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Middle Tennessee State University

Middle Tennessee State University, founded September 11, 1911, is a university located in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. MTSU was originally known as the Middle Tennessee Normal School. The normal school became a state college in 1943 and officially became a university in 1965.

MTSU's tenth and current President is Sidney A. McPhee, Ph.D. He has served since 2001.

MTSU is a member of the Tennessee Board of Regents System, one of two higher education systems in Tennessee.

Originally known primarily for its Education and Nursing programs, MTSU has more recently gained notoriety for its outstanding Aerospace, Business, and Mass Communication/Recording Industry programs.

MTSU's easy access from Nashville and surrounding cities via Interstate 24 and State Route 840, coupled with its favorable enrollment standards, make it the largest university in the central third of the state and the single largest economic contributor in Murfreesboro.

Contents

Enrollment

As of Spring 2005, MTSU has the state's largest undergraduate student body with 20,279 students.

Beginning May 2005, MTSU will hold two graduation ceremonies each spring and autumn to accommodate the large number of graduates (average 1,600 per class) and their families wishing to attend. The ceremonies are held in the 10,000-seat Monte Hale Arena inside the Charles M. Murphy Athletic Center.

Much of the student body comes from within a 50 mile (80 km) radius of campus.

MTSU's focus in recent years has been on growth, but the university is quickly outgrowing its infrastructure. With the 2004 advent of the Tennessee Lottery (which provides college scholarships to Tennessee students attending in-state schools), more students than ever will have the financial resources to attend MTSU. The current administration seeks to curb growth by raising admission standards and delegating remedial study programs to 2-year community colleges within the Tennessee Board of Regents system.

Only 3,500 students (approximately 15% of enrollment) live in on-campus dormitories, though the landscape surrounding the university is littered with apartments marketed toward students. It is estimated another 35-40% of students rent residential space within the city of Murfreesboro.

Admission Standards

Guaranteed Admission

The majority of freshman applicants are admitted in the Standard Admission category. In addition to completion of the required high school courses, applicants must present one of the following:

  • a minimum 3.0 GPA
  • a minimum composite ACT of 22 (SAT of 1020)
  • a minimum 2.7 GPA and minimum ACT of 19 (SAT of 900)
  • satisfy the NCAA standards for student athletes who are qualifiers or partial qualifiers under Division I guidelines

Conditional Admission

Any student not meeting guaranteed admission requirements will be considered for conditional admission. The review will include all academic credentials as well as other special interests and skills, and other non-academic factors as explained on the Personal Statement Form. Students admitted in this category will be expected to:

  • remove high school deficiencies (if applicable) within the first 64 hours of enrollment
  • maintain academic good standing as defined by University retention standards
  • receive services from the University's Academic Support Center
  • enroll in University 1010 the first semester of enrollment

Academics

MTSU is divided into seven colleges:

  • College of Basic and Applied Sciences
  • College of Education and Behavioral Science
  • College of Graduate Studies
  • College of Liberal Arts
  • College of Mass Communication
  • Jennings A. Jones College of Business
  • University Honors College

Eight Bachelor degrees are offered:

  • Arts
  • Business Administration
  • Fine Arts
  • Music
  • Science
  • Science in Nursing
  • Social Work
  • University Studies

The College of Graduate Studies confers Master's degrees in nine areas, the Specialist in Education degree, and the Doctor of Arts degree.

MTSU's first Ph.D. was awarded in May 2003, though the university had awarded many Doctor of Arts degrees in the past.

MTSU employs approximately 800 full-time faculty members.

MTSU was founded on its education program, and it remains one of the highest-enrolled programs at the university. Nursing, another staple among Tennessee universities, was also a large part of MTSU's early identity. In recent years, MTSU has become known for its newer programs, including Aerospace, Journalism, Broadcasting, and Recording Industry.

The Department of Recording Industry (part of the College of Mass Communication, and commonly referred to by the acronym "RIM" for its former name "Recording Industry Management") is the university's most popular program. Due to the popularity of the program, students must apply for candidacy, which constitutes acceptance into the program. Before they can apply for candidacy, students must complete pre-requisite "core courses". Every semester a limited number of slots are opened for new candidates. Eighty-five percent of these slots are awarded on the basis of a score which is determed by a formula that considers cumulative GPA, the required mathematics course grade, the GPA from the core courses, and the total hours earned. This systems insures that the most highly motivated students enter the program, and confers a certain degree of exclusivity. Its close proximity to Nashville, a mecca for music recording, provides incredible resources for this outstanding department, which is regularly recognized as one of the best the nation has to offer.

The Department of Aerospace has a working agreement with the single-runway Murfreesboro Airport to provide many of its classes on-site. A retired 747 airliner is housed at the airport as a teaching tool. American Airlines has donated a state-of-the-art cockpit simulator to MTSU. It is housed in the Business & Aerospace Building near the center of campus.

MTSU classifies itself as a regional university, and primarily draws its student base from the areas surrounding Nashville and Murfreesboro. As the school has grown larger, its student base has expanded. The Aerospace and Recording Industry programs regularly draw students from outside the state of Tennessee. Most other programs primarily draw students from inside the state.

Campus information

  • 109 permanent buildings with 3.8 million square feet (353,000 m²) of space.
  • 466 acres (1.9 km²)
  • one mile (1.6 km) from the geographic center of Tennessee

The campus is 1.3 miles (2 km) east of downtown Murfreesboro. The oldest building on campus, Kirksey Old Main, lies at the north end of the original quadrangle. Flanking it to the west are Rutledge Hall, a dormitory, the James Union, and Lyon and Monohan Halls, which are also dorms. Flanking to the east are Jones Hall (now an office building), Todd Hall (the former library, which recently underwent renovations and is now home to the Art Department), Wiser-Patten Science Hall/Davis Science Building, and Smith, a men's dormitory. These are the key original buildings on campus and form its historic core. Between these buildings are Peck Hall, (English and History departments), Walnut Grove, and Cope Administration Building. Further east are newer additions, such as the Keathley University Center, Photography Building, Ned McWherter Learning Resources Center, John Bragg Mass Communications Building, James Walker University Library, Business and Aerospace Building, Campus Recreation Center, and the campus's newest building, the Paul W. Martin, Sr. Honors College. In the early 2000s, nine fraternities moved to the university's state-of-the-art Greek Row, located on the extreme eastern side of campus. Sorority Houses are prohibited per Tennessee state law. Sororities are given meeting rooms in campus buildings.

All buildings on campus are given 2, 3, or 4 letter abbreviations, which most people use to identify the buildings. For example, the Keathley University Center is better known as "The KUC". The Business and Aerospace Building is better known as "The BAS".

The campus takes the general shape of a square and is largely cut off to automobile traffic. Its borders, however, are defined by four heavily-traveled Murfreesboro thoroughfares:

  • On the west: North Tennessee Boulevard
  • On the south: East Main Street
  • On the east: North Rutherford Boulevard
  • On the north: Greenland Drive

Middle Tennessee State University has no auxiliary campuses, and aside from online courses, all classes are held either on-campus or at adequate facilities in the city of Murfreesboro.

MTSU is only a half-mile (800 m) east of the nearest hospital, privately-owned Middle Tennessee Medical Center, located on East Bell Street.

Athletics

Middle Tennessee State University's colors are Royal Blue (PMS Uncoated 300) and White. Its nickname is the Blue Raiders. Female teams are known as the Lady Raiders. The nickname's origin goes back to a 1934 newspaper contest. An MTSU football player, Charles Sarver, won $5 from The (Murfreesboro) Daily News Journal with his winning entry "Blue Raiders", which he later admitted borrowing from Colgate University, whose teams were known as "Red Raiders" at the time. No official nickname existed prior to 1934, when teams were called "Normalites," "Teachers," and "Pedagogues". Contrary to popular belief, the "Blue Raiders" nickname is not related to the American Civil War, in which Union soldiers, wearing blue, raided Murfreesboro, Tennessee in 1863.

MTSU athletic teams participate in NCAA Division I (I-A for football) in the Sun Belt Conference. MTSU competed in the Ohio Valley Conference until 2000.

MTSU's mascot is a pegasus named "Lightning". MTSU's original mascot was a student dressed as Ku Klux Klan founder and Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest. Due to sensitivities within the African-American community, the mascot was changed to a blue-colored scent hound dog named "Ole Blue" in the 1970s. The current "Lightning" mascot was adopted in 1998, when the athletics department updated its image in preparation for the 1999 move to Division I-A football and subsequent transfer to the Sun Belt Conference.

NCAA-sanctioned athletic teams include:

MEN:

WOMEN:

MTSU also fields teams in club sports such as rugby and ice hockey. These "club sports" are not sanctioned by the university, though each team does receive funding as a student organization. They are also authorized to use school logos, wordmarks, and identities. These teams do not compete at the NCAA level, though they do compete against other colleges and universities within unofficial intercollegiate organizations.

The university's main athletics building (which houses the basketball arena and athletic department offices and was built in 1973) is named in honor of Charles M. Murphy, standout MTSU athlete in the 1930s. The basketball arena is named in honor of local sports writer and broadcaster Monte Hale, though it is more commonly called "Murphy Center", the name of the building that houses it. The football stadium is named in honor of Johnny "Red" Floyd, former MTSU football coach.

The athletic facilities, including Murphy Center and Floyd Stadium, are located in the northwest corner of campus.

Murphy Center features an indoor track, and is regularly home to the Sun Belt Conference indoor track championships.

The university's athletic teams simply refer to the school as "Middle Tennessee" or "MT", abandoning the words "State University". This is being done in case the university changes its name to "University of Middle Tennessee", as has been long-rumored.

Floyd Stadium features 31,000 seats and an AstroTurf playing surface. The stadium has never been filled to capacity since its expansion (from 15,000 seats) in 1997.

Football and Men's basketball are broadcast on two flagship radio stations: university-owned 89.5 WMOT, and Salem Communications' 104.9 WBOZ. Women's basketball is broadcast on university-owned 88.3 WMTS.

MTSU's chief football rival are the University of North Texas Eagles. The chief basketball rival are the Western Kentucky University Hilltoppers.

MTSU has won only one national championship in a team sport: golf, 1965. However, seven individuals have won national championships. All were in golf or track. The most recent was in 2003.

In 2003-04 and 2004-05, the Lady Raiders basketball team won the Sun Belt Conference championship and was given a berth in the NCAA Women's Tournament. Each of those two years, the team was victorious in its first-round game, only to lose in the second round.


Distinguished alumni

Trivia

Alumni and boosters have repeatedly tried to change the university's name to the University of Middle Tennessee, but the request has been consistently rejected by the Tennessee Board of Regents. Though the official reason is not known, speculation centers on The University Of Tennessee's efforts to stop such a change, so "UMT" would not be confused as being a member of the UT system, the other higher education organization in Tennessee.

Middle Tennessee State University has its own zip code (Murfreesboro, TN 37132) and telephone prefix +1 615 898 ****

Parking is abundant on campus, but mostly lies on the outside perimeter. Parking is a constant gripe among students.

The university's newspaper is entitled "Sidelines"

MTSU holds the licenses to two FM radio stations:

  • 88.3 WMTS (680 W, typical student-programmed college radio station)
  • 89.5 WMOT (100 kW, professionally-programmed jazz station, home to MTSU athletics)

MTSU has been awarded Comcast Cable's channel 10, which has been named "MTTV", throughout Rutherford County and southeastern portions of Davidson County/Nashville for student-created programs and official university announcements.

Each year, the Tennessee high school football, basketball, and volleyball state championships are held at Floyd Stadium and Monte Hale Arena/Murphy Center.

Floyd Stadium, the university's football field, is thought to be the geographic center of Tennessee, though the official marker sits approximately a half-mile (800 m) north of the stadium on Old Lascassas Pike.

The three main roads through campus were named A Street, B Street, and C Street until 2001. Then they were renamed Alumni Avenue, Blue Raider Drive, and Champion Way in correlation with their original A, B, C names. Another road, Faulkinberry Drive, kept its original name.

Middle Tennessee State University has its own police force.

Middle Tennessee State University is a "dry campus", meaning alcoholic beverages are prohibited at all times. If a student is discovered to have alcohol on campus, he/she is fined, suspended, and possibly expelled.

Charles M. Murphy Athletic Center on the northwest corner of the MTSU campus was once the Nashville area's premier concert venue, hosting concerts from artists such as Elvis Presley, KISS, Elton John, and Garth Brooks. Murphy Center was the site of country/western duo The Judds' 1992 farewell concert.

MTSU won the highest-scoring NCAA Division I-A football game in history, 70-58 over the University of Idaho Vandals on October 6, 2001 at Floyd Stadium.

Contact information

Middle Tennessee State University

1301 East Main Street

Murfreesboro, TN 37132-0001

+1 615 898 2300

External links

  • http://www.mtsu.edu/ - official university site
  • http://www.goblueraiders.com/ - official athletics site
  • http://www.mtsusidelines.com/ - university newspaper
  • http://www.wmot.org/ - 89.5 WMOT, university radio station
  • http://www.mtsutv.org/ - MTTV, the university television station
Last updated: 05-21-2005 02:15:44