MURFREESBORO, Tenn. —MTSU’s1,731 newest graduatesare out in the world and ready to use their education after receiving their degrees — and words of encouragement from enthusiastic guest speakers — in the university’s fall 2018 commencementceremonies Saturday, Dec. 15, in Murphy Center.
Wanda Lyle, managing director of UBS AG and general manager of the UBS Business Solutions Center in Nashville, urged students at MTSU’s morning graduation ceremony to recall the adage “education is a gift.”
“It’s true, but your education is yours, your accomplishment, that you own, and you will define how best to use it,” she said. "The opportunity to earn your college degree is surely a gift, but successfully completing your education is not.
“It's the product of your hard work. Youdid that. You own it. Be proud of what you have accomplished; no one can ever take your education or the confidence and skills and what you’ve gained from it away from you.”
Alumna and WSMV-Channel 4 news anchor and journalist Holly Thompson reminded her fellow Blue Raiders at the afternoon commencement to hold fast to their principles and have faith in their abilities.
“You are paving your own way, forging your own path,” she said. “At some point, you will face conflict. You will face fear. You will hear naysayers doubt you, maybe even ridicule you and try to quench your fire and your passion.
“No matter the challenge, know this: You can do it.”
Graduating summa cum laude from the College of Education, senior Elleana Sissomof Readyville, Tennessee, said obtaining her bachelor’s degree in early childhood education felt “more real now.”
“My two years at MTSU have been fantastic. I love MTSU and probably will be back getting my master’s some time soon,” the Motlow State Community College transfer said, adding that a job with Cannon County Schools’ Woodland Elementary School awaits her.
“My professors have been wonderful, and my supervisor has been great.”
Integrated studies major BryTavious Chambersof Memphis, who graduated from MTSU’s University Collegethe same month a rap single he produced went double platinum and No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and was nominated for two Grammy Awards, said he was glad he’d chosen MTSU for his education.
“I learned so much academically and personally while being here at MTSU,” Chambers, known professionally as“Tay Keith,”said. “I enjoyed my four years here, and I appreciate all of the support I received from the community while in school.”
Chambers produced rap superstar Travis Scott’s No. 1 track, “SICKO MODE” with Drake, Big Hawk and Swae Lee, which was nominated for the best rap performance and best rap song Grammys and is part of Scott’s also-nominated No. 1 “Astroworld” album.
In his senior year alone, besides the double-platinum “SICKO MODE,” Chambers produced nearly a dozen hot tracks for both renowned artists and newcomers, including DJ BlocBoy JB’s triple-platinum “Look Alive"; Drake's “Nonstop,” which peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard charts; Lil Wayne's "Hasta La Vista"; and Eminem's "Not Alike."
MTSU President Sidney A. McPheeencouraged the new graduates to “bask in the glory that surrounds this day” but reminded them that it’s also a starting point for their next adventures.
"This is indeed a day of celebration for all of us,” McPhee said. "You may feel that this long journey is over; we feel that it is just a comma, not a period, in your story. It is the beginning of even greater things to come."
U.S. Army veteran Jay Strobino received his degree in exercise science from the College of Behavioral and Health Sciences in the afternoon ceremony, still clearly humbled by recent on-campus recognition. The Silver Star recipient, shot 13 times during one-on-one combat in Iraq in 2006, received a special student veteran’s award and a standing ovation at the university’s recent Board of Trustees meeting.
Strobino, now living in Nashville, was effusive in his praise of the MTSU Charlie and Hazel Daniels Veterans and Military Family Center. He paused his academic journey in 2013, and the organization helped him recognize that he’d already earned enough college credits for a degree.
On Saturday, the Connecticut native celebrated his new degree with his wife and kids, as well as his parents, who flew in for a ceremony that was delayed for five years and crystalized in just a few months.
“It’s surreal,” Strobino said, mortarboard in hand, donning a gown draped with one of the special red stoles for graduating MTSU student veterans.
“I’m blown away with the entire process that the Daniels Center has now. It’s literally veterans helping veterans and bringing them together.”
Strobino said his plan now “is to not stop.” He is strongly considering pursuing a master’s degree at MTSU.
Of the 1,731 students receiving degrees Saturday, 1,471 were undergraduates and 260 were graduate students. The latter number included 248 master’s recipients, one education-specialist degree recipient and 11 doctoral degrees.
Two graduate students and 19 undergraduates also received certificates for their advanced study.
An official program listing all the fall 2018 graduates is available at http://ow.ly/r08R30mTsEN. More photos are in albums on the university’s Facebook page, http://facebook.com/mtsublueraiders.
Graduation information — including links to maps and driving directions to MTSU, cap-and-gown information, official photographs and contacts for the Registrar’s Office — is available anytime at http://www.mtsunews.com/graduation-info.
The university will be closed for winter break Dec. 24-Jan. 1, and offices will reopen Wednesday, Jan. 2. MTSU’s spring 2019 semester classes will begin Monday, Jan. 14.
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