1,750-plus MTSU grads will celebrate new degrees at Dec. 14 commencement

Dec 06, 2019 at 09:04 am by Unknown


MURFREESBORO, Tenn. -- More than 1,750 MTSU students are preparing to take on the world with hard-earned degrees in hand after the university's fall 2019 commencement ceremonies, set next Saturday, Dec. 14, in Hale Arena inside Murphy Center.

in the College of Graduate Studies, College of Basic and Applied Sciences, the Jones College of Business and the College of Education.

Belle Wheelan, president and chief executive officer of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, will speak at the afternoon ceremony, set for 1:30 p.m. for graduates in the College of Behavioral and Health Sciences, College of Liberal Arts, College of Media and Entertainment and the University College.

The university will provide closed-captioning services for the live video streams as well as American Sign Language interpretation on-site at the ceremonies.

The university Registrar's Office reports that 1,753 students are preparing to graduate from MTSU this fall, including 1,505 undergraduates and 248 graduate students. The latter number includes 228 master's candidates, six education-specialist degree recipients and 14 doctoral candidates.

Three graduate students and 12 undergraduates also will receive certificates for their advanced study.

An official program listing MTSU's fall 2019 graduates is available at http://ow.ly/Rx8X30pZ5Df.

MTSU's commencement ceremonies are always free and open to the public. A special map with parking and shuttle information for commencement day is available at http://ow.ly/Zagy30pZoBI, and a seating chart of Murphy Center, including access for guests who use wheelchairs or have other mobility issues, is available at http://ow.ly/XLEX30pZ5s8.

Morning speaker Young, who attended MTSU in 2005, so far has sold 12 million singles and has released 11 No. 1 singles and 17 RIAA-certified gold, platinum and multiplatinum projects. His work also has earned multiple Grammy, Country Music Association and Academy of Country Music nominations.

His hits include "Hangin' On," his ninth No. 1 as a songwriter; the platinum-selling "Losing Sleep," the first in a string of back-to-back No. 1 songs; and "I'm Comin' Over," his first double-platinum single.

Young, who was a competitor in MTSU's annual "Invention Convention" as a youngster and returned as its headline speaker in 2008, has long maintained his ties to the university. He donated a selection of his touring audio equipment in 2012 to be used for event production services and created an annual scholarship for recording industry students in 2016.

Earlier this year, the university announced that it would name a renovated entertainment venue on campus for the Murfreesboro native to recognize his continued support for MTSU.

Afternoon speaker Wheelan, whose career in education spans more than 40 years, is the first woman and the first African American person to lead the Southern Association's Commission. She's served as a faculty member, university provost, community college president and the secretary of education for the Commonwealth of Virginia, to name only a few of her roles.

She is an alumna of Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, where she earned her bachelor's degree with dual majors in psychology and sociology; Louisiana State University, where she received a master's degree in developmental educational psychology; and the University of Texas, where she earned her doctorate in educational administration.

Wheelan's lengthy list of career accolades includes six honorary degrees; Distinguished Graduate Awards from Trinity University and the University of Texas College of Education; inclusion in Washingtonian Magazine's "100 Most Powerful Women in Washington, D.C." list; the American Association of University Women's Woman of Distinction Award; and the John Hope Franklin Award from Diverse: Issues in Higher Education magazine for outstanding leadership in higher education.

Her extensive memberships include Rotary International and the boards of directors for the American Association of Community Colleges and American College Testing Inc. She also was an appointee to the President's Round Table of the National Council on Black American Affairs and the National Society of Collegiate Scholars' Community College Honorary Board.

University officials are urging guests to arrive early to ease traffic congestion around Murphy Center and help ensure comfortable seating for everyone inside Hale Arena. Driving directions are available at http://mtsunews.com/graduation-info.

Graduation information -- including links to maps and driving directions to MTSU, cap-and-gown information, official photographs and contacts for the Registrar's Office -- also is available anytime at http://mtsunews.com/graduation-info.

The university will be closed for winter break Dec. 24-Jan. 1, and offices will reopen Thursday, Jan. 2. MTSU's spring 2020 semester classes will begin Tuesday, Jan. 21.

ONLINE:

Friends, families and supporters who can't attend in person can watch the Dec. 14 ceremonies live online at two sites: http://facebook.com/mtsublueraiders or http://www.mtsu.edu/live.

Live coverage will begin about 15 minutes before each ceremony starts. Each ceremony should last around two hours.

Sections: News



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