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Why burn?
May 20, 2026At Konza Prairie Biological Station, K-State researchers use prescribed burns to study and preserve one of the last remaining tallgrass prairie ecosystems in North America.
Forbes names K-State a top employer for new graduates
May 20, 2026Kansas State University is one of just 40 colleges and universities nationwide — and one of only six Big 12 institutions — recognized by Forbes as a top employer for new graduates....
Kansas Board of Regents to meet May 20 in Topeka
May 20, 2026The Kansas Board of Regents meets today at the Curtis State Office Building in Topeka. Agendas, complete meeting minutes and a livestream are available online.
Provost announces internal search for College of Arts and Sciences interim dean
May 20, 2026The Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President announces an expedited internal search for the interim dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. The search is limited to current...
Crafted with purpose
May 19, 2026Through hands-on interdisciplinary learning, furniture design students in K-State's College of Architecture, Planning & Design develop both technical skill and creative confidence.
Journal of Research in Rural Education joins K-State's open-access scholarship platform
May 18, 2026K-State Libraries is welcoming the Journal of Research in Rural Education to New Prairie Press — the university's publisher of open-access scholarship — expanding its growing collection...
People with Purpose: Dan Ireton
May 18, 2026As an academic services librarian, Dan Ireton believes meaningful research begins when students feel comfortable enough to ask questions.
K-State Blue Key Senior Honorary initiates 2026-2027 class
May 15, 2026The Kansas State University chapter of Blue Key Senior Honorary, or Blue Key, has initiated 16 new members for the 2026-2027 academic year.
Purple Praise: May 2026
May 15, 2026National awards, honor society inductions, debut albums and more: standout Wildcat achievements from May 2026.
Sedimentary sleuths
May 15, 2026K-State biological and agricultural engineer Trisha Moore is leading a project to test the effect of water injection dredging on sediment levels in the Big Blue and Kansas Rivers.