University will send counselors, representatives to seven TBR colleges
to aid students seeking to transition to the Murfreesboro campus
MURFREESBORO — MTSU
announced Wednesday (March 4) it will send teams of counselors and representatives
to seven Tennessee Board of Regents community colleges in March and April to
aid students who have their sights set on the four-year institution.
MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee announced the “Paint the
Colleges True Blue” tour during a summit held on the Murfreesboro campus, where
college and university leaders reaffirmed their commitment to bolster the
success of transfer students.
“MTSU is the No. 1 choice of our state’s transfer students,”
McPhee said. “We are proud that so many Tennesseans have chosen our university
as the next step in their academic pursuits.
“But there’s more that we could and should do to ensure
their success.”
McPhee
said MTSU administrators, academic counselors and admissions team members will
be on hand at eight different TBR locations over the six weeks to counsel
students seeking guidance about the university’s programs and services:
· March 17: Motlow State Community College’s
Smyrna campus
· March 19: Volunteer State
Community College in Gallatin
· March 24: Motlow’s main campus in Tullahoma
· March 26: Chattanooga State Community
College
· March 31: Columbia State Community
College
· April 2: Nashville State Community
College
· April 7: Jackson State Community
College
· April 16: Pellissippi State
Community College in Knoxville
Workshops will run from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. local time, except
for Chattanooga State and Jackson State, which will be 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. local
time. They will be free and, while geared to community college students, will
be open to the public.
McPhee
said the counselors and representatives will assist students who wish to
transition to MTSU and provide them with information about the Murfreesboro
campus, the transfer process and the university’s advising and student success
services.
The
workshops will also help students who wish to declare Dual Admissions status, McPhee
said, which allows them “to take advantage of many of the rights and privileges
of an MTSU student while enrolled at these TBR colleges.”
Agreements
signed between MTSU and TBR colleges in recent years allow two-year students to
enroll as MTSU students while still pursuing an associate degree. If the
students transfer before getting an associate degree, the pacts allow the
“reverse transfer” of MTSU credits back to the colleges to earn a two-year
credential.
While
stressing the need to do more, McPhee noted that the Tennessee Transfer
Pathways initiative has “already taken big steps to bridge these gaps.”
“Simply put, the
Pathways guide students in making the right course choices by showing how they
can transfer seamlessly to a four-year institution,” he said.
Wednesday’s summit
at MTSU allowed university and college academic leaders an opportunity to
discuss new potential partnerships. MTSU Provost Brad Bartel, along with the
university’s deans, shared information about new degree programs and services.
Bartel and Rick Sluder, vice
provost for student success, also shared details about MTSU’s “Quest for
Student Success” reforms launched in 2013 to boost graduation and retention
rates through changes such as course redesigns, enhanced advising and new
student data tracking software.
The provost noted that MTSU
hired almost 50 additional academic advisers last fall, who have helped raise
the university’s retention metrics for enrolled students. MTSU also recently
switched its Transfer Academic Scholarships from being competitively based to
guaranteed for students from TBR’s 14 community colleges.
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