MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — MTSU and Blackman High School marked another milestone in its
unique partnership with a special ceremony for a group of students enrolled in
the Collegiate Academy at the Murfreesboro high school.
Held in
the BHS Auditorium Tuesday evening, the third annual Pinning Ceremony
celebrated almost 100 students, primarily sophomores, who had successfully
completed a year of the academy while also introducing 60 academy seniors who
are working on capstone research projects to complete the college preparatory
program.
Launched
in 2015, the Blackman Collegiate Academy includes a special
partnership between MTSU and Blackman that allows eligible juniors and seniors
to take up to six hours of university courses taught at Blackman by MTSU
instructors at no cost. The credits will count on high school and college
transcripts.
MTSU
Provost Mark Byrnes, keynote speaker for the event, applauded the students for
accepting the academic challenge the academy presents and thanked Blackman for
allowing the university to sign on as a partner.
“In
return what we hope is that you take a very close look at MTSU as your home for
college,” said Byrnes, an MTSU alumnus himself. “Any group of students willing
to go the extra mile … and do the extra work that is required at this academy,
it tells me that you’re smart, you’re determined and you’ll do well in
college.”
Byrnes
noted that he was “a Murfreesboro kid” who like many others at that time didn’t
initially consider attending MTSU because of its close proximity, but also like
many others came to discover that he could have every sort of college
experience at MTSU “just like everywhere else.”
He
encouraged students to register for and attend the upcoming Nov. 4 Preview Day
on campus when they take tours given by student guides, learn about
departments, programs and student organizations, and meet faculty and staff
from academic areas and the MTSU Division of Student Affairs.
Blackman
High Principal Leisa Justus and Assistant Principal Ken Reed, Collegiate
Academy coordinator, thanked the many parents in attendance for supporting
students “who’ve chosen to challenge themselves to do more.”
“This
academy is going to open doors for these students, we can guarantee you that,”
Justus said.
Before
administrators presented the underclassmen with their special pins, this year’s
Collegiate Academy seniors introduced themselves and shared the wide variety of
research topics underway, ranging from childhood obesity to social media use
and from animal abuse to green energy.
BHS
senior Amyia Davis drew applause from the attendees when she noted that the
current senior class of the academy had taken more than 1,210 advanced courses,
had an average GPA of 3.78 and an average ACT score of 27.75.
For more
information about the Blackman Collegiate Academy, visit http://bhs.rcschools.net and click on the
“Academics” tab.
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