MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — High school students with a serious interest in education visited
Tennessee’s first public teacher-training university Tuesday, March 7, to learn
more about becoming educators with the help of a degree from MTSU.
50-plus young members of Future Teachers of America chapters at Cocke County High School,
Franklin County High School, Siegel High School and the University School of
Nashville toured the rain-soaked Murfreesboro campus to learn about enrolling
in a degree program with MTSU’s College
of Education, getting scholarships, staying healthy and active while they’re
earning their degrees and what to expect as college students.
Their visit was part of the Tennessee Education
Association’s annual two-day “Civication” event, which invites FTA members to
visit the state Capitol during spring break and learn about education
legislation. With MTSU on the way for several groups attending “Civication,” it
made sense to arrange an informational visit before a scheduled trip to
Legislative Plaza.
Jim
Rost, manager of student success and advising services for MTSU’s College of
Education, was among several campus leaders who spoke with the visitors. He
told the aspiring young educators that each will find a different, but
best-suited, path of teaching.
“I found my own calling, and I committed to serving
a different population (than a K-12 teacher): as an administrator and in
teaching higher education,” Rost said. “The best thing about my job is not the
paycheck. It’s the fact that I get to talk with people like you guys and
somehow have a positive impact on someone at the end of each day.”
Future Teachers of America helps prepare future
educators for the classroom as they become involved at the local, state and
national levels to advocate on behalf of children and public education. The
National Education Association chartered the first high school chapter in
Wyoming in 1936, and in only 15 years, the organization expanded nationwide to
include more than 1,200 high school and college chapters and 40,000-plus young
members.
You can learn more about MTSU’s College of
Education anytime at http://www.mtsu.edu/education.
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