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K-State selects locations for 2023-2024 community visits, celebrates first year of success across the state

Thursday, June 22, 2023

Watch a wrap-up video on the 2022-2023 presidential community visits.  

 

MANHATTAN — K-State continues traveling the state.

Kansas State University is gearing up for the second year of presidential community visits across Kansas. The regional community visit initiative focuses on the people of Kansas and their communities. K-State is visiting multiple communities throughout the state to listen to and learn from the Kansans who live there.

"A next-generation land-grant university listens to the people it serves, and that's exactly what we are trying to do through this community visit initiative," said K-State President Richard Linton. "We're the university for Kansans, and our first year of community visits was a vital opportunity for us to engage with thousands of people in 73 counties across the state. I can't wait to build on that momentum and connect with communities that represent the remaining 32 counties so that we can paint all 105 counties purple in the upcoming academic year."

The 2023-2024 academic year will include nine new county regions: Allen County, Barton County, Ellis County, Jackson County, Norton County, Phillips County, Reno County, Seward County and Smith County.

K-State will stop in the nine communities during the course of four visits. The dates include:

• Oct. 4-5, 2023: Allen County/Humboldt.
• Nov. 7-9, 2023: Barton County/Great Bend, Ellis County/Hays, Norton County/Norton, Phillips County/Phillipsburg and Smith County/Smith Center.
• Feb. 6-7, 2024: Jackson County/Holton.
• March 5-7, 2024: Reno County/Hutchinson and Seward County/Liberal.

Exact locations and additional event details about each visit will be provided closer to the dates.

Each visit will include activities to engage with Kansans in the surrounding region. Linton and K-State Connected 'Cats students will lead several events, including community conversations, recruitment activities and events to highlight university partnerships and K-State Research and Extension relationships.

The events for each regional community visit will be free and open to all Kansans: community members, leaders, families, current and future students, and parents.

Learn more about the community visit initiative.This map shows the 18 counties and surrounding regions that K-State has visited or will visit during two years of community visits.

This map shows the 18 counties and surrounding regions that K-State has visited or will visit during two years of community visits. By the end of the 2023-2024 academic year, K-State will have touched all 105 counties in Kansas. Learn more about the locations and schedules.


A closer look at the 2022-2023 community visits

During the inaugural 2022-2023 academic year of community visits, K-State visited nine communities and engaged with 2,437 Kansans in 73 of the state's 105 counties. The second year of community visits will fill in the gaps so that K-State will have touched all 105 counties by the end of the 2023-2024 academic year.

The 2022-2023 community visit series included nine locations: Flint Hills region, Ford County/Dodge City, Greater Kansas City area, Central Kansas/Salina, Shawnee County/Topeka, Sedgwick County/Wichita, Crawford County/Pittsburg and Girard, Finney County/Garden City and Thomas County/Colby and Hoxie.

The Office of Engagement has created multiple interactive resources that tell the story of each community visit with photos, data and interactive content. The StoryMap includes photos and interactive content that document the specific events at each community visit. The Regional Community Visits Dashboard uses GIS technology to provide data-driven insight at both the statewide level and for each individual community visit.

Learn more about the events at each location and view photos from the 2022-2023 series of community visits.

Each community visit included events specific to that region, such as highlighting student experiences through workplace engagement at Textron Aviation in Sedgwick County, understanding Topeka's comprehensive approach to serving the unsheltered in Shawnee County or discussing the ways that farmers in the Rattlesnake Creek watershed are using water conservation methods in southwest Kansas.

K-State Connected 'Cats student leaders play a key role in bringing their K-State experiences to each community, especially through the Connected 'Cats Spirit of K-State award. At every community visit, Connected 'Cats choose educators from their hometown high schools to recognize for their inspiration and positive influence in helping the Connected 'Cats get to where they are today. The educators are recognized in a surprise ceremony at the high school and given a certificate for a $1,000 scholarship to give to a current high school student who plans to attend K-State.

"Our universities play a really important role when we talk about economic development and growth overall for the state of Kansas," said Jason Gregory, executive vice president for Downtown Wichita, who participated in the Sedgwick County community visit. "We've got to engage the higher ed institutions across the state. They are going to determine whether we succeed or fail as a state when it comes to employment and when it comes to economic growth."


This images shows the regional community visit dashboard.

The K-State Office of Engagement has created an interactive Regional Community Visits Dashboard that uses GIS technology to provide data-driven insight on the 2022-2023 community visits.

Media contact

Division of Communications and Marketing
785-532-2535
media@k-state.edu

Website

Regional community visits

News tip

Chanute, Claflin, Ellinwood, Great Bend, Hays, Hoisington, Holton, Humboldt, Hutchinson, Iola, Liberal, Norton, Phillipsburg and Smith Center.

Photos

Download the following photo.

Mackenzie Waggoner, senior in agricultural communications and journalism, Topeka, and a Connected 'Cat student leader, tells her K-State story during the Shawnee County community visit in January 2023.

Mackenzie Waggoner, senior in agricultural communications and journalism, Topeka, and a Connected 'Cat student leader, tells her K-State story during the Shawnee County community visit in January 2023. 

Download the following photo.

President Richard Linton and a team of K-State faculty, staff and students discuss the Rattlesnake Creek watershed with farmers during the Ford County regional community visit in September 2022.

President Richard Linton and a team of K-State faculty, staff and students discuss the Rattlesnake Creek watershed with farmers during the Ford County regional community visit in September 2022.

Written by

Jennifer Tidball
316-660-0116
jtidball@k-state.edu

At a glance

As the university for Kansans, K-State is gearing up for the second year of statewide presidential community visits to listen and learn from Kansans in the communities they call home.