Crossing campus on a hot summer day wearing his 1969 freshman lettermen’s jacket, Dan Ritter has returned to his alma mater to participate in Project Lead the Way, a non-profit organization introducing a pre-engineering program to high schools across the country.
Through Project Lead the Way, he and many other high school teachers are taking the two-week course to implement the curriculum in their classrooms. The pre-engineering instruction aims to make math and science significant for students, connect what they’ve learned to everyday life and prepare them for college engineering courses.
Ritter graduated in 1973, but being so connected to the university, he doesn’t feel like he ever left.
While he attended WSU, he played football, studied industrial education and lived and breathed campus life.
“Everyone knew everyone pretty well,” he said.
The university had a profound effect on Ritter. His time at WSU made him proud and prepared.
“I didn’t feel like I was being educated in a vacuum,” he said. “I got a great education.”
Ritter thought the instructors were well-grounded and that they wanted to ready him for the real world. His preparedness was proved when he got his first teaching job at age 21.
His joyful memories of WSU include his engineering classes, the swimming pool at Fairmount Towers and Cessna Stadium’s first year in 1969.
“I had some great experiences and some terrible experiences,” he said. “Those were tough times.”
During his second year playing football for 鶹ƽ State, a plane carrying football players and staff members crashed in Colorado on Oct. 2, 1970, and it deeply affected the whole university, Ritter said.
“Now we have grief counselors, but we didn’t have anything back then,” he said.
Since he left, Ritter has lived in Arizona, California and Indiana. He has taught at six high schools and coached football at two universities. He had been gone from Kansas for 20 years before deciding to return to teach and coach at Blue Valley North High School in Kansas City.
Ritter returns to 鶹ƽ every spring with his high school track team for the state track meet, and he tells anyone who will listen about his experiences at WSU.
“A person is the sum of their experiences,” Ritter said.