Singer wants to help female recording
industry students at alma mater
NASHVILLE — Former
MTSU student and current Lady Antebellum lead singer Hillary Scott is giving
back to her alma mater by establishing a scholarship for aspiring female music
industry students within the university’s recently renamed College of
Media and Entertainment.
“This
scholarship is something I'm extremely excited about,” said Scott, a former
MTSU recording industry major turned Grammy-winning artist as part of the
popular country music trio. “There are so many amazing people who have
supported, encouraged and challenged me to become who I am today, and many of
those were from my time at MTSU.
“I'm
passionate about helping young women succeed and thrive in what they love to do
and am thrilled to be a small part of fostering the dreams that I share with so
many current and future students."
Lady
Antebellum manager and MTSU alumnus Daniel Miller announced the scholarship on
Scott’s behalf Tuesday, Sept. 22, at music rights organization BMI in
Nashville. (Watch a video report at http://youtu.be/9SHadN2iQgg.)
The
announcement came during an event to commemorate the name change of the
previous MTSU College of Mass Communication. Among those in
attendance were university President Sidney A. McPhee; Ken Paulson, dean of the
College of Media and Entertainment; and Department of Recording Industry Chair
Beverly Keel.
University
officials say the new name better reflects the 24-hour media cycle, the
college’s diversity of programs and concentrations, and the growing demand for
content that informs, engages and entertains.
“We are
now in a position where our former students and graduates have become so
successful that they can afford to give back to MTSU,” Keel said just before
Scott’s scholarship was announced.
The
scholarship will be awarded to a student in the Department of Recording
Industry. The amount and name of the scholarship have yet to be determined.
Another
fellow MTSU alumnus, Pete Fisher, general manager and vice president of the
Grand Ole Opry, told the crowd that every industry represented in the College
of Media and Entertainment is “in a significant state of change,” presenting an
exciting challenge for university educators who have to prepare students for
the marketplace.
“That’s
what MTSU and that’s what the College of Media and Entertainment is committed
to under Dean Paulson’s leadership,” Fisher said. “I’m so excited for the
future.”
For more
information about MTSU’s College of Media and Entertainment and its departments
and majors, visit www.mtsu.edu/media.
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