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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsBackground on DEI Initiatives in Kansas Higher Education
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives have become central to many American universities' missions over the past decade. These programs aim to foster environments where students from varied backgrounds feel supported, addressing historical inequities through targeted outreach, training, and curriculum adjustments. In Kansas, public institutions like the University of Kansas (KU), Kansas State University (K-State), and Wichita State University (WSU) implemented DEI offices, required diversity courses in general education, and incorporated related principles into hiring and admissions processes.
DEI efforts gained momentum following national conversations on racial justice, particularly after 2020 events. Kansas universities responded with expanded support services, cultural competency training, and gen ed requirements emphasizing diverse perspectives. For instance, WSU's general education framework included a 'Bucket 7' mandating three credits of diversity-focused content alongside a first-year seminar. Such measures were credited with improving retention rates among underrepresented students, with KU reporting a 5% increase in graduation rates for minority cohorts between 2019 and 2024.
However, these initiatives drew criticism for promoting ideological conformity over merit-based excellence. Critics argued that DEI training emphasized concepts like systemic racism and implicit bias—core tenets of Critical Race Theory (CRT), an academic framework examining how race intersects with law and society—potentially dividing campuses and prioritizing group identity over individual achievement.
Evolution of Anti-DEI Legislation in Kansas
Kansas's journey toward restricting DEI began in 2024 with House Bill 2105, which prohibited public postsecondary institutions from using DEI criteria in admissions, hiring, or promotions. This law allowed Attorney General Kris Kobach to pursue civil penalties up to $10,000 per violation, prompting universities to shutter DEI offices and rebrand efforts as 'inclusion' or 'belonging' initiatives.
In 2025, Senate Bill 125 escalated measures by banning DEI positions, programs, trainings, and state funding for such activities across agencies, including higher education. Institutions faced funding withholdings—$2 million per university—if non-compliant. The Kansas Board of Regents issued guidance by June 2025, advising removal of DEI language from mission statements, email signatures, and policies. K-State, for example, excised 'diversity' from its mission statement in September 2025 to align with these directives.
Undercover investigations by groups like Accuracy in Media revealed ongoing DEI promotion under euphemisms, fueling legislative pushback. By early 2026, House Bill 2428 proposed outright bans on required DEI-CRT courses but stalled; instead, similar language was embedded in the FY2026-2029 budget.
Details of the Newly Signed Budget Proviso
On April 8, 2026, Governor Laura Kelly signed House Bill 2513, the comprehensive state budget covering fiscal years 2026 through 2029. Tucked into its higher education appropriations was a pivotal proviso: starting in the 2028-29 academic year, public institutions cannot require students to enroll in 'DEI-CRT' courses for degree completion, except in programs whose titles explicitly denote a primary focus on racial, ethnic, or gender studies—with Board of Regents approval.
The term 'DEI-CRT' remains undefined in the bill, tasking the Kansas Board of Regents with crafting a precise definition by July 31, 2026. This vagueness has sparked debate, as early proposals in HB 2428 described DEI-CRT-related courses as those covering systemic racism, intersectionality, or claims of America as inherently racist. Non-exempt courses cannot fulfill general education or core requirements elsewhere in the curriculum.
Funding penalties loom large: up to $2 million withheld per institution annually until compliance certification to the State Finance Council. The proviso also freezes tuition revenue at current levels and mandates 10% reductions in administrative staffing.
Governor Kelly's Signing and Political Context
Democratic Governor Laura Kelly, a moderate known for vetoing extreme measures, allowed HB 2513 to become law without fanfare on the DEI provision. This contrasts her 2024 decision to let HB 2105 pass without signature and vetoes on other social issues. Signing amid a Republican supermajority legislature likely reflected budget compromises, including education funding increases.
Republican leaders like House Higher Ed Budget Chair Adam Turk hailed it as eliminating 'Victim Status 101,' arguing higher education should prioritize workforce readiness over ideological training. Turk noted universities could self-certify compliance 'on a promise basis,' minimizing disruption.
Photo by Austin Davis on Unsplash
The Kansas Board of Regents' Upcoming Role
The nine-member Kansas Board of Regents, gubernatorial appointees confirmed by the Senate, now holds definitional power. Past guidance on SB 125 emphasized compliance without stifling academic freedom, exempting federally mandated activities. By late July, expect guidelines identifying DEI-CRT hallmarks—perhaps course descriptions invoking equity hierarchies or bias training.
Institutions must submit exemption requests for specialized programs, like ethnic studies majors. Regents will oversee audits, potentially reviewing syllabi and gen ed matrices. This centralized approach aims for uniformity across KU, K-State, WSU, Emporia State, Fort Hays State, and Pittsburg State University.
Kansas Board of Regents FY2026 Budget Request outlines prior fiscal impacts from DEI eliminations.Immediate Impacts on Kansas Public Universities
Universities face curriculum overhauls well before 2028. WSU Faculty Senate approved revisions to Bucket 7, replacing mandatory diversity credits with flexible options from other gen ed areas. Chief of Staff Zach Gearhart stressed WSU's inclusivity predates DEI mandates, focusing on all students' success.
KU previously estimated $1.8 million compliance costs for earlier bills, including policy reviews and retraining. K-State resolved student DEI complaints in January 2026, satisfying lawmakers temporarily. Across campuses, gen ed courses on U.S. history, sociology, and communications may require tweaks if deemed DEI-CRT adjacent.
Administrative cuts could eliminate dozens of positions, redirecting funds to instruction. Tenured faculty face accelerated dismissal post one-year improvement plans, heightening job insecurity.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Reactions
Faculty voices dominate opposition. WSU's Christopher Stone lamented funding pressures overriding academic governance: 'Can we just tell them to shove it? We can’t afford to.' Political science professor Carolyn Shaw warned of eroded academic freedom, noting voluntary diversity course popularity pre-mandate.
PEN America's Amy Reid decried 'educational censorship camouflaged in budgets,' chilling race and gender discussions essential for critical thinking. Gamal Weheba of AAUP Kansas echoed: 'Faculty determine curriculum—politics should not.'
Students report mixed views; some welcome reduced mandates, others value diversity exposure for real-world preparation. Lawmakers defend merit-focus, citing national enrollment declines tied to perceived wokeness.
- Proponents: Enhances viewpoint diversity, cuts costs.
- Critics: Limits historical analysis, risks lawsuits.
- Neutrals: Calls for clear definitions to protect electives.
National Context Amid DEI Debates
Kansas joins over 30 states curbing DEI, from Florida's blanket bans to Utah's course restrictions. Post-2024 elections amplified momentum, with federal probes into Harvard admissions fueling scrutiny. A Goldwater Institute model bill inspired Kansas's language, emphasizing constitutional education alternatives.
Studies show DEI mandates correlate with grade inflation and declining public trust in higher ed, per 2025 Gallup polls. Yet, proponents cite improved outcomes; Brookings Institution reports diverse campuses boost innovation by 20%. Higher Ed Dive coverage contextualizes this wave.
Photo by madeleine craine on Unsplash
Potential Challenges, Legal Hurdles, and Future Outlook
Vague definitions invite lawsuits alleging First Amendment violations, mirroring Florida challenges. Universities may reframe courses as 'civic engagement' or history electives. Compliance costs could exceed $10 million statewide, straining budgets amid stagnant state aid per student.
Looking ahead, expect Regents' July guidelines sparking further debate. By 2028, Kansas higher ed may pivot toward STEM, civics emphases—HB 2513 mandates U.S. Constitution courses. Long-term, balanced curricula could restore public confidence, aiding enrollment recovery.
For faculty and administrators, adaptability is key: upskill in neutral pedagogy, explore PEN America's analysis for advocacy strategies.
Implications for Higher Education Careers in Kansas
This shift reshapes job markets. DEI roles vanished post-2024, with former directors transitioning to student success advising. Faculty must navigate revised syllabi, potentially boosting demand for constitutional law and American history experts.
Prospective educators should emphasize research excellence and teaching versatility. Administrators face efficiency mandates, favoring data-driven leaders. Amid national trends, Kansas positions as a merit-focused hub, attracting conservative-leaning talent while challenging progressives to innovate.
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