICF) through a partnership between FNSA and the Lied Center of Kansas.

The 2024 FNSA Powwow & Indigenous Cultures Festival will take place from 10:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. on April 13 inside and outside the Lied Center of Kansas.

New this year, through KU’s commitment to supporting this long-standing community event that brings all people together for a day of celebration, the powwow will take place on the KU Powwow Grounds at the Lied Center. The committee thanks the KU Operations Team and outgoing Vice Provost Mike Rounds and the Office of the Provost for their dedication and support.

This daylong, family-friendly event will welcome the KU, Lawrence and surrounding communities to participate, share experiences, make connections and learn more about the traditions, culture, history and contemporary topics relating to the Indigenous peoples of North America.

The day includes interactive experiences and educational workshops focused on Indigenous cultures and history, including:

Powwow 101 Presentations by Jancita Warrington (Menominee, Potawatomi, and Ho-Chunk Nations)
Native Screenwriters Panel featuring Miciana Alise (Tlingit)
Native Fashion Panel featuring Dr. Jessica Metcalfe (Turtle Mountain Chippewa)
Power of Native Theatre featuring Honolulu Theatre for Youth
Ishtaboli (Choctaw Stickball) Interactive Presentation featuring Ron McKinney (Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma) and the Haskell Stickball Club
Pine Needle Basket Weaving Workshop featuring Amy June Breesman (Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma)
Unveiling of Murals by Navajo/Creek/Yuchi/Seminole artist Steven Grounds

Activities offered during the 2024 KU FNSA Powwow & Indigenous Cultures Festival will be held inside the Lied Center. Attendees planning on staying throughout the powwow are encouraged to bring lawn chairs; available seating will be limited.

Regional Native American artists and artisans will have items for sale in accordance with the Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990. Leading the food vendors is longtime vendor Peaches’ Frybread and popular local vendor Monteau’s Indian Tacos. Additional Indigenous-inspired food will be available for purchase throughout the day. During the event, only adult-size T-shirts will be for sale.

All activities on April 13 are free and open to the public. It is recommended guests bring cash to purchase from vendors and lawn chairs for enjoying the powwow. For full and up-to-date details on the Annual FNSA Powwow & Indigenous Cultures Festival, please visit the powwow website or connect with the Facebook event.

For more information, contact Laura Kingston by email.

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

Study finds media coverage focused on Katherine Johnson’s achievements, treated discrimination as past problem

 

LAWRENCE — Without Katherine Johnson, NASA would not have landed a man on the moon.

The 2016 film “Hidden Figures” told Johnson’s story as a brilliant mathematician, a trailblazer who overcame racism and sexism to succeed at NASA in the 1950s and ‘60s. That monumental career was again examined in the media following her death in 2020.

A new study from the University of Kansas analyzed news coverage of Johnson’s death, finding that coverage focused on her achievements first but also tended to depict the race- and gender-based discrimination she faced as a problem of the past.

Steve Bien-Aimé, assistant professor of journalism & mass communications at KU, analyzed 42 news items and opinion pieces following Johnson’s death to determine how her life and career were presented in newspapers.

“To be one of the premier mathematicians sending people to the moon means you are really good,” Bien-Aimé said. “I wanted to know are they talking about that, or that she was a rarity as a Black female NASA mathematician, or that she was a pioneer? Overall, journalists did a pretty good job of presenting her as a brilliant mathematician first.”

Coverage focused first on Johnson as a person. She was at the top of her field, and her expertise was vital to one of the foremost scientific achievements, it noted. Coverage mentioned that she overcame severe racial and gender discrimination.

However, newspapers tended to treat racism and sexism as though they were issues of the past, not problems still facing society today, according to the KU study. Coverage also did not examine why structural racism and sexism were and continue to be problems or who benefits from them.

“Katherine Johnson’s time in science butted right up against Jim Crow and the civil rights era. Some of her most notable NASA work came about a decade after Brown v. Board, but it’s not like a court decision made all discrimination go away,” Bien-Aimé said. “There was not a name put on who did it, or why such discrimination existed. When you avoid that, you also avoid examining how or why structural inequities are built and maintained.”

Coverage of Johnson’s death and career was good at using person-first language, or the fact that first and foremost she was a brilliant mathematician. And while it noted there was underrepresentation of women in the sciences during her career, coverage also lacked citation of other women in discussing her work and legacy, the KU study found. Fewer than half of the news items quoted women who were not Johnson, and many of those that did quoted Margot Lee Shetterly, whose book was the basis for the film “Hidden Figures.”

“The coverage showed she was great at what she did. If you say she was a great Black woman mathematician, you are putting qualifications on how good of a mathematician she was,” Bien-Aimé said. “She was a brilliant mathematician, and those other identities are important, but we should treat her the same as others. She was noteworthy because they don’t go to the moon without her.”

The research, published in the Journal of Black Studies, notes that coverage of Johnson’s death can serve as an example of hegemony, or reinforcing the status quo in that people can assume why the type of discrimination she faced existed. However, that can amount to disavowal, or not addressing difficult topics because the writer or those in today’s society feel they did not cause the issue, Bien-Aimé said. It also presented a missed opportunity to discuss issues such as disparities of women and people of color in STEM fields today.

Such presentations of notable figures are important not only for how they discuss one person and their experiences, but for what they can tell us about current society and journalism, according to Bien-Aimé. He also said that how journalists portray individuals such as Johnson is important because of the shrinking media landscape and how their voices are amplified, whether their coverage is positive, negative or ambivalent.

“Journalists have a tough job, and having to produce more and more content all the time, it is hard to produce more robust stories,” Bien-Aimé said. “But we have to know if we are able to look at these situations and ask, ‘Why is it rare? What makes this a novel 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: Groundwater measurement results mixed in western, south-central Kansas

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

 

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Contact: Brownie Wilson, Kansas Geological Survey, 785-864-2118, [email protected]

Groundwater measurement results mixed in western, south-central Kansas

 

LAWRENCE — Preliminary groundwater level measurements compiled by the Kansas Geological Survey show mixed results for western and south-central Kansas in 2023, with some areas in the northwest and west-central part of the state experiencing increases for the first time in three or more years.

“In the Ogallala portion of the High Plains aquifer, the aquifer had a chance to ‘reset’ in 2023, given some timely rains in the summer months,” said Brownie Wilson, KGS water-data manager.

Measurements in those areas reflect a rebound from lower-than-normal groundwater levels caused by the extreme drought conditions seen in 2022.

“Unfortunately, south-central Kansas missed out on those rains, and the dry conditions persist today,” Wilson said.

The KGS, based at the University of Kansas, and the Division of Water Resources (DWR) of the Kansas Department of Agriculture measure water levels in about 1,400 wells every year to monitor the health of the High Plains aquifer and other aquifers in western and south-central Kansas.

Those measurements showed an overall average decline of 0.17 feet last year, marking the fourth straight year of overall declines. Groundwater levels across the region fell 1.9 feet in 2022, about a foot in 2021 and 0.87 feet in 2020.

The High Plains aquifer is a network of water-bearing rock that extends into eight states. In Kansas, the aquifer comprises three components – the Ogallala aquifer, the Great Bend Prairie aquifer and the Equus Beds. Of these, the Ogallala underlies most of western Kansas and consists mainly of the Ogallala Formation, a geologic unit that formed from sediment eroded off the uplifting Rocky Mountains.

Most of the wells in the network monitored by the KGS and DWR are within the boundaries of the state’s five groundwater management districts, which are organized and governed by area landowners and local water users to address water-resources issues.

Northwest Kansas GMD 4, which saw well-above-average precipitation in 2023, experienced the largest increase in water levels, at 0.35 feet, after declines of 1.32 feet in 2022 and 0.55 feet in 2021. Groundwater levels last increased in the district, by 0.61 feet, in 2019. GMD 4 covers Sheridan, Sherman, Thomas, and parts of Cheyenne, Decatur, Gove, Graham, Logan, Rawlins and Wallace counties. Groundwater there is pumped from the Ogallala aquifer and shallow alluvial sources associated with streams.

Western Kansas GMD 1, where the majority of wells are drilled into the Ogallala aquifer, also saw an overall average increase of 0.27 feet, following declines of 1.13 feet in 2022 and 0.55 feet in 2021. The monitoring program has recorded increases in district water levels only three times since 1996, the last time in 2004. GMD 1 includes portions of Greeley, Lane, Scott, Wallace and Wichita counties. Water levels in the district, one of the first areas of the state to have large-capacity wells drilled in the 1940s-1950s, have fallen to a point that yields for irrigation have greatly diminished.

“Another factor in play is both GMDs 1 and 4 have active enhanced management plans in place to conserve water. Initial studies have shown water users are reducing both total amounts diverted and how much is applied to irrigated fields,” Wilson said.

In Southwest Kansas GMD 3, average groundwater levels declined by 0.19 feet. The region experienced the most severe drought conditions in the state in 2022, with widespread areas receiving 50% to 75% of long-term precipitation averages. The same area in 2023 saw above-average precipitation amounts of up to 150% to 200% of normal. Much of that came during the growing months of April through July.

“The timeliness and gentle nature of the precipitation events allowed many producers to shut down their wells for several weeks, which in turn reduces the overall stress on the aquifer,” Wilson said.

Water levels in GMD 3 declined by 2.83 feet in 2022 and 2.08 feet in 2021. The district includes all or part of Finney, Ford, Grant, Gray, Hamilton, Haskell, Kearny, Meade, Morton, Seward, Stanton and Stevens counties. Most of the wells monitored in the district are drilled into the Ogallala aquifer, except in a few areas where they can also draw from the deeper Dakota aquifer.

Water levels in south-central Kansas saw a second straight year of larger than normal decline rates amid continuing drought conditions.

Equus Beds GMD 2, a significant source of water for Wichita, Hutchinson and surrounding towns, experienced the largest drop at 1.62 feet, after declines of 2.11 feet in 2022 and 0.14 feet in 2021. GMD 2 covers portions of Harvey, McPherson, Reno and Sedgwick counties.

Water levels in Big Bend GMD 5, centered on the Great Bend Prairie aquifer, fell 1.12 feet in 2023, following declines of 2.32 feet in 2022 and 0.81 feet in 2021. GMD 5 includes Pratt and Stafford counties and parts of Barton, Edwards, Kiowa, Pawnee, Reno and Rice counties.

“Despite the prolonged drought conditions and lingering groundwater declines, both districts have a greater potential to recover when the rains do return,” Wilson said.

The KGS measured 577 wells in western Kansas, and DWR staff from field offices in Stockton, Garden City and Stafford measured 221, 264 and 350 wells, respectively, in western and south-central Kansas. Most of the wells, spread over 49 counties, are used for irrigation and have been measured for decades with landowners’ permission.

Measurements are taken primarily in January, when water levels are least likely to fluctuate due to seasonal irrigation. The measurement results, available on the KGS Water Well Levels web page, are provisional and subject to revision based on additional analysis.

The Kansas Geological Survey is a nonregulatory research and service division of the University of Kansas. KGS researchers study and provide information about the state’s geologic resources and hazards, including groundwater, oil and natural gas, rocks and minerals, and earthquakes.

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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