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Education

Education2

The state's education system is one of the best in the nation and a powerful factor contributing to the success of many businesses. The high school graduation rate and percentage of the population with a bachelor’s degree are both well above the national average. A progressive business climate, coupled with a top-notch education system, has resulted in an adept, well-skilled and highly trainable workforce. A study by the Kansas Board of Regents shows tuition and fees at the state’s six universities compare favorably with colleges in five neighboring states, falling as much as 18 percent below the regional average.
Kansas educational systems provide teaching and learning that combine a focus on 21st century skills and student outcomes with innovative support systems to help students master the multi-dimensional abilities required of them in the 21st century. The state is a partner in the national standards movement, Common Core State Standards Initiative, providing a consistent, clear understanding of what students are expected to learn. The standards are robust and relevant to the real world, reflecting the knowledge and skills that our young people need for success in college and careers.

Kansas is committed to accountability and measures outcomes using a connected database. The state recently received a large federal grant to enhance capacity to effectively monitor the educational progress of students from early childhood through higher education and into the workforce.

Education Week reports that Kansas exceeds the national average on a number of key statistics, including: educational spending per student, pupil/teacher ratio, small class sizes, graduation rate and proficiency in both math and reading. Kansas students also score above the national average on standardized college placement tests (ACT) in math, science, reading and language arts. Kansas continues to provide high levels of technology education and computer resources to all students.

The Kansas Legislature provided $130 million in financing for four major research facilities at Kansas universities: a Food Safety and Security Research Facility at Kansas State University, a Biomedical Research Facility at the University of Kansas Medical Center, equipment for the Biosciences Research Building at the University of Kansas and expansion of the Aviation Engineering Complex at Wichita State University. In addition, the Legislature authorized $13 million for improvements to the National Institute for Aviation Research at Wichita State University. The new National Center for Aviation Technology, a 225,000 square-foot training facility built with the Wichita Area Technical College and Sedgwick County, opened in the fall of 2010.

EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS

University of Kansas

KU

The University of Kansas (KU), with an enrollment of more than 29,400 students and 2,500 faculty members, ranks among the nation’s top 50 public universities and is one of just 34 public schools in the prestigious Association of American Universities. It has a strong research portfolio, with many opportunities available to partner with businesses. It’s also considered one of the nation’s best college buys, with tuition below the majority of its research university peers.

KU’s main campus is in Lawrence, while the KU Medical Center is in Kansas City. There are also KU campuses in Overland Park, Salina and Wichita, and educational and research centers in Garden City, Hays, Parsons, Pittsburg, Topeka and Yoder.

The university has a strong research commercialization focus, with three business incubator facilities located in Lawrence and at the KU Medical Center housing both university spin-outs and companies eager to partner with researchers at the university. Externally funded research at all KU campuses grew to $225 million in FY 2010, an 8.4 percent increase over FY 2009. It is a record amount for KU and the third consecutive annual increase.

Access to leaders in their respective disciplines is demonstrated by KU’s graduate programs, 48 of which are ranked in the top 50 by U.S. News & World Report. Special education and city management/urban policy programs each rank first among public university programs.

KU’s solid academics and outstanding extracurricular programs garnered praise in the 2011 edition of the Fiske Guide to Colleges. The guide gives KU four stars for academics, social life and quality of life, citing the university’s “excellent honors program” and calling the campus “one of the loveliest in the United States.”

Reinforcing KU’s position as one of the premier college bargains in the United States is the university’s innovative Four-year Tuition Compact, which freezes tuition for entering freshmen. New freshmen pay a fixed tuition rate, with no increase for the following four years.

In addition, beginning in fall 2012, students choosing KU will be eligible for new, four-year renewable scholarships for freshmen and two-year scholarships for transfer students, based on academic performance. This means prospective students can visit www.affordability.ku.edu and know what scholarships they qualify for even before they apply. KU’s in-state tuition and fees are the 28th lowest among the 34 public members of the Association of American Universities.

What you may not know about KU:

  • The School of Pharmacy is ranked No. 4 by the National Institutes of Health for amount of grant funded research, the only Big 12 program in the top 10.
  • The KU School of Medicine was ranked a top five school nationally for fulfilling its social mission to train primary care physicians to work in underrepresented areas. In fall 2011, the school expanded its two-year program at the Wichita campus into a four-year program and opened a new Salina campus designed specifically to train doctors for careers in rural communities.
  • The University of Kansas Cancer Center applied for National Cancer Institute designation in fall 2011. If successful in its bid, it would put KU in an elite group of the world’s top cancer centers and provide Kansans advanced in-state care and clinical trials.

 

Selected Instructional Program Clusters 
 Technical Institutions and Community Colleges
Agribusiness/Value Added
    
Agribusiness/Agricultural 
        Business Operations
    Ag & Food Products Processing
    Plant Protection & 
        Integrated Pest Management
    Ag Food Chain Security

Advanced Manufacturing & Aviation
    
Aircraft Mechanic (Airframe & Power Plant)
    Aviation Manufacturing
    Drafting and Design Technology
    Machine Tool
    Plastics Engineering &    
        Composites Technology
    Sheet Metal Worker
    Diesel Mechanics
        Electronics & Repair

Business Management &
Administrative Services
    
Accounting
    Banking & Related Business
        Administration
    Entrepreneurship and Business 
        Leadership
    Banking & Financial Support Services
Bio & Chemical Technology    
    Nondestructive Evaluation Technology
    Radiation Protection Technology
    Chemical Engineering Technology

Communications
    
Graphic Design
    Broadcast Technology
    Web Application & Design

Computer & Information Sciences
    
Administration
    Computer System Technology
    Programming
    Networking and Telecommunications
    Systems Analysis/Analyst
    Information Systems Security

Construction Trades
    
CAD/CADD Drafting and/or
        Design Technology
    Construction Engineering Technology
    Electrical Power Transmission
    Industrial Welding Technology
    Welding & Cutting
    Industrial Mechanics
    Heavy Equipment Operation
Engineering-Related Technologies   
    Drafting Technology
        Electric/Electronic 
    Engineering Technology
    Environmental Control Technology
    Industrial Production Technology
    Quality Control Technology 
    Water & Waste Water Technology
    GIS/GPS - Surveying Technology 

Energy
    Energy Performance and
        Resource Management
    Electrical and Power
        Transmission Installation/Installer
    Natural Gas Transmission &
        Distribution Technician
    Wind Energy Technology
    Power Plant Technology

Health Professions
    Nursing, RN, and, LPN and
         Allied Health   

Transportation & Distribution
    Railroad Technology
    Truck Driving
    
Kansas State University

Kstate

Kansas State University (K-State) is a major comprehensive public research university with a faculty of more than 1,150 and an enrollment of more than 23,500 students. Called one of the best public universities in America, K-State's three-campus system (Manhattan, Olathe and Salina) serves students across Kansas, the nation and the world with more than 250 undergraduate majors and options, 110 graduate majors and a number of undergraduate and graduate certificate programs in multiple disciplines.

K-State is a recognized leader in animal health and food safety and security, which is drawing national research centers to Manhattan: the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Center for Excellence in Emerging and Zoonotic Animal Diseases, and the Arthropod-Borne Animal Disease Research Unit.

As a growing national hub for research, K-State was issued 11 patents in 2010 and faculty researchers brought in a record $147.7 million in extramural funding. This research expertise is getting national attention. K-State was cited as one of the reasons why Manhattan tops Forbes magazine's list of the best small places for business and careers.

Leading publications are calling K-State one of the best colleges in the nation, including U.S. News and World Report and The Princeton Review's Best 373 Colleges. And with nods from Military Advanced Education magazine and G.I. Jobs magazine, K-State is a perennial selection as one of the nation's most military-friendly universities.

Students at K-State are among the nation's best. K-State is the only public university over the past 15 years to rank among the top 10 of all U.S. schools in five major scholarship programs: Rhodes, Marshall, Truman, Goldwater and Udall. In 2011 alone, K-State students received Truman, Goldwater and Udall scholarships, a Boren Fellowship, two Fulbright awards and four National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships; a K-State team earned a national championship in debate; a K-Stater was crowned a national forensics champion and two K-State doctoral students were ranked among the top 20 in the world for their research.

K-State's land-grant mission is thriving. The Carnegie Foundation awarded K-State the Community Engagement Classification, an honor that recognizes higher education institutions that collaborate with their larger communities and understand the benefits of a reciprocal exchange of knowledge and resources.

K-State's commitment to sustainability is earning national recognition. K-State is the only public university in Kansas selected for The Princeton Review's Guide to 311 Green Colleges, and K-State has the first building at a state higher education institution to be LEED certified: the School of Leadership Studies Building earned LEED gold certification in 2010; LEED certification also is pending for a new building in the university's Jardine Apartment Complex.

K-State's research and academic successes are being matched by philanthropic support of the university, which is at an all-time high. The Kansas State University Foundation set a fundraising record of $107 million, while the athletic department's Ahearn Fund surpassed its goal by more than $1 million and set a new record for total gifts to the department.

And to keep the university's momentum growing, the university family is embarking on a visionary, campus-wide campaign to move K-State forward by being recognized as a top 50 public research university by 2025.

What you may not know about K-State: 

  • K-State is the first land-grant university in the nation to offer classes and the first public university in Kansas. 
  • K-State is the only research and doctoral university in the nation with three CASE/Carnegie U.S. professors of the year, all of whom teach undergraduate classes. 
  • K-State is the most popular college choice among Kansas high school seniors.
Wichita State UniversityWichitaStateU

Wichita State University (WSU) is a comprehensive urban-serving research university of more than 14,000 students and more than 500 faculty in Wichita, Kan. WSU offers graduate (masters and doctorate) and undergraduate degree programs in six colleges and 39 academic departments.

The University offers more than 60 undergraduate degree programs in more than 200 areas of study in six undergraduate colleges. The Graduate School offers an extensive program, including 44 master’s degrees in more than 100 areas.

The University is a Carnegie high research university with internationally recognized research programs in aviation and advanced materials. WSU is a training partner for the National Center for Aviation Research (NIAR). Being a part of WSU gives NIAR a distinct advantage, having an excellent academic connection from which to draw the most outstanding aviation researchers. The University research programs attract approximately $45 million in external funding annually.

WSU’s cooperative education program, which offers students the opportunity to earn credit along with job experience, is among the largest and most successful of its kind in the Midwest. Students are placed not only in local companies, but also at national organizations such as the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

What you may not know about Wichita State: 

  • Via Christi Health System and WSU researchers have partnered to create the Center of Innovation for Biomaterials in Orthopedic Research (CIBOR) in Wichita. CIBOR’s goals include: development of medical devices that can be quickly brought to market, such as surgical instruments, stretchers and operating tables that do not require a long FDA-approval process; and longer-term development of advanced implantable devices, such as artificial hips and knees. 
  • NIAR is a Center of Excellence for General Aviation Research and the headquarters for the Center of Excellence for Composites and Advanced Materials. Other government organizations have also designated NIAR as a research hub. NASA sponsors the National Center for Advanced Materials Performance, located within NIAR, and the National Science Foundation has named WSU/NIAR as a Center for Friction Stir Processing.
Pittsburg State University

PittsburghState

Pittsburg State University (PSU) is a comprehensive regional university providing more than 100 undergraduate and graduate programs in its College of Arts and Sciences, Kelce College of Business, College of Education and College of Technology. PSU has an enrollment of more than 7,000 and is located in Pittsburg, Kansas.

Students who choose PSU find a traditional campus atmosphere and strong accredited programs in a wide variety of fields at an affordable price. Under the university’s flat-rate tuition plan, cost-conscious full-time students pay one rate, regardless of how many hours they carry.

In addition to strong pre-professional programs in the health sciences, the university boasts AACSB accreditation for its Kelce College of Business and NCATE accreditation for its highly regarded teacher education programs in its College of Education.

PSU’s College of Technology is a special point of pride for the university and is home to more than 30 nationally known programs in automotive technology, construction management and construction engineering technologies, engineering technology, graphics and imaging technologies and technology and workforce learning. Some of the programs, such as Plastics Engineering Technology, are ranked among the top in the nation.

PSU is also the home of the Kansas Polymer Research Center, which specializes in research on bio-based polyols used to replace petroleum products in manufacturing. Scientists in the KPRC hold a number of patents and in 2007 were honored by the National Academy of Sciences with the Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award.

What you may not know about Pittsburg State:

  • Pittsburg State’s plastics, automotive and wood technology programs are among the only programs of their type in the nation. 
  • PSU’s Gladys A. Kelce College of Business is one of only around 100 schools in the country to earn the Information Systems Security certification by the Committee on National Security Systems, and one of 28 colleges that offer a program in Endorsed Internal Auditing. 
  • The job placement rate for Pittsburg State Nursing graduates last year was 100 percent.
Emporia State University

EmporiaState

Emporia State University (ESU), located in Emporia, Kan., enrolls more than 6,000. ESU was named a Tier 1 university in the U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Colleges.” The school offers a high level of individual academic instruction from faculty and offers the best career services.

ESU’s Teachers College is highly regarded and was named as one of the four model teacher preparation programs in the nation. Its Professional Development School model of elementary teacher training, modeled after physician residency programs, was held up by the U.S. Department of Education as a model for the 21st century. ESU is home to the National Teachers Hall of Fame and the Jones Institute for Educational Excellence, which works to enhance the quality of education in Kansas through research, training and policy analysis.

What you may not know about Emporia State:

  • The William Allen White Children’s Book Award Program, the first statewide reader’s choice award in the nation, was established at ESU in 1952. 
  • ESU does not charge by the credit hour. A full-time student may take 10 or more hours and not have to pay any additional tuition. Emporia State University is one of only two Regents universities in Kansas offering this great flat rate. 
  • ESU students will develop and improve leadership skills in the Leadership Education and Development (LEAD) program. This program connects students who want to get practical experiences. 
  • ESU’s School of Business was recognized by U.S. News and World Report being the least expensive graduate program for both in-state and out-of-state students.
Fort Hays State University

FortHays

Fort Hays State University (FHSU) is a regional comprehensive university with more than 12,000 students and approximately 350 faculty. FHSU is located in Hays, Kan., which has been recognized as the third-best college town in America among small cities.

FHSU is known for its innovation and entrepreneurship. Among the universities in the Kansas Board of Regents system, FHSU has the unique mission to integrate computer and telecommunications technology with the educational environment and the work place. Through its Department of Informatics, FHSU serves as both a local and regional academy for Cisco Systems, the worldwide leader in networking for the Internet. The U.S. government has designated the university a National Center of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance.

The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching selected the university for its 2008 Community Engagement Classification in both the Curricular Engagement category and the Outreach and Partnerships category. FHSU serves as administrator of the Kansas Small Business Development Center network, which is a partnership with the U.S. Small Business Administration and the Kansas Department of Commerce. Also, FHSU’s Docking Institute of Public Affairs facilitates effective decision-making among governmental and non-profit leaders through applied research, training and strategic planning.

With the lowest tuition in the region, FHSU offers its students hands-on learning with close attention from faculty that prepares them with a global perspective, professional skills and confidence to pursue successful careers. Students can pursue majors in more than 30 academic departments in four colleges and a Graduate School. In addition to classes on the Hays campus, FHSU has an international presence with more than 4,000 students from nearly all 50 states and several foreign nations enrolled in its Virtual College. In addition, FHSU has about 3,500 students at partner universities in China.

What you may not know about Fort Hays State: 

  • FHSU was the first American university to be approved by the Ministry of Education of the People’s Republic of China to offer dual bachelor’s degrees under the framework of the Sino-Foreign University of Cooperation in Running Schools. 
  • With more than 30 award-winning programs offered worldwide, FHSU’s Virtual College is the global leader in online education. FHSU is proud to have partnerships with every branch of the U.S. Military.
Washburn University

Washburn

Washburn University (WU), located in Topeka, Kan. is a municipal university enrolling more than 7,000 students. Through the College of Arts and Sciences and schools of Law, Business, Nursing and Applied Studies, Washburn students have access to more than 200 programs of study. Graduate degrees are also offered at Washburn, and the law school is nationally ranked. The Washburn School of Business has earned accreditation from The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, the oldest and largest business school accreditation organization in the world.

With a low student-faculty ratio of 16- to-1, students receive personalized, quality education from a qualified staff. More than 83 percent of the faculty members hold a doctoral degree or the highest degree available in their fields. WU is home to the Mulvane Art Museum, the oldest accredited art museum west of the Mississippi, and to KTWU, the first public television station in Kansas.

The University provides state-of-the-art integrated educational and residential centers for 800 students. Learning at Washburn is facilitated by extensive computer, video and teleconferencing capabilities within meeting and seminar rooms.

What you may not know about Washburn:

  • Washburn is annually ranked as one of the best colleges in the Midwest by U.S. News and World Report
  • For the fourth consecutive year, the School of Business was named an outstanding business school by the Princeton Review and was listed in the 2011 edition of Best 300 Business Schools. 
  • Washburn University School of Law was named an outstanding law school by the Princeton Review in the 2011 edition of The Best 172 Law Schools. The Legal Analysis, Research and Writing Program at the law school was ranked 13th in the nation by U.S. News and World Report.

OTHER EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS

Map of Commmunity and Tech Colleges

Community and Technical Colleges

Kansas provides strong technical education through a network of 26 community and technical colleges. The colleges provide education and training for your incoming workforce and current employees. Flexible training formats are designed to meet business’ needs for credit or non-credit, online, evening, concentrated courses and more. Colleges can provide existing programs or customize to meet a company’s specific needs.

Workforce Development/Career Technical Education

Never before has postsecondary workforce development been more important than it is today. Kansas technical and community colleges provide the education and skills necessary so employees can contribute to your company’s bottom line. Technical education focused on workforce demands offers a value proposition to students, employers and communities. Technical education prepares individuals with high skills in anticipation of better careers and personal enrichment, and provides employers with the talent needed to remain competitive in a global economy.

Technical and community colleges focus efforts and resources to prepare workers for careers in Kansas’ highest-priority fields, such as health care, advanced manufacturing/aviation, energy, biosciences and value-added agriculture. Education and training in these critical industries will help ensure a strong Kansas economy long into the future. Successful workforce development programs ensure continued profitability for employers.

The Kansas Postsecondary Technical Education Authority, a group of appointed business leaders, have been charged with the task of aligning technical education more closely with business needs. Technical programs are responding with training which leads to industry credentials selected by business members.

The Workforce Development/Career Technical Education (CTE) Unit:

  • Serves as the link between higher education and the workforce and economic needs vital to local communities and the state 
  • Fosters economic development in the state by providing leadership in defining and advocating statewide workforce and economic development initiatives 
  • Partners with the Kansas Department of Commerce and Kansas Department of Labor to develop an integrated education and workforce training system that unifies efforts, produces highly skilled workers and leverages resources to aligned priority needs and maximize benefits 
  • Supports college partners as they provide high-quality, cost effective, short-term, career-relevant training solutions, as well as academic programs and certifications aligned with the needs of today’s employers
  • For more information on Kansas community and technical colleges, please refer to the Training and Workforce Services section.
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