As fall semester quickly approaches, Middle Tennessee State University has not
only been welcoming the newest crop of incoming Blue Raider freshmen but also
those already in the midst of their higher ed journey who are transferring to
the Murfreesboro campus this year.
Coordinated by the Office
of New Student and Family Programs, CUSTOMS helps new freshmen and new
transfers learn what it’s like being an MTSU student. It helps ease the
transition into the university, prepares them for educational
opportunities and introduces them to the intellectual, cultural and social
climate of the university.
For transfer students, orientation starts as
early as April and sessions are held throughout the summer, wrapping up this
week.
“I just feel like I’ll have more opportunities
to network here,” said Diamon Williams,
a transfer student from Memphis, Tennessee, attending the final summer transfer
orientation this week. Williams, who will continue pursuing his psychology
major as a junior this fall, said came to MTSU to be closer to family and has a
brother who is already a Blue Raider.
Transfer students started off the morning with
check in at the Student Union Building before participating in various
activities throughout the day such as residence hall tours, getting their Blue
Raider ID’s made, getting schedules for fall semester, and a receiving a formal
welcome from MTSU’s administration.
Students split into different groups,
accompanied by a Student Orientation
Assistant, or SOA, to guide them throughout campus.
“So far, people (have been) real cool and nice,”
said rising junior physical education major Marcus McCulley of Nashville, Tennessee. McCulley also has a
sibling who attends MTSU and even ran into someone in his CUSTOMS group that he
knew from home.
Sarah
Lindley, a rising senior majoring in community and public
health, went to the same high school as McCulley and noted how the size of the Blue
Raider campus was a bit “overwhelming.”
And just as the transfer students learned new
things about campus, so do those SOAs who guide them to areas of campus they
too may not be familiar with.
“One thing you learn with this job is to go with
the flow,” said SOA Madison Oler, a
recording industry major serving as a student guide for another year.
Fellow SOA Alexandria
Revor, a senior exercise science major, worked CUSTOMS for the first time
this year and “learned a lot about campus,” she said, bragging that being an
SOA “doesn’t even feel like a job” and has helped hone her people skills.
“You get people from all over with different
personalities,” she said.
For more about CUSTOMS
for transfers, including schedules, cost and more, visit www.mtsu.edu/customs/transfer or call 615-898-5533.
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