LEWISBURG,
Tenn. — An agreement
signed Thursday (Feb. 27) between Middle Tennessee State University and
Columbia State will allow community college students to earn a bachelor’s
degree in agribusiness without ever having to leave Marshall County.
The Agribusiness
Program 2+2 Agreement — two years at the community college and two at a
university — will begin this fall and help ease the transfer of Columbia State
students to MTSU. Students can move from an associate degree to an MTSU
Bachelor of Science degree at Columbia State’s Lewisburg campus.
Approved by the
Tennessee Board of Regents, the program targets students who want to grow and
expand their current agricultural operation, open a new agribusiness or venture
into a new learning experience, which could open employment opportunities
locally, nationally and abroad.
Faculty,
administrators and staff from both TBR institutions joined MTSU President
Sidney A. McPhee and Columbia State President Janet F. Smith at the ceremony to
formally sign the pact.
McPhee noted
that the agreement supports Gov. Bill Haslam’s “Drive to 55” initiative. In
December, Haslam announced a plan to bring the percentage of Tennesseans with
college degrees or certifications to 55 percent by 2025. Tennessee ranks 43rd
in the nation in working adults with a two-year degree or higher.
McPhee said the
agribusiness agreement “will provide easy access and leveraging for students.
We want to educate Tennesseans with degrees with less cost and add to the
workforce in the major areas of the governor’s priority.”
Smith, who grew
up on a farm, said agriculture is an important program at Columbia State.
“This (2+2)
program provides our students and community with additional educational
opportunities that enhances their ability to be an ag business person they
desire to be, and live at home and to continue to work in their business,”
Smith said.
MTSU School of
Agribusiness and Agriscience Director Warren Gill also pointed the “Governor’s Rural Challenge” which, among other things,
links the “Drive to 55” with agriculture, based on the importance of
agriculture to Tennessee and the need for more people with advanced agriculture
training.
“In Marshall
and surrounding counties,” Gill added, “we’re going to be bringing an improvement
in educational opportunities that will lead to careers to help peoples’ lives
in the agriculture industry and improve agriculture in this region.”
Assisted by
MTSU’s Kara Youngblood, Gill and Dearl Lampley, dean of the Science, Technology
and Mathematics division at Columbia State, prepared the agreement. Youngblood helps
coordinate educational opportunities between MTSU and community colleges.
“Our students
often ask about the opportunity to complete a bachelor’s degree on our campus,
as many have job and family obligations, which make traveling to universities
problematic,” Lampley said. “MTSU has made it possible for these students to
continue to support their families and complete their education.”
The 2+2 program
will be conducted through several methods of course delivery, including
videoconferencing, online, hybrid (blend of face-to-face interaction and
web-based technologies) and the traditional classroom.
Marshall County
Mayor Joe Liggett told officials at the event the board of directors of the
Marshall County Farm Bureau voted Feb. 20 to award a $1,000 scholarship to a
student from the community who will be in the Columbia State Lewisburg
agribusiness program.
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