Spring graduate grateful for ‘confidence booster’ from flexible major
MURFREESBORO — For
MTSU senior Sara Croft, switching to a major in university studies with a minor
in organizational communication “was the best choice I have made so far while
at Middle Tennessee State University.”
When the Columbia, Tennessee, native graduates Saturday, May
10, she’ll do so as this year’s recipient of one of the Outstanding Student
Awards for MTSU’s Experiential Learning Scholars Program.
“By switching to this major, I was required to take multiple
classes that fall under the Experiential Learning, EXL, type of courses,” said
Croft, whose previous studies in liberal arts and business could be applied
toward her current major.
Coordinated through MTSU’s University College, the
bachelor’s degree in university studies provides students with a broad-based,
interdisciplinary education, with students getting personalized advising to
choose courses that meet their “areas of emphasis” for a future career path or
preparation for graduate school.
“The major in university studies allows students to select
an area of emphasis and a minor that will best meet their career goals,” said
Dr. Dianna Rust, University Studies program coordinator. “With this flexibility,
it provides students with the opportunity to participate in EXL classes and
complete internship experiences helping them gain applied and theoretical
knowledge.”
Effective fall 2014, the Bachelor of University Studies will
become the Bachelor of Science in Integrated Studies.
University College Dean Mike Boyle presented Croft with the
EXL Outstanding Student Award at a recent reception hosted by the college at
historic Kirksey Old Main.
Croft said that the EXL courses she’s taken within her major
have helped her take the information that is given in class and apply it, not
to a given textbook situation, but to her life. She said the courses “were a
great confidence booster.”
MTSU launched the EXL program in spring 2006 as a pilot
project in conjunction with a university-wide improvement plan. EXL courses
provide students with valuable networking with professionals and an opportunity
to explore career paths through real-world activities.
In addition to completing eight EXL courses, Croft has
completed an internship at the June Anderson Center for Women and
Non-traditional Students, which included presenting at the Blue Raider
Leadership Summit in February and also during National Women’s History Month at
MTSU.
For the past two years Croft has hosted a weekly radio show
on WMTS-FM, the student-run campus radio station. As a sophomore, she served as
treasurer for MT Lambda student advocacy group.
The student who nominated Croft stated, “Creative and
compassionate, she truly desires to learn, help others, and make a difference,
both on campus and within the larger community. Sara is active on-campus,
lending support to various groups, interning at the June Anderson Center,
participating in the QEP focus group, and presenting at leadership seminars. Sara
is an adept leader, and the selection committee would be hard-pressed to find
another candidate with Sara’s personal blend of logic, empathy, and foresight.”
Croft’s parents are Tom and Suzanne Croft of Columbia,
Tennessee.
For more about MTSU’s university studies degree, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/bus.
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