October

  • Community Leaders Discuss Food Deserts Affecting Kansas City, St. Louis Region

    The discussion was apart of the continuing collaborative, UniverCities Exchange
    Academic and community leaders from Kansas City and St. Louis met virtually to discuss issues combating Missouri’s urban food deserts during this year’s UniverCities Exchange. UniverCities Exchange is an ongoing collaborative project between the University of Missouri-Kansas City and the University of Missouri-St. Louis and gathers community leaders and academic experts to discuss problems and possible solutions affecting the Kansas City and St. Louis metro areas. The project began in fall 2020 with a discussion of health disparities during the COVID pandemic. The goal of the conversations is to foster a connection for future collaborations across Missouri. In this year’s installment, the panel discussed the current state of resource availability and historical events that have led to food shortages. Steve Kraske, host of KCUR’s Up to Date and UMKC journalism professor, served as moderator. Panelists included: Dina Newman, Director of UMKC’s Center for Neighborhoods Aimee Dunlap, UMSL Associate Professor of Biology Erica Williams, Executive Director of Red Circle Max Kaniger, CEO of Kanbe’s Markets Here are some highlights of the panel’s conversation regarding the problems and how communities are addressing them: “The Kansas City food landscape has really changed – literally and figuratively – over these last few years. I don’t think you can get a lot for $200 or less. You can drive through these communities of concern and see small, medium and large urban gardens and urban farms. And you can see the diversity of things these people are growing. If the pandemic showed us one thing, it’s about the affordability and the accessibility of food and people are beginning to realize how vital the food system can be.” -Dina Newman “Living in a food desert can affect your life in many ways. From the not being able to get enough food to feed your family in a way that is affordable, accessible, and attractive, but it also affects the region itself. Grocery stores provide a lot of jobs and sales tax revenue to a region. When you have an area that does not have a grocery store, you are taking all your sales tax revenue dollars and putting those somewhere else.” -Erica Williams “I think there is lots of potential for success in things like canning and cooking demonstrations. It’s great to grow kale, but then what do you do with it? I think sharing knowledge about cooking and making food in a healthy way, can help to inspire people.” -Aimlee Dunlap “With Kanbe’s, we wanted to come up with a model that supported small businesses that are already here and supported the infrastructure in our communities while, in the best way possible, supporting the local farm system and reducing waste on the massive wholesale farming industry. We wanted to fill a gap. From there, we have grown, and we are now distributing to over 40 convenience stores, five days a week, and getting a whole lot of healthy food into the community.” -Max Kaniger To watch last year’s UniverCities Exchange, click here. Oct 11, 2022

  • School of Science and Engineering Recognizes Alumni, Supporters, Donors

    TREKK, McDonnell among this year’s Vanguard Award winners
    The School of Science and Engineering recognized this year’s top donors, alumni and organizations at the 2022 Vanguard Awards.  The annual awards program is an opportunity to spotlight those who help expand STEM education and outreach in Kansas City.  2022 Vanguard Recipients  Young Alumni Award: Lauren Koval (BSCE ’17)  After her graduation in 2017, she joined McCownGordon Construction, where she progressed from a project engineer to an engineering manager and was responsible for many high-profile projects locally and regionally. In 2020, she received the Rising Trendsetter STEMMY award.   At UMKC, Koval was an exemplary student, playing for the UMKC Division 1 women’s soccer team, and being named academic all-conference for all four years in the program, all while also being a UMKC Trustee’s scholar. Koval continues to mentor UMKC Trustee’s scholars. She joined the Civil and Mechanical Engineering Advisory board in 2020 and was named chair in 2021. Supporter Award: Tom McDonnell  McDonnell has been one of the biggest supporters of SSE over the years. Recently, he was among the first donors to sign on to support the Robert W. Plaster Free Enterprise and Research Center.  STEM Outreach Partner of the Year: Notre Dame de Sion and St. Teresa’s Academy  Notre Dame de Sion High School and St. Teresa’s Academy are committed to engaging young women in STEM in a variety of different ways. Last year, Sion’s students toured the Plaster Center and applied the concepts they learned in math into a CAD/3D printing project.   St. Teresa’s students visited campus and spent a whole day immersed in learning about aerospace engineering or augmented and virtual reality, taking their knowledge back to school to create independent projects. These trips give students hands-on experiences and allow them to develop an enthusiasm for pursuing STEM degrees.  Company of the Year: TREKK Design Group, LLC  Founders Kimberly and Trent Robinett met as students at the formerly known School of Computing and Engineering, where, in 1995, Kimberly received a degree in electrical engineering and Trent a degree in civil engineering.   In 2002, the two launched TREKK Design Group. TREKK’s early projects focused primarily on transportation and site development work across Kansas City and later transitioned to focus on wastewater field services. In 2014, Kimberly and Trent were honored with the UMKC Alumni Achievement Award.   TREKK continues to support SSE through its sponsorship of the structural lab overlook and study areas within the Plaster Center. Trent also serves as a practitioner for the civil senior design class.  To view last year’s Vanguard winners, click here. Oct 07, 2022

  • UMKC Faculty Earn Promotion and Tenure Appointments

    Board of Curators selects two faculty members to receive Curators’ Distinguished Professorship, the university’s highest academic honor
    UMKC celebrated the promotion and tenure of more than 30 faculty members Sept. 20. “Achieving promotion and tenure requires significant focus and dedication. In addition to the rigorous academic review required to be promoted and or tenured, you persevered through the challenges that the pandemic has brought over the past few years,” Jenny Lundgren, UMKC provost, said. “You shifted to remote learning, and sometimes shifted back again, modified curricula, reconfigured research studies and performances, and supported students in distress – all while handling the disruption in your personal lives. Your accomplishments are nothing short of remarkable.” Lundgren noted the depth and commitment to their students and academic disciplines were admirable. “We are fortunate that you have invested your time and talent here at UMKC. Your achievements are your own, but your colleagues, students, and the world benefit from them.” Lundgren announced that the UM System Board of Curators approved two UMKC faculty members for the System’s highest academic honor. Max Vitiello, Ph.D., from the Department of History in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, was appointed Curators’ Distinguished Professor. Tina Niemi, Ph.D., Earth and Environmental Sciences in the School of Science and Engineering, has been appointed as Curators’ Distinguished Teaching Professor.   Other faculty awards and honors – such as new Curators’ Distinguished Professors, and Trustees’, Governor’s and Chancellor’s awards for research, teaching, mentoring, community engagement and commitment to diversity and inclusion – will be presented at a separate event in the spring semester. The promotion and tenure process at UMKC involves a lengthy and rigorous review of academic performance in the areas of teaching, scholarship and service. Each of the academics recognized at the celebration has demonstrated to their peers and to the administration that they have met high standards for sustained contributions and outstanding performance. UMKC 2022 Promotion and Tenure Alison Graettinger, School of Science and Engineering, tenure with promotion to associate professor      Oh Ha, School of Education, Social Work and Psychological Sciences, tenure with promotion to associate professor Erin Hambrick, School of Education, Social Work and Psychological Sciences, tenure with promotion to associate professor Bryan Hong, Bloch School of Management, tenure with promotion to associate professor            Ryan Mohan, School of Science and Engineering, tenure with promotion to associate professor Mostafizur Rahman, School of Science and Engineering, tenure with promotion to associate professor Roozmehr Safi,  Bloch School of Management, tenure with promotion to associate professor Joanna Scott, School of Dentistry, tenure with promotion to associate professor Fengpeng Sun, School of Science and Engineering, tenure with promotion to associate professor Sarah Cox, School of Pharmacy, promotion to associate clinical professor Elizabeth Englin, School of Pharmacy, promotion to associate clinical professor     Kristin Lee, School of Nursing and Health Studies, promotion to associate clinical professor          Juliana Redford, School of Dentistry, promotion to associate clinical professor Linda Seabaugh, School of Dentistry, promotion to associate clinical professor      Holly Hagle, School of Nursing and Health Studies, promotion to associate research professor     Paul Barron, School of Science and Engineering, promotion to associate teaching professor Bryan Boots, Bloch School of Management, promotion to associate teaching professor    Lena Hoober-Burkhardt, School of Science and Engineering. promotion to associate teaching professor Preetham Goli, School of Science and Engineering, promotion to associate teaching professor Bill Keeton, Bloch School of Management promotion to associate teaching professor        Julie Kline, Bloch School of Management, promotion to associate teaching professor Melisa Schulte, Bloch School of Management, promotion to associate teaching professor Amy Simmons, School of Education, Social Work and Psychological Sciences, promotion to associate teaching professor Pat Welsh, Bloch School of Management, promotion to associate teaching professor Larry Wigger, Bloch School of Management, promotion to associate teaching professor Michael Wizniak, Bloch School of Management, promotion to associate teaching professor Cynthia Flanagan, promoted to librarian II Stuart Hinds, University Libraries, promoted to librarian III  Tracey Hughes, University Libraries, promotion to librarian III Mardi Mahaffy, University Libraries, promotion to librarian IV Sandy Rodriguez, University Libraries,  promoted to librarian IV Lindy Smith, University Libraries, Promoted to Librarian III  Marie Thompson, University Libraries, Promoted to Librarian III     Cydney McQueen, School of Pharmacy, promotion to clinical professor Eileen Cocjin, School of Dentistry, promotion to clinical professor Cydney E. McQueen, School of Pharmacy, promoted to clinical professor  Erica Ottis, School of Pharmacy, promotion to clinical professor      Andrew Smith, School of Pharmacy, promotion to clinical professor           Rebeca Weisleder, School of Dentistry, promotion to clinical professor Brenda Bethman, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, promotion to teaching professor John Eck, School of Science and Engineering, promotion to teaching professor Beth Elswick, UMKC Conservatory, promotion to teaching professor Phillip Gonsher, Bloch School of Management, promotion to teaching professor Brian Hare, School of Science and Engineering, promotion to teaching professor Margaret Kincaid, School of Science and Engineering, promotion to teaching professor Kevin Kirkpatrick, School of Science and Engineering, promotion to teaching professor Rana Lehr-Lehnardt, School of Law, promotion to teaching professor Brian Frehner, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, promotion to professor DeAnna Hiett, UMKC Conservatory, promotion to professor Zhu Li, School of Science and Engineering, promotion to professor Tim Lynch, School of Law, promotion to professor Cynthia Petrie, School of Dentistry, promotion to professor Melisa Rempfer, School of Social Work and Psychological Sciences, promotion to professor Tom Rosenkranz, UMKC Conservatory, promotion to professor Zach Shemon, UMKC Conservatory, promotion to professor Mikah Thompson, School of Law, promotion to professor Michael Wacker, School of Medicine, promotion to professor Ye Wang, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, promotion to professor   Oct 06, 2022

  • UMKC Infectious Disease Collaboration Awarded $879K

    Interdisciplinary team receives CDC grant to develop a new generation of mathematical and computational models of infectious diseases
    In the last months of 2019, Majid Bani Yaghoub, Ph.D., planned his mathematics curriculum to study a new virus that was beginning to spread in China. He knew mathematical modeling and analysis based on a real-world situation would be a good fit with his students in Graduate Differential Equations. Even then, before COVID-19 became a common topic of global study, Bani’ s students were using optimal control theory to predict the best way to minimize spread. Bani is furthering his work through interdisciplinary research to develop and implement mathematical and computational models to optimize control and prevention of infection in healthcare settings. Bani has assembled researchers from the UMKC Division of Computing, Analytics and Mathematics; the UMKC Department of Biomedical and Health Informatics; the UMKC School of Medicine; University Health; the Kansas City, Missouri, Health Department; and the University of California-Davis School of Veterinary Medicine to form the Midwest Virtual Laboratory of Pathogen Transmission in Healthcare Settings (MVL-PATHS), an interdisciplinary research collaborative. The Center for Disease Control awarded MVL-PATHS a three year $879,162 grant to develop a new generation of mathematical and computational models of infectious diseases. The team will use the One Health modeling approach, which incorporates interconnections between people, animals, plants and their shared environment. Bani believes the One Health approach – a process that recognizes the health interconnections among people, animals, plants and their shared environment – is crucial to identify risk factors for transmission of healthcare-associated infections. The research team will be working with healthcare providers to record their movements, how much time they spend with patients and other factors in order to collect data that will make models more accurate than the current models. “We’re not interested in watching individuals,” he says. “The models will identify high-risk movement patterns  and hotspots  at a hospital so that we can have better control of asymptomatic spread of infection.” The research could foster a healthier general population, but the team is paying special attention to vulnerable populations. “Already, the research shows that people who are working in nursing homes may work at multiple locations, so it’s possible they are taking infections from one nursing home to another. This is not about laying blame. The research can help us discover ways that we can improve the situation.” The interdisciplinary team is critical to the research success. “This is a great start for the UMKC School of Science and Engineering and a direct result of the university’s restructuring through UMKC Forward,” Bani said. “The COVID-19 pandemic taught us many lessons, and one of the key lessons was that math models are useful, though they are far from perfect. There is a need to create a new generation of math models, computational models and tools that can become more accurate, more reliable.” But the work goes beyond research of what has already occurred. “The essence of this project is to develop a virtual laboratory for simulation of disease spread, and at the same time train PhDs who can implement the virtual laboratory in health institutes, and work with the Center for Disease Control and health departments,” Bani said. “There were many things that we could have done to lessen the impact of COVID-19. The key now is to learn from that experience and use the One Health modeling approach rather than looking at an individual farm or hospital. We must recognize that the world is fully connected, and we need to look at these problems as one big picture and see how these different units and communities can work together.” Oct 04, 2022