Honeywell scholarships awarded

Area students and their teachers were honored recently at an education celebration by Honeywell. The students receive the Honeywell Opportunity and Prosperity through Education Manufacturing Scholarship. (Submitted photo)
Datara Lee, center, received the Black Achiever Society Engineering Scholarship recently. With him were John Ricciardelli, left, Honeywell FM&T president; and Anthony Carey, right, Honeywell FM&T senior manager. Not present was Alizah Jones, Wyandotte High School. (Submitted photo)

Kansas City, Kansas, students recently received scholarships during a science, technology, engineering, math and manufacturing (STEMM) education celebration through Honeywell.

There were more than 20 Kansas City area scholarship recipients of the Honeywell Opportunity and Prosperity through Education (H.O.P.E.) Manufacturing Scholarship and the Black Achievers’ Society Engineering Scholarship.

As part of the scholarship program, Honeywell pairs each student with a manufacturing mentor to provide insight on manufacturing positions.

Scholarship award amounts vary and qualified students may receive a full scholarship, depending on need or academic qualifications.

The scholarship recipients from Wyandotte County high schools included Gervais Ford, Wyandotte; Alfredo Lopez, Wyandotte; Bryan Munoz, Schlagle; Jacob Bramlett, Bishop Ward; Elvis Beltran, Sumner Academy; Jesus Herrera, Wyandotte; and Jose Rivera, Schlagle.

Receiving Black Achiever Society Engineering Scholarships were Datara Lee, Sumner Academy; and Alizah Jones, Wyandotte High School.

Bonner Springs student named to dean’s list

Matthew Taber, Bonner Springs, Kansas, has been named to the dean’s list at Olivet Nazarene University, Bourbonnais, Illinois.

Students on the dean’s list must have a semester grade point average of 3.5 or higher on a 4.0 grading scale and must be enrolled as a full-time undergraduate student.

Olivet Nazarene University is a Christian, liberal arts university with more than 140 areas of undergraduate and graduate study. There are several campuses, as well as more than 100 learning locations.

Spring enrollment flat in Kansas universities while other states drop

by Stephan Bisaha, Kansas News Service

Kansas universities had about 800 more students enrolled this spring than they did last year, according to new data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center.
That’s about a half percent more — essentially flat.

But flat is better than the national figure, which saw enrollment across the United States drop about 1.3 percent, or about 231,000 fewer students.

Other Midwestern states saw steeper drops, including Kansas’ neighbors. Colorado had about 9,000 fewer students this past spring semester compared to the previous year — a decline of 3.2 percent.

Kansas has struggled to enroll more students in its ongoing effort to increase the number of Kansans with some level of post-secondary education. A Georgetown University study found that Kansas will need to do so to avoid future workforce shortages.

Rick Muma, the provost at Wichita State University, said failing to meet those goals could have consequences.

“We could be losing businesses who are going to go somewhere else where they can get those needs met,” Muma said.

Last year was the second year in a row where Kansas fell short of its targets for the number of students who obtained a degree or certificate at a public university.

WSU has put a stronger emphasis on enrollment and recruitment, according to Muma. In order to attract more students, Muma said the university is looking into more online courses and focusing on industrial needs.

“What we’re seeing from a lot of local industry is they want short courses or curriculum that’s truncated in a manner that their employees can easily digest and get the skills that they need,” Muma said.

Stephan Bisaha, based at KMUW in Wichita, is an education reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KMUW, Kansas Public Radio, KCUR and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. Follow him on Twitter @SteveBisaha. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to the original post.
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