Sometimes you think you know,
but you
don't.
As a professional journalist working in the middle Tennessee market
for more than nine years, I had plenty of opportunity to cover
Middle Tennessee State University. As editor of
BusinessTN magazine—the only statewide business and
public affairs magazine in Tennessee—and its successor,
Nashville Post , I covered aspects of the University
ranging from its strong business and educational ties to China to
its signature recording industry, aerospace, and concrete
management programs. I considered myself more aware than most of
MTSU's value to the area, whether through economic impact or
in its role as an institution of higher education.
In retrospect, I had no idea how significant MTSU was to the local
market area—and specifically to the business community. MTSU
is roughly the size of Vanderbilt, Tennessee State, Belmont, Fisk,
and Lipscomb universities combined. It produces more graduates for
Nashville's workforce than those other five institutions put
together. And to top it off, MTSU students actually stay and work
in the middle Tennessee market at a much higher rate than graduates
of the other schools.
In Rutherford County—in recent years, a national leader in
job growth—MTSU is a linchpin of economic and cultural
vibrancy. A good-sized city each day during the school year, the
county's second-largest employer also plays an integral role
in the quality of life in Murfreesboro.
MTSU's future promises to be just as impressive—if not
more so—than its past. From bringing new buildings online to
growing important new Ph.D. programs to the exciting research being
conducted by its faculty,
MTSU is a university on the move
. Even amid budget cutbacks, MTSU's momentum has not
stalled.
My first few months as the University's new senior editor for
University publications opened my eyes to the richness of academic
and social life here at MTSU. The stories in this edition represent
some of those findings. In preparing this inaugural edition,
I've also discovered what many have known for a long
time—MTSU is the best-performing university in all of
Tennessee. Among all TBR schools, MTSU's graduation rate
ranks second—even though the University boasts the largest
undergraduate enrollment in the state at more than 26,000 students.
This has been accomplished despite the fact that the amount of
taxpayer funds appropriated to MTSU during the 2009-2010
fiscal year was almost half that of UT-Knoxville. The bottom
line? MTSU lives up to the hype as "Tennessee's
Best"; performing university.
Sometimes you think you know, but you don't—and then
you learn.
MTSU