Latest Releases

Loading

Loading posts...

  • Karen Gandy

    Rocket scientist counting down to final launch of her career

    November 21, 2023

    The notion that it’s never too late to start something new runs through Karen Gandy’s head now the same way it did in the 1990s. Gandy was then in her 30s, and despite trying several different jobs, she had yet to find a career that ignited her passion. She applied and was accepted to Southern Polytechnic State University, now ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ. That choice launched Gandy’s career in rocket science and down a path in life that she is reflecting on as she prepares for her final satellite launch and then retirement.

    Read More

  • Coles College Business Hall of Fame

    ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State's Coles College inducts Tommy Bagwell, Lori Kaczynski into Hall of Fame

    November 17, 2023

    Tommy Bagwell and Lori Kaczynski – two longtime supporters of ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ whose contributions have created educational opportunities for countless students, were recently inducted into the Michael J. Coles College of Business Hall of Fame.

    Read More

  • Jordan St. Louis

    ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State senior bridges safety gap for law enforcement with tech startup

    November 15, 2023

    ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ engineering senior Jordan St. Louis is using high-tech imaging technology to improve the safety of law enforcement officers and the community. His company, Generalized Robotics, founded during his freshman year, has created a 360-degree police camera called Patrol Buddy Go and has found its first client in the Clayton County, Ga. Police Department.

    Read More

  • Carol Chrestensen

    ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State professor receives grant to study enzymes linked to cardiovascular disease and cancer

    November 13, 2023

    A decade-long effort to study protein and enzyme binding could be the key to understanding and preventing cardiovascular disease and cancer. Equipped with a three-year, $405,650 grant from the National Institutes of Health, ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ professor Carol Chrestensen will further investigate the binding process with the help of undergraduate researchers.

    Read More

  • KSU Empty Bowls

    Empty Bowls event combines ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State art, music and support for students

    November 10, 2023

    Now in its seventh year, Empty Bowls is one of KSU’s largest fundraisers for Campus Awareness, Resource & Empowerment (CARE) Services. Including Thursday’s event, the program has raised more than $30,000 to support food insecure students on campus through the CARE Pantry.

    Read More

  • Ethics Awareness Week

    NCAA leader headlines Ethics Awareness Week observances at ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State

    November 09, 2023

    Putting the interests of student athletes first is a top ethical responsibility of the National Collegiate Athletic Association and its members like ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ, Felicia Martin, an NCAA executive, said Wednesday in a speech at KSU. Integrity must guide every action in organizations such as the NCAA and ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State, which is observing its annual Ethics Awareness Week, Martin said. Her speech was the keynote address in a week filled with special lectures and events focusing on ethics.

    Read More

  • Multilingual household research

    ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State research aims to preserve language and culture in trilingual homes

    November 03, 2023

    As they raise multilingual families, ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ education faculty and researchers Jayoung Choi and Tuba Angay-Crowder have seen firsthand the work it takes to preserve the languages they grew up speaking before coming to the U.S. Choi, professor of Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages in KSU’s Bagwell College of Education, and Angay-Crowder, a postdoctoral researcher, have teamed up with Clemson University education associate Mihaela Gazioglu and HaBilNet, to make it easier on immigrant families in the U.S.

    Read More

  • Benedicte Kalonda

    ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State student encourages peers through campus engagement

    November 01, 2023

    ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ senior Benedicte Kalonda’s college career has been a roller-coaster. During her first two semesters, professors and classmates were faces on a computer screen as the University shifted online for safety in the 2020-21 academic year during the coronavirus pandemic. Fast forward to the beginning of her senior year, and she stood in front of thousands of cheering freshmen as the student co-host at First-Year Convocation, the University’s official welcome event for new students.

    Read More

  • Computing

    ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State researcher explores new way to use AI for student teachers

    October 30, 2023

    Student teachers face a common challenge in their academic careers – they have limited opportunities to interact with elementary school children prior to their final year of college. To fix this, a ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ researcher is leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) to give education students lifelike interactions with a virtual student earlier in their training.

    Read More

  • Jianming Wen

    ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State playing role in making super-fast quantum computing a reality

    October 23, 2023

    In what could provide a significant boost for national defense, ¿ìè³É°æÊÓƵ State associate professor Jianming Wen is working to create a building block of a new form of computing that is faster and more secure than today’s best supercomputers. To help build and equip his laboratory, Wen has received a $796,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to expand study of the physics of quantum computing, making KSU one of 22 universities receiving funds through the NSF’s $38 million ExpandQISE (Expand Quantum Information Science and Engineering) initiative.

    Read More