Went to orientation last week with daughter. Dean of students spoke. Said MSU would have record enrollment for freshmen this year. MSU nation is growing.
Went to orientation last week with daughter. Dean of students spoke. Said MSU would have record enrollment for freshmen this year. MSU nation is growing.
I enrolled in 2012 and they told my freshman class the same thing. I worked the New Maroon camp for incoming freshman later in college and the year after the 2014 football season the out of state applicants was up 35% from previous years
Went to orientation last week with daughter. Dean of students spoke. Said MSU would have record enrollment for freshmen this year. MSU nation is growing.
That's a good thing. Are entrance standards higher than for in-state students? I have no problem with it if that's the case ... would improve our standards. And there's nothing wrong with giving them academic scholarships either if they deserve it.
This^^^^^^^^^^Dr. Jimmy Abraham always did an amazing job handling Orientation and Roadrunners recruiting, as well as the Alumni Delegates. I know many others were involved as well but Jimmy laid much of the groundwork for the growth today.
You'd probably have a lot of support for a statue of Dr Abraham somewhere on that campus.
Just about all schools in the SEC are setting attendance records year after year. Getting students isn't the hard part. It's having the facilities to accommodate.
How can we do this when we have that court ruling that essentially allows anyone to get in?We have to emphasize quality over quantity too. As far as I'm concerned, that cannot be overstressed.
I do not think that is true regarding out-of-state students. I thought you get half-off the out-of-state tuition. Still probably cheaper than most of the in-state schools in surrounding states.If you guys are all alumni, your kids will be eligible to attend as in-state students, no matter where you live. There are some academic restrictions there, and the student must maintain a 3.0 (from memory). Also, I believe they waive the out-of-state fees for children of veterans as well.
ETA: I looked it up, here you go:
Veteran, Service-Member, Dependent, Spouse, Non-Resident Tuition Waiver
Award: The difference between resident and non-resident tuition is waived for veterans, active duty service members and their dependents.
Also...
Non-Resident Academic Alumni Scholarship - Graduate students who are sons or daughters of an alumnus or alumna who earned a minimum of 48 semester hours of credit or a degree from Mississippi State University and who have not received other tuition waivers are eligible for a $6,000 award applied to their non-resident ...
How can we do this when we have that court ruling that essentially allows anyone to get in?
At this point I figure MSU needs to enroll as many as possible and try to keep growing. If you ask Dave Ramsey, where you receive your degree is meaningless. May as well get it as Mississippi State.
“...just OUR dumb” like the Ayers ruling.Ayers only applies to Mississippi residents
Went to orientation last week with daughter. Dean of students spoke. Said MSU would have record enrollment for freshmen this year. MSU nation is growing.
I do not think that is true regarding out-of-state students. I thought you get half-off the out-of-state tuition. Still probably cheaper than most of the in-state schools in surrounding states.
“...just OUR dumb” like the Ayers ruling.
I do not think that is true regarding out-of-state students. I thought you get half-off the out-of-state tuition. Still probably cheaper than most of the in-state schools in surrounding states.
There are basically no standards for Mississippi students thanks to the Ayers settlement, which dictated entry requirements to all eight Mississippi public institutions shall be the same. Essentially, if you have a 15 ACT and 2.5 GPA, MSU will admit. But they do not recruit this student, as school officials will tell you that student would be better served in one of Mississippi's community colleges to transition to senior university.
This is why MSU and UM have bumped up their out of state recruiting........... A) to grow bodies, which equal revenue and b) to grow quality. The state of Mississippi does not produce enough students to fully populate the 8 public schools, the private schools, and the 15 CJCs, and that is before we even talk to quality of student.
Not sure about the minimum requirements for entrance but I am pretty sure there was a minimum ACT score of 29 or something to get out of state tuition waived. I would assume most out of state people would not be too interested in paying that extra tuition so I would expect those people to be of that higher score range.
I had several folks from Alabama in my circle of peers but I don’t remember if there was a neighboring state waiver or if they all had the minimum ACT score, but I know none of them had to pay the out of state tuition.
I do not think that is true regarding out-of-state students. I thought you get half-off the out-of-state tuition. Still probably cheaper than most of the in-state schools in surrounding states.