Event to be held in spring, fall
before undergraduate ceremonies
MURFREESBORO — Starting with the May
commencement ceremony, Middle Tennessee State University will begin a new
tradition of holding a separate ceremony for grad students in the spring and
fall.
The
first ceremony for the College of Graduate Studies will be held at 3 p.m.
Friday, May 6, in Murphy Center, for those students earning their doctorate,
master’s and education specialist degrees.
Doctoral
students will receive the added recognition of having brief biographies and
dissertation abstracts read aloud before receiving their hoods and diplomas.
“We
think this separate commencement is a very positive step in that it gives
graduate students the recognition they deserve,” said Dr. Jackie Eller, interim
vice provost for research and dean of the College of Graduate Studies.
The
speaker for the graduate ceremony will be a recipient of the Career Achievement
Award made each August at the university’s Fall Faculty Meeting. Dr. Carroll
Van West, director of the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation and Tennessee
State Historian, received the award last fall and will give remarks at the
inaugural graduate ceremony.
The
traditional commencement platform party featuring MTSU President Sidney A.
McPhee, deans and top executives also will attend the graduate ceremony.
Each
doctoral graduate will march into Monte Hale Arena with the faculty member who
will present the graduate’s new academic hood. Master’s and education
specialist degree candidates will march in according to their college and
degree program.
MTSU’s
commencement ceremonies for undergraduate students will be held the next day,
Saturday, May 7, in the same location, with ceremonies at 9 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Speakers will be announced later.
Students
in the College of Basic and Applied
Sciences, the Jennings A.
Jones College of Business, the College of Education, and the College of Media and
Entertainment will receive their degrees in the morning ceremony. The afternoon
ceremony will be conducted for students in the College of Behavioral and Health Sciences, the College of Liberal Arts, and
the University College.
With
the total number of MTSU graduates averaging roughly 2,000 for the May and
December ceremonies in recent years, each of the morning and afternoon events
could each easily last two hours or more. University officials said that
holding a separate commencement event for graduate students will shorten
ceremonies for all graduates as well as their families and supporters in
attendance.
The
graduate ceremony will be held in May and December. Summer commencement in
August will continue as a single ceremony for all graduates with the addition
of readings of brief biographical and abstract information for doctoral
candidates. The outgoing president of the Faculty Senate will still give the
summer keynote address.
Details
about MTSU’s commencement ceremonies, including speakers, parking and new
traffic information, is updated at http://www.mtsunews.com/graduation-info.
No comments:
Post a Comment