MURFREESBORO
— Middle Tennessee State University remains the
largest institution in the Tennessee Board of Regents system, despite a decline
in enrollment from last year, figures released Sept. 12 show.
MTSU also welcomed TBR's largest class of freshmen and transfer
students for the 2014 fall semester and set a new record for international
enrollment.
In addition, the class of 2018 had an average ACT of 22.3, a slight
increase over the record mark of 22 put forward by last year's freshmen.
MTSU's Fall 2014 head count is 22,729, which includes 20,262
undergraduates and 2,467 graduate students. The university's enrollment is
down 4.82 percent over last year.
The university welcomed 2,932 freshmen and 1,809 transfer students
this fall. Also, MTSU has 768 international students — a 20 percent increase
over last year and 33 percent over three years.
“MTSU, like many other institutions, is grappling with several
enrollment challenges, including rising tuition costs and a declining
population of high school seniors in Tennessee,” said Deb Sells, vice president
for student affairs and vice provost for enrollment services.
“Nevertheless, in a marketplace where students have ever-increasing
options, we are pleased that the majority of students in the TBR system chose
MTSU for their higher education,” she said.
MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee pointed to the university's Quest for
Student Success initiative, which fully deployed this fall, as a way to improve
student retention and graduation rates.
“I want our university to focus not only on bringing in new
students, but also keeping and graduating those who have invested with us,”
McPhee said. “These efforts underway this fall will have a direct impact upon
our future enrollment.”
McPhee also said MTSU will be announcing other new initiatives
shortly that will reinforce the Student Success push and help with recruitment
of high school seniors and transfers. McPhee and other top university leaders
are again hitting the road beginning this week for the six-city True Blue Tour
to recruit top prospective students across the state.
Earlier this year, MTSU announced that it will guarantee five of its
major scholarships next fall to prospective students who meet the
application requirements and deadlines.
And the university's Transfer Academic Scholarships have switched
from competitive-based to guaranteed next fall for qualifying students
transferring from any of the state's community colleges.
McPhee said he was pleased about the significant increase in MTSU's
international population, which reflects the strategic priority placed upon
outreach to those students.
“We anticipate to see these numbers grow even further as our most
recent efforts in China and elsewhere come to fruition,” he said.
The Tennessee Board of Regents system consists of 46 institutions
with a combined annual enrollment of over 200,000 students, making it among the
nation's largest systems of public higher education. The TBR's six state
universities, 13 community colleges, and 27 colleges of applied technology
offer classes in 90 of Tennessee's 95 counties.
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