Our Stories
Toward Infinite possibility
July 16, 2024
Share:
Passport_Hero
Blandit massa enim nec dui nunc mattis enim ut tellus. Cursus risus at ultrices mi tempus imperdiet nulla. Tincidunt nunc pulvinar sapien et ligula ullamcorper.
Creating a world where all Jayhawks are able to obtain a passport
Emily Becker
Senior Digital Media Strategist | KU Endowment

KU graduate Jack Martin still remembers exactly when he got his first passport. In preparation for a trip to the British Isles, his grandparents took 10-year-old Martin to the Abilene, Kan., post office to mail off his passport application. The trip would end up a key moment in shifting how he, even at such a young age, perceived the world. 

“It changes your mindset to know that you can go just about anywhere in the world, thanks to that passport,” he said. “It changes how you see the world knowing that you can go and experience it.”

It is the chance to give other Jayhawks a similar life-changing experience that led Martin and his wife, Sarah Jackson Martin, to become loyal supporters of the programs provided by KU’s International Affairs office. This past spring, the couple offered a matching donation during One Day. One KU. in support of International Affairs’ Passport initiative, the goal of which is to ensure that the $165 cash passport application fee is not a financial burden to any KU student interested in experiencing international education 

“For some students that $165 is a barrier to being able to study abroad or to being able to travel,” he said. “And so that was something that really appealed to us, to provide this key to the world to students.”

While Martin wasn’t able to study abroad while he was a political science major at KU, he believes that the experience is vital to not only understanding the world, but also yourself, and encourages every student to take advantage of international education opportunities. 

“For someone who might be hesitant about studying abroad, maybe that's for financial reasons, maybe it's from concern about what you see in the news, I would say that the world is a big and amazing place,” he said. “And that, sure, there are things that are happening in the world that are concerning and are tragic, but there is also just so much joy and so much opportunity in the world.”

MORE STORIES

KU research team develops virtual reality, AI-boosted system to help students with autism improve social skills
For more than a decade, University of Kansas researchers have been developing a virtual reality system to help students with disabilities, especially those with autism spectrum disorder, to learn, practice and improve social skills they need in a typical school day. Now, the KU research team has secured funding to add artificial intelligence components to the system to give those students an extended reality, or XR, experience to sharpen social interactions in a more natural setting.
KU researchers developing AI-boosted program to help teach writing skills to students with disabilities
Researchers at the University of Kansas are developing and expanding a program that will give teachers new capabilities powered by AI to help students with disabilities improve their writing skills with immediate scoring and feedback.
Engineering faculty member wins prestigious early-career Presidential Award
Two University of Kansas professors were recently awarded the highest honor given by the U.S. government to early-career researchers who show great potential for leading scientific advancements in the 21st century.