A special semester publication of the Washburn Review November 11, 2024
Volume 147, Issue1
washburnreview.org Established 1885
1,196 freshmen
photo by Jeremy Ford Freshmen and more gather in Lee Arena for the annual Convocation event in August. This was Washburn University’s second consecutive year hosting a record-breaking freshman class.
Washburn breaks its freshmen record Jeremy Ford Washburn Review jeremy.ford1@washburn.edu
The 2024 fall semester hosted a recordbreaking freshman class at Washburn University for the second consecutive year. Washburn’s freshman class peaked at 1,196 students with a 27% increase of Shawnee County students largely in part to the Together We Thrive financial aid package. “We are trying to make sure that the students in our community who didn’t think college was a possibility because of finances can be in our classrooms [and] can be pursuing educational goals and dreams when they otherwise might not have been able to, and that was really our goal,” said JuliAnn Mazacheck, Washburn University president. Together We Thrive consists of three main scholarships: the Shawnee County Promise
scholarship (up to full tuition), the Shawnee County Thrive scholarship ($4,000) and the Northeast Kansas Advantage scholarship (up to full tuition). These three options have heavily encouraged local students to stay at home and pursue a career through a university. The growing number of new students is a statistical anomaly as many Kansas colleges and universities have seen a decrease in enrollment over the past few years. “We’ve got an increasingly shrinking amount of 18-year-olds who are available to go to college,” said George Burdick, senior Washburn Student Government Association president. All four of the Division II schools in the state of Kansas have a decreased enrollment in the past five years, according to the Kansas Board of Regents. However, in the past three years, Washburn is the only school that has
made a comeback and is now seeing positive enrollment numbers and expects those numbers to continue to rise. And while high enrollment does bring a long list of pros - higher student engagement, more university funding, more learning opportunities and so on - it also has brought some direct negative effects to students on campus. “We’re wanting to be able to … provide the housing, especially for incoming students, and then if we can’t or if there aren’t enough spaces to provide the housing for people beyond their first year, then we get to communicate with them in plenty of time so that that can find alternative places to live,” Mazachek said. Housing has been a problem this semester, with all three on-campus residence halls at max capacity and both Kuehne Hall and
West Hall reverting back to living spaces to accommodate for the high interest of students wanting to live on campus. Since many freshmen choose or are required to live on campus, this means that the Washburn Village may have to house freshmen in the future, making less spots for upperclassmen. “It is a challenge because we can’t fix that problem immediately,” Mazachek said. “We do have some decisions that we’ll have to make about who gets to live in the residence halls next year.” As Washburn University navigates the challenges of increased enrollment, the commitment to fostering local talent through innovative financial aid programs like Together We Thrive remains steadfast, ensuring students the quality resources they need for not only a quality education, but a quality experience as well.
photo by Jeremy Ford
The north doors of Plass Learning Resource Center. Plass holds many student resources and offices, including the library.
Plass now holds student resources Jeremy Ford
Washburn Review jeremy.ford1@washburn.edu
Washburn University made a big change on campus this fall with the creation of the Plass Resource Learning Center in the university’s seven year plan. Plass was formerly the home to the Washburn Law School until it moved to Robert J. Dole Hall in the fall of 2023. With the building being vacant, Washburn decided to renovate the building and place a majority of the student resources in the building. When plans to renovate the building began in March of 2024, Laura Stephenson, interim vice president of academic affairs at Washburn University, said the project will impact all students in their undergraduate studies because of the multitude of resources available in the building. The first floor has the Richard E. Shermoen Mathematics Learning Lab, Military Student Success Center, TRIO programs, and the Writing Center as well as classrooms and offices. The second floor has offices for international programs, Washburn Transformational Experience, Study Abroad, Honors program, First Generation, Career Engagement and Aleshire Center for Leadership and Community Engagement. It also has areas for academic testing, studying, classrooms and part of the library. The third floor houses mostly offices for Academic Advising, First-Year
Experience, New Student Orientation and student success coaching. Part of the library will be on the third floor as well as the Student Accessibility Services. The fourth floor hosts more of the library and library offices. Plass was originally planned to be completed in three phases with the first phase being done before the fall 2024 semester, however complications with the building required the project to be pushed back. “I think that one of the things that happened was when they came into the building, it was maybe not in the kind of shape that they thought it would be, particularly behind the walls,” said Steve Hageman, director of First Year Experience. “I think it was just an older building and you couldn’t see it from the outside until you actually got into the building. They ended up having to redo the bathrooms from scratch, which was something that wasn’t necessarily anticipated.” The building also had accessibility problems amid the ongoing construction that affected some students. “With the construction, I had to park way further out. I have a knee injury so it’s causing more pain, and there are disabilities you can’t see but they are definitely suffering,” said Yessica Holman, junior pre-law major. The building just wrapped up its first phase and is now jumping into its second phase. With many more changes coming to campus throughout the next few years, students can expect to make routine visits to Plass for a wide variety of resources, classes and more.
With reporting by Carlee Hess-Burch, Jayme Thompson, Cheyenne Hittle, Lexi Hittle.
graphic by Student Media
The Plass Learning Resource Center is now home to many student resources on campus. Here is a list of what each floor in Plass offers.
photo by Jeremy Ford
The current state of the cafe on the second floor of Plass. This new cafe will replace Study Grounds, which was located in Mabee Library.
Homecoming
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