The Sunflower v.122 i.35

Page 1

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2018 • VOL. 122, ISS. 34

THESUNFLOWER.COM

WICHITA STATE UNIVERSITY’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1896.

PRIVATE SCHOOL COMING TO WSU WSU MADE NO FORMAL ANNOUNCEMENT ABOUT DECISION

LEASE AGREEMENT SIGNED IN DECEMBER

BY CHANCE SWAIM

BRIAN HAYES / THE SUNFLOWER

Work has already started on the former Printing and Publication Services building on the main campus just south of the Student Credit Union. The building is being turned into a Koch-funded, K-12 private school.

Koch family-funded private elementary school coming to campus in September

C

BY CHANCE SWAIM

hase and Annie Koch, the son and daughter-in-law of Koch Industries’ Charles Koch, along with a former fundraiser and state director for Koch-funded political advocacy group Americans for Prosperity, are opening a private school on Wichita State’s campus in the fall. The school will be called Wonder, according to the Wichita Eagle, which first broke the story Sunday. The university has not released any information on the school, although it signed a lease agreement with the school in December. The school will be located in the Printing and Publication Services Building just south of the campus credit union, near the National Institute of Aviation and Research, according to a university official. In the fall, it will open as an elementary school, but plans to expand to serve students pre-K-through12th-grade education. As of Sunday, the inside of the building had been gutted and Dondlinger Construction trucks and construction materials were on-site. The Kochs will lease the building for $90,000 a year and pay for renovations, the report

“I THINK THEY HAVE AN INCREDIBLE VISION, AND WE JUST FEEL VERY PRIVILEGED TO BE A PART OF THAT CONVERSATION.” ­—SHIRLEY LEFEVER, EDUCATION DEAN

said. The lease agreement was signed through the Wichita State Innovation Alliance, a nonprofit formed to manage projects on Innovation Campus with a board full of Wichita State administrators, including President John Bardo. Shirley Lefever, dean of the College of Education at Wichita State, told the Eagle she’s excited to partner with the school, which will serve as a kind of living laboratory for teaching students. She did not elaborate on how Wichita State students would be involved in the private school in the article and was not immediately available for comment Sunday. “I think they (Wonder) have an incredible vision, and we just feel very privileged to be a part of that conversation,” Lefever said. Tuition for elementary-age children will be $10,000 a year. Pre-schoolers will pay about

WSU plans to use local, national newspaper fund for security cameras BY CHANCE SWAIM

Wichita State’s student government plans to use the student fees money that made local and national newspapers available for free on campus to install security cameras, fund an international hardship fund, and pay for “any special projects SGA would like to take on.” Wichita State Student Body President Paige Hungate announced Thursday that student government “discontinued” the student-funded Collegiate Readership Program, citing “inconsistent deliveries and breach of contract” as reasons. “Papers weren’t being delivered,” Hungate wrote in an

email Thursday. The Wichita Eagle, USA Today, and the New York Times newspapers have not been delivered on a consistent basis to campus buildings for months, and The Sunflower began hearing complaints from readers as early as September about the other newspapers not being delivered on campus. The Collegiate Readership Program, which is funded by $62,500 in student fees, provided free copies of the Wichita Eagle, USA Today, and the New York Times to Wichita State students. The decision will not affect The Sunflower, which has its own, separate newsstands and delivery system. SEE READERSHIP PAGE 2

$6,500 a year, according to the report. The Eagle reported that Wonder will not seek state accreditation. Instead, it will work under the guidelines of the International Association of Learner-Driven Schools. Zach Lahn, a former fundraiser and state director for Americans for Prosperity, a Koch-backed conservative political advocacy group, was a partner and co-founder of the project. Lahn said the preschool will be a Montessori-model. Students will be grouped into multi-age studios, instead of by grade level. There won’t be any teachers at the school, but “guides” and “coaches,” Lahn said. There won’t be traditional grades or report cards. Students will spend four to six weeks working on “theme-based, handson projects,” presenting them to family and community members, who will offer feedback and ratings. “Most of the private schools (in Wichita) are college-preparatory academies, and we are not that,” Annie Koch told the Eagle. “People who are really passionate about having a college-prep academy might not be as passionate about what we’re doing.”

WHO DECIDED TO BRING KOCH SCHOOL TO CAMPUS?

WSIA ALLIANCE BOARD MEMBERS

The decision to lease a university building to a Koch-family funded private school was made three months ago. But you wouldn’t know if it weren’t for a news story that ran in the Sunday edition of the Wichita Eagle. Wichita State has not made any formal announcement of the decision. College of Education Dean Shirley Lefever is quoted in the story. The university — through a 501c3 formed to manage Innovation Campus projects called Wichita State Innovation Alliance (WSIA) — signed a lease agreement with the school in December. Several of the WSIA board members are Wichita State administrators. According to information in that article — which ran dominant on the front page of the Sunday paper — the school, called Wonder, will pay Wichita State $90,000 a year for the space. Wonder will invest about $1.1 million in the building, and total launch costs are estimated at about $1.5 million including the renovations and equipment.

(Pictured Below)

John Bardo - WSU President John Tomblin - WSU Vice President of Research and Technology Transfer and Director of National Institute for Aviation Research Andy Schlapp - Executive Director of Government Relations Lou Heldman - WSU Vice President of Strategic Communications Elizabeth King - WSU Foundation President Rodney Miller - College of Fine Arts Dean Ruth David - National Science Foundation Board Member Scott Redler - Freddy’s Frozen Custard Co-founder David Mitchell - Mitchell & Richards Bill Moore - Former Westar Energy CEO Tony Vizzini - WSU Provost and Senior Vice President

Willie Kendrick - Popeyes Franchisee

Wichita State Innovation Alliance Board

JOHN BARDO

JOHN TOMBLIN

ELIZABETH KING

RODNEY MILLER

ANDY SCHLAPP

RUTH DAVID

LOU HELDMAN

SCOTT REDLER

NO PHOTO AVAILABLE

DAVID MITCHELL

BILL MOORE

TONY VIZZINI

WILLIE KENDRICK

Bardo’s radio comments about ‘strongly ethnic Mexican’ recruiting draw criticism BY JENNA FARHAT

President John Bardo discussed recruitment strategies for “very strongly ethnic Mexican” families during a radio interview with KNSS last week. “When you recruit in different groups, you have to think differently about what it means to recruit,” Bardo said. “If you’re dealing with a very strongly ethnic Mexican family, for example, there may be 10 decision makers in that family as opposed to two. “So you have to think differently about, with whom do I talk? Who’s going to help make the decision here?” Bardo, who has a Ph.D. in

sociology, talked about the latest Innovation Campus developments and new recruitment strategies during the interview. BARDO “We’ve been experimenting with a lot of ways of trying to increase enrollment, and not just any one headcount.” Former president of Wichita State’s Hispanic American Leadership Organization Kelvin Lopez-Garcia said he thought Bardo was referring to first-generation Latino students with immigrant parents, who don’t necessarily have Mexican roots.

“I personally don’t think he ‘gets it’ when it comes to recruiting us to campus,” Lopez-Garcia said. “What we really need is more professors that look like us,” he said. He said he thought Bardo’s comments were based on stereotypes about Latino families. Lopez-Garcia said WSU would benefit from working with local high schools that are more familiar with Latino students. He said WSU can help by making undocumented students aware of resources available to them. “I don’t really understand . . . why he says that there are ‘potentially 10 decision makers’ in the mix.” SEE BARDO PAGE 2

INSIDE

PERFORMANCE OPERA

GROUP OF UNDERDOGS

SHOCKER TROTTER

Koch family-funded elementary school is perfect for ... THE PIPELINE.

Alan Held didn’t always plan to have a career in opera.

4 soloists feature their work with the WSU Symphony orchestra.

Former Shocker walk-on Hannah Mortimer shows off.

NEWS • PAGE 2

CULTURE • PAGE 3

CULTURE • PAGE 3

SPORTS • PAGE 4

FEEDING THE PIPELINE


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