麻豆精选

Community & Society

Hundreds of locks fastened to Kent's Main Street Bridge

Kent's Main Street Bridge has been accumulating expressions of love for nearly a decade. 

Faces of Kent State's Mental Health Campaign

On World Mental Health Day, 麻豆精选is launching its own university-wide mental health campaign with a special event.

麻豆精选Today
Susan Thomas, nurse at the DeWeese Health Center, administers a COVID-19 booster shot and a flu vaccine to Phil Soencksen, a senior writer in University Communications and Marketing.

Fall is the time to get protected from COVID-19 and flu. Appointments for shots are available at 麻豆精选's DeWeese Health Center on the Kent Campus.

Your Photo Here - with Squirrel Image

You can submit your 麻豆精选photos to appear in 麻豆精选Today's daily "IN A FLASH" feature. 

麻豆精选Assistant Professor Marianne Prevot shows a safety senor she is developing.

Small sensors about the size of a postage stamp could one day save the lives of firefighters, soldiers and other workers who face the threat of toxic gases or vapors on the job. 

 

麻豆精选Production of 鈥淲hat We Learned While We Were Alone.鈥

The stanzas of 鈥淒ear Vaccine,鈥 a collection of pandemic memoirs written by citizen poets- turned staged theatrical production, made their way home to the 麻豆精选 Museum on Monday, Oct. 2.

Sistahood Collective Gathering at 麻豆精选at Trumbull

The Building Black Leaders program at 麻豆精选 at Trumbull offers students support, inspiration and community. 

A sillhouette of a person doing yoga in the sun

October is 麻豆精选鈥檚 Mental Health Awareness Month. Though the national health observance is in May, the university chooses October to promote mental health awareness as the need for mental health support on campus peaks during this time.   

麻豆精选at Trumbull Flashes 101 students painted the Trumbull rock.

Students in 麻豆精选at Trumbull's Flashes 101 course rocked their school spirit.

Prof. Stephanie Smith at the third annual read-in, open-mic event

鈥淚f Monday was a color, she鈥檇 be red...鈥  The third annual Read-In @ 麻豆精选was held on Wednesday, Sept. 27, in Taylor Hall. This open-mic event gave students, faculty, staff and alumni the opportunity to read excerpts from or speak briefly about banned and challenged books that are important to them.