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Author: Sarah Childers

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  • Sarah Childers
KSU holds 11th annual Homelessness Awareness Week
  • Arts & Living

KSU holds 11th annual Homelessness Awareness Week

  • Sarah Childers
  • November 5, 2018
  • 0

Homelessness Awareness Week teaches students that homelessness can affect anyone, no matter their background.

Students share ‘tales of the haunted’
  • Arts & Living

Students share ‘tales of the haunted’

  • Sarah Childers
  • October 29, 2018
  • 0

KSU students sound off on their experiences with the supernatural.

MHHE educates all students, not just those from KSU
  • Arts & Living

MHHE educates all students, not just those from KSU

  • Sarah Childers
  • October 22, 2018
  • 0

KSU’s Museum of History and Holocaust Education has multiple outreach programs to help educate children in primary and secondary schools.

Q&A with KSU superhero, Mr. James
  • Arts & Living

Q&A with KSU superhero, Mr. James

  • Sarah Childers
  • October 15, 2018
  • 0

The Sentinel recently spoke with Mr. James, a recent KSU spotlight about his influence on its students.

Counseling at-risk students can save lives
  • Arts & Living

Counseling at-risk students can save lives

  • Sarah Childers
  • October 8, 2018
  • 0

Counselors are tasked with examining the behavior or students who pose a risk to themselves or others, and it’s an involved job.

Student-produced documentary showcases life in West Africa
  • Arts & Living

Student-produced documentary showcases life in West Africa

  • Sarah Childers
  • September 24, 2018
  • 0

A KSU student filmed a documentary to highlight the struggles of students in the West African country of Benin.

KSU Hosts 24-Hour Play Festival
  • Arts & Living

KSU Hosts 24-Hour Play Festival

  • Sarah Childers
  • August 27, 2018
  • 0

Students at KSU created and performed their own plays over a period of 24 hours.

LGBTQ resource center hosts bi-weekly discussion forum
  • Arts & Living

LGBTQ resource center hosts bi-weekly discussion forum

  • Sarah Childers
  • August 20, 2018
  • 0

KSU students have the opportunity to voice their concerns about current events in an open forum event hosted by the LGBTQ Resource Center.

KSU brings hypnotists and food drive to WOW
  • Arts & Living

KSU brings hypnotists and food drive to WOW

  • Sarah Childers
  • August 13, 2018
  • 0

Kennesaw State students will have the chance to help feed disadvantaged people by volunteering at the Rise Against Hunger event and the chance to be hypnotized during a mentalist show.

The Sentinel logo

The Sentinel is the student newspaper of Kennesaw State University. Since 1966, The Sentinel has provided an open forum to the campus community. It is published in print monthly and online weekly.

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Accessibility Statement

Copyright © 2025 The Sentinel Theme: Fact News By Adore Themes.

KENNESAW, Ga. — Since October 1963, KSU Student Media has dedicated itself to authentic storytelling and exceptional journalism written by the students, for the students. Over the past two academic years, Student Media at Kennesaw State University has seen significant traction and promise through strong student leadership and ambitious
initiatives.

OWL Radio, The Sentinel Newspaper and The Peak Magazine have grown into organizations whose reach, whether through written word or radio broadcast, touches tens of thousands of students.

Despite the lack of institutional support, Sentinel and OWL Radio have been nominated for the Atlanta Press Club 2026 Awards of Excellence and the GABBY awards for Student Radio, respectively.

Kennesaw State University administration is hindering progress by stripping the key funding for The Sentinel, The Peak and OWL Radio.

On March 23, KSU announced that there were no remaining funds for Student Media. This eradicated the possibility for additional physical prints for The Sentinel or The Peak and drastically cut funding for OWL Radio’s event programming. The justification of the funding removal does not come with a promise of better housing, parking, or safety on campus for students. Rather, it comes with KSU’s neglect of their debt to their music licensing budget.

For the fiscal year, Student Media was allocated a $97,000 budget by the Division of Student Affairs. However, instead of the entirety going to Student Media, $61,185.99 of the budget paid for music licensing fees for Registered Student Organizations (RSOs), Fraternity and Sorority Life (FSL) and Student Affairs as a whole.

This move through budgeting resulted in Student Media paying not just the debt for the music licensing, but Kennesaw State University’s ability to play music across campus freely.
Despite only being responsible for part of the music licensing costs, Student Media’s budget covers almost all of KSU’s music licensing fees, excluding athletics. These fees take up 63.08% of Student Media’s total budget, meaning OWL Radio, The Peak and The Sentinel are only receiving a fraction of the funding they need to function.

Here’s the truth: Kennesaw State is disinterested in the growth of Student Media.

We are in a dangerous and pivotal time in American History. According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, under the Trump Administration, Press Freedoms have been dubbed “no longer a given” by the organization.

Student reporting and radio operations are becoming more crucial by the day to cover important topics larger media outlets look away from, and the stripping of funding follows a dangerous step for KSU’s perspective on Press and Broadcasting Freedoms.

This follows a concerning enrollment pattern in KSU’s journalism program while other university papers, such as the University of Georgia’s Red & Black and Emory University’s The Emory Wheel, continue to thrive. Editorial Board: KSU’s Neglect of Student Media Is Unacceptable

The university’s journalism program, which did not exist until 2017 according to Campus Enrollment Data, saw early success, with peak enrollment numbers in 2018 and 2020. However, the program has seen a steady decline since 2021.

Instead of taking the time to invest in its journalism students, KSU has opted to invest into their athletic department, pouring millions of dollars into sports and freshmen generations, including a $15 million dollar naming deal with FifthThirds Stadium and a lack of housing or class priority for students who classify as non-freshman.

Fundamentally, Kennesaw State’s recent history has been defined by an administration that has neglected the student body and proven repeatedly that KSU’s priorities are financially tied to athletics and tuition revenue from incoming classes.

To have a thriving campus community, KSU must invest in its student body. Students want a university that cares for each student, not how many students it can accept and pack into a classroom or a stadium. A university is only as great as its students’ success, and without true support, KSU will always fall short.

OWL Radio, The Sentinel and The Peak are calling for the support of the student body, faculty and alumni by donating to Student Media through KSU’s Giving Day. Any amount helps and will allow Student Media to continue quality, student led content.

Signed Kennesaw State University Student Media Editors and Managers, Zaire Breedlove, Devyn Byers, Alexis Barton, Tye Brown, Devyn Woodard, Joey Hawthorne, Mary Wingate, Mafe Gomez, James Harris, Jordan Scruggs, Scott Daniell, Jackson Louneoubon

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