MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — One of MTSU’s award-winning
professors is confident that the university’s newest 858 graduates can overcome
almost any challenge to reach their goals, thrive and help others if they “keep
moving forward.”
She has.
Speaking Saturday, Aug. 11, to the summer Class of 2018 commencement
ceremony in Murphy Center, professor Joey
Gray told the students and their supporters that she was a child mocked by
her classmates for having to announce every day that she received a “free
lunch,” an aspiring graduate student told that she couldn’t retake the
grad-school entrance exam to boost her score, and a doctoral degree candidate
told by a prospective program that she “wasn’t the kind of student they were
looking for.”
Now director of MTSU’s Leisure, Sport and Tourism Studies Program, an associate professor
in the Department of Health and Human
Performance in the College of
Behavioral and Health Sciences, and the outgoing president of the
university's Faculty Senate, Gray
self-deprecatingly used what she called her “alter ego, Dory, the fish from ‘Finding
Nemo,’” to encourage the new graduates to “keep moving forward.”
Gray said she had seven job interviews and a
Trustees’ Teaching Award from Indiana University by the time she earned her
doctorate. She accepted MTSU’s offer in 2006 and has built a life in Tennessee
that includes her career as a beloved student mentor and leader among her
colleagues, receiving the university’s 2017 Outstanding Teaching Award in part as thanks for her efforts.
“Like many of you all, I come from humble beginnings,”
Gray said, “but the one thing I had … was determination. When somebody told me
I couldn’t do something, I found a way to do it. … It doesn’t matter where you
started. What matters is what you do and the mark you leave on the earth.
“Don’t let people tell you what you can do. Keep
moving forward. … You’ll encounter some jerks along the way. Rise above them.
Know your strengths and weaknesses, and surround yourself with people who
complement both.”
University
Honors College Transfer Fellow Natalie Foulks of Knoxville, Tennessee, mirrors that determination
with her perfect 4.0 GPA. Foulks, who earned her bachelor’s degree summa cum
laude in speech-language pathology and audiology, said she looked forward to
“walking across the stage with all (16) of the girls in my major. We’ve all
gotten close.”
“It’s a way to celebrate all my hard work with
friends and family at the end of this journey,” added Foulks, who heads to graduate
school at East Tennessee State University in two weeks. “It’s bittersweet. I
hate to leave MTSU, but I’m excited to see what’s next.”
The university Registrar’s
Office reported that 858 students, including 646 undergraduates and 212
graduate students, from all nine of MTSU’s colleges — Graduate Studies, Basic and Applied Sciences, the Jones College of Business, Education,
Behavioral and Health Sciences, Liberal Arts, Media and Entertainment, the University College and the Honors
College — accepted their degrees in
the Aug. 11 event. The graduate recipients included 171 master’s degrees, 25
education-specialist degrees and 16 doctoral degrees.
An official program listing all the graduates is
available at http://ow.ly/cmkP30ld2uT.
MTSU President Sidney
A. McPhee told the crowd that if these grads follow the longstanding
pattern, most of the new alumni can be expected to remain in Tennessee.
“With an economic impact totaling more than $1.2
billion annually, MTSU creates more than $400 million in wages and salaries and
8,300 jobs, and … upon completing their degrees, almost 80 percent of our
graduates remain in Tennessee, helping build, and better, our quality of life,”
McPhee said of the university.
“Indeed, this institution and our graduates fuel
much of the prosperity we enjoy in our region and state. As proud as I am of
all that we represent at this university, I am even more proud to shake the
hands of these exceptional students and confer the degrees that they have
earned.”
MTSU graduation information is available anytime at
http://www.mtsunews.com/graduation-info.
The
university’s 2018-19 academic year begins Monday,
Aug. 27, with the first official day
of fall 2018 classes. University
Convocation, a public ceremony welcoming new freshmen into the MTSU family,
is set for Saturday, Aug. 25, at 5
p.m. in Murphy Center and will feature Bryan
Stevenson, author of MTSU’s Summer Reading Selection, “Just Mercy: A Story
of Justice and Redemption,” as guest speaker.
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