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LEXINGTON, Ky. (Feb. 18, 2026) – The University of Kentucky’s Creative Writing Division in the Department of English, part of the College of Arts and Sciences, will welcome award-winning poet and novelist Kei Miller as part of the Spring 2026 Visiting Writers Series.

The reading will take place at 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 26, in the John Jacob Niles Gallery at the Lucille Little Fine Arts Library. The event is free and open to the public.

Miller is the author of 11 books that range across several genres. His 2014 poetry collection, The Cartographer Tries to Map a Way to Zion, won the Forward Prize for Best Collection. His 2017 novel, Augustown, has won the Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature, the Prix Les Afriques, and the Prix Carbet de la Caraïbe et du Tout-Monde. He was the 2019 Ida Beam Distinguished Visiting Professor at the

By Ariel Arthur 

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Feb. 9, 2026) —  The University of Kentucky’s Center for Health, Engagement and Transformation (CHET) awarded pilot funding to three doctoral students to support research projects focused on improving the health of a population of high need.

CHET’s 2025 Doctoral Student Pilot Grants were awarded to Zachary Siegel, Abigail Moore and Thilini Samadhi Weeraratne.

Since 2023, CHET has funded doctoral student pilot grants to support projects and develop job market competitiveness for emerging health disparity researchers. Students in any college whose research focuses on reducing health disparities are eligible for 12-month awards of $5,000-$10,000.

By Meredith Weber 

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Feb. 18, 2026) — Six educators were honored Feb. 17 as the 2026 Great Teacher Award recipients. They are: 

Zach Agioutantis, Ph.D., Stanley and Karen Pigman College of Engineering (mining engineering). Robin Cooper, Ph.D., College of Arts and Sciences (biology). Patrick Lee Lucas, Ph.D., College of Design (interiors) . ToniMarie Marchioni, D.M.A., College of Fine Arts (music — oboe).  Mark Prendergast, Ph.D., College of Arts and Sciences (neuroscience).  Paul Priyesh, Ph.D., Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment (animal and food sciences).

The two College of Arts and Sciences faculty members are:

By Richard LeComte 

Christopher Collins and  Stephanie Carpenter met at UK. 

LEXINGTON, Ky. – Blazer Dining Hall on the University of Kentucky campus might not strike one as a prime location for romance, but it worked great for Stephanie Carpenter, Ph.D., and Christopher Collins. 

The couple, now engaged, began their journey together in the hall in 2010 they were undergrads in UK’s College of Arts and Sciences.  

“When we first met, I had come from a dance rehearsal,” said Carpenter, who was a chemistry major from Nicholasville. “I was part of the University of Kentucky Dance Ensemble. I was between rehearsals, and I went to Blazer Dining Hall to get some breakfast. While I'm there, there's this girl from my high school, and she says, ‘Hey Stephanie, do you know this guy? He lives in your dorm, and he's from New York

By Ryan Girves 

Jennifer Cramer

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Feb. 10, 2026) — For Jennifer Cramer, Ph.D., language has been more than a subject of study; it is a lens through which people understand identity, community and belonging. As a professor of linguistics in the University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences, Cramer has spent her career helping students see language not as a set of rules, but as a living, social practice shaped by culture and place.

That philosophy guided her work as a Chellgren Endowed Professor, an experience she describes as both affirming and transformative.

“Being named a Chellgren Endowed Professor was quite the honor,” Cramer said. “I had seen

By Allison Perry 

Claire D. Clark

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Feb. 6, 2026) — In a new essay, a University of Kentucky historian examines how confronting past choices in scholarship can redirect a scholar’s path and cultivate insight. The essay appeared in a September 2025 special issue of the American Historical Review titled “Mistakes I Have Made.”

Claire D. Clark, Ph.D., is a tenured Chellgren Endowed Associate Professor of Behavioral Science in the College of Medicine. She also holds a joint appointment in the Department of History in the College of Arts and Sciences. A historian of medicine, she seeks to understand how the lessons learned from medicine’s past can be pragmatically applied to situations we face today.

By Richard LeComte 

Magnolia tapichalacaensis 

LEXINGTON, Ky. -- A University of Kentucky doctoral student dug deeply into the Tapichalaca reserve in Ecuador and uncovered a magnolia tree variety that’s different enough from other types to be called its own species: Magnolia tapichalacaensis.  

The tree’s big flowers attracted the attention of Edison Rea-Sancho, a doctoral student in biology in UK’s College of Arts and Sciences. He recently co-wrote a paper for the journal Phytotaxa

“Plants are awesome," Rea-Sancho said. “I am from Ecuador, and I grew up surrounded by plants. Being in the tropical rain forest made me curious about plants and trees. Among

By Jenny Wells-Hosley 

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Jan. 29, 2026) — Applications are now open for awards and funding opportunities offered by the University of Kentucky Appalachian Center and Appalachian Studies program. These opportunities are open to any student participating in work and research in the Appalachian region.

Graduate students are eligible to apply for the James S. Brown Graduate Student Award for Research on Appalachia, and both undergraduate and graduate students are eligible to apply for the Eller & Billings Student Research Award. These awards support student research in/

By Ryan Girves

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Jan. 26, 2026) — Brandon Erby, Ph.D., assistant professor in writing, rhetoric and digital studies in the University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences, will present this year’s Gaines Lecture for Outstanding Research in the Humanities.

Erby’s lecture, titled “Digitizing Prison Dreams: Incarcerated Podcasters and their Views on Freedom,” will highlight research from his award-winning, peer-reviewed article, “Imagining Freedom: Cultural Rhetorics, Digital Literacies and Podcasting in Prison.”

By Sara Spinks, Veena McCoole and Jenny Wells-Hosley

OXFORD, England (Jan. 20, 2026) — Large language models like ChatGPT increasingly shape how people see the world, yet their responses can mirror long-standing biases in the data they ingest.

New research from the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford and the University of Kentucky finds that ChatGPT systematically favors wealthier, Western regions in response to questions ranging from “Where are people more beautiful?” to “Which country is safer?”

The study, “The Silicon Gaze: A typology of biases and inequality in LLMs through the lens of place,”

By Jenny Wells-Hosley 

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Jan. 16, 2026) — As the nation approaches the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States, the University of Kentucky Department of History is launching a public event series designed to deepen understanding of the American Revolution and its enduring legacy.

The “Celebrating 1776” series will feature lectures, conversations, film screenings and new courses for students through 2026, drawing on the department’s nationally recognized scholars in American history and serving as a resource for the UK campus and the broader Kentucky community.

The series kicks off 6 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 28, with a public conversation featuring Joseph Ellis, one of the

By Richard LeComte 

Shaunna Scott, left, and Kathryn Engle, editors of "Toward Just Transitions."

LEXINGTON, KY. -- A new book edited by University of Kentucky faculty offers hope, in a variety of ways, to the people of a post-coal and deindustrialized Appalachia. 

“Toward Just Transitions: Visions for Regenerative Communities in Appalachia,” published by the University Press of Kentucky, tackles such issues as food, health, race and philanthropy in a series of essays. 

“The Just Transition movement has to do with the decline of coal mining and other sorts of natural resource-producing, energy-producing and exporting industries," said Shaunna Scott, Ph.D., emerita associate professor of sociology in UK's College of Arts and Sciences co-editor of the

By Francis Von Mann 

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Jan. 9, 2026) — University of Kentucky professor Andy Doolen has published a new biography examining the life, ideas and assassination of early American figure John Dunn Hunter.

“Traitor: The Life and Assassination of John Dunn Hunter, American Radical,” is by Andy Doolen and published by Johns Hopkins University Press.

Andy Doolen, professor of English and American studies in the College of Arts and Sciences, is the author of Traitor: The Life and Assassination of John Dunn Hunter, American Radical,” published Dec. 2, 2025, by Johns Hopkins University Press.

John Dunn Hunter was many things: a frontier hero, a writer, a celebrity at home and abroad, and, ultimately,

More than 2,100 students have been named to the University of Kentucky College of Arts and Science's Dean's List for Fall 2025<. To earn Dean's List honors, students must earn:

A semester GPA of 3.6 or greater. A least 12 earned credit hours in graded coursework. Earned credit hours taken as Pass/Fail are excluded.

A list of Dean's List students may be found here


 

By Francis Von Mann 

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Dec. 19, 2025) – Allegra Solomon has been longlisted for the 2026 PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for Debut Short Story Collection, one of the most prestigious honors for emerging fiction writers in the United States. 

The award, presented by PEN America, recognizes an exceptionally talented author whose first short story collection demonstrates distinguished literary achievement and strong promise for future work. Solomon was selected as one of ten longlisted authors nationwide for her debut collection, “There’s Nothing Left for You Here” (Four Way Books). 

Solomon

By Daniel Flener 

Husna Ahmadi, who came to the University of Kentucky as a refugee in 2023, found a home on campus, excelled as a student and leader, and will graduate Friday. Photo provided.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Dec. 18, 2025) — Husna Ahmadi isn’t sure what she will feel walking across the stage of Rupp Arena to receive her University of Kentucky diploma.

“I don’t know what to expect,” she said. “Maybe my whole journey here; the flights, the anxiety, the friends, the memories, all of it may just come rushing back.”

In late 2021, as the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, many students in the country suddenly found themselves in limbo, unsure of whether or how to continue their educations. After a year in another country, still in limbo,

By Jenny Wells-Hosley 

Three University of Kentucky faculty members are among the awarded teams by Schmidt Sciences. Graphic provided by Schmidt Sciences.

NEW YORK (Dec. 17, 2025) — Schmidt Sciences has awarded $11 million for up to 23 teams of researchers around the world to develop and apply artificial intelligence to archaeology, history, literature and other humanities disciplines, seeking to unlock new understandings of human history and culture, the organization announced today. 

Three University of Kentucky faculty members are among the awarded teams. The projects and UK researchers include: “Medieval Judicial Opinions: Access and Analysis with AI”
Lead principal investigators are Abigail Firey,

By Rebekah Frazier 

This large rotational landslide, or slump, along Highland Pike in Kenton County has been active for more than 20 years and is nearly 300 meters long. Photo provided by KGS.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Dec. 16, 2025) — The Kentucky Geological Survey received a $182,961 grant from the U.S. Geological Survey to advance geological understanding and hazard preparedness for Northern Kentucky and Cincinnati. 

The project will produce landslide inventory maps and landslide susceptibility maps for the region that will benefit city planners, local governments and landowners. 

“There is currently no published landslide inventory for the city of Cincinnati and only an incomplete landslide inventory for Northern Kentucky, despite

By Richard LeComte 

LEXINGTON, Ky. --  Johanna Miller absolutely wanted to go to the University of Kentucky, but when she found herself in economic need, she contemplated dropping out the next semester.  

Johanna Miller - Photo by Nathan Parker

That’s when the people of UK’s College of Arts and Sciences stepped in in the person of Christia Spears Brown, Ph.D., associate dean for student engagement and success. 

"Out of the blue, I was sitting in class, and I got a text message from the associate dean that said she wanted to have a phone call with me,” said Miller, an undergraduate Writing, Rhetoric and Digital Studies major from Lexington. “That's all she said, so I got really nervous about that. I was like, ‘You want to talk to me? That’s really strange.’ So after class, I

By Francis Von Mann 

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Dec. 10, 2025) - For an hour each week, the University of Kentucky’s College of Arts and Sciences and the UK International Center make Lexington seem five countries bigger. Over steaming cups of international tea, the International Student Services space transforms into a crossroad of language and culture.

UK College of Arts and Sciences and the International Center collaborate to host 'Global Hangouts' and 'Language and Cultural Exchange' events in the UK International Center.

The gatherings are informal, half game night and half real-world practice, run by two student teams: Student Leaders