MTSU Trustees approve flat tuition, fees for new academic year.
Education June 17, 2020 Daniel Prince
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Middle Tennessee State University’s Board of Trustees made it official Tuesday: No increase in tuition or fees for the 2020-21 academic year.
Trustee Joey Jacobs, chair of the board’s Finance and Personnel Committee, put forward the recommendation by President Sidney A. McPhee to hold flat tuition and fees for undergraduate and graduate students. The board accepted the measure unanimously.
McPhee announced May 1 that his administration would not seek an increase in tuition and fees for the coming academic year, saying “we must do what we can to help our students and their families come to terms with the economic impact caused by COVID-19.”
That same day, Board Chairman Stephen B. Smith signaled his support of the proposal. “I fully support the tremendous efforts by the president and his team in keeping MTSU focused on the future during this crisis,” Smith said May 1.
MTSU’s tuition and fees remain the lowest among the state’s three largest public universities, including the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and the University of Memphis, Jacobs said.
The board, which convened virtually due to COVID-19 precautions, also:
- Approved 24 candidates for tenure and 49 faculty candidates for promotion, as recommended by the Academic Affairs, Student Life and Athletics Committee;
- Changed the degree designation for the Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training to Master of Science in Athletic Training, as recommended by the Academic Affairs, Student Life and Athletics Committee;
- Recommended the university begin to pursue with the state in 2021-22 a new building for Applied Engineering’s popular Mechatronics Engineering and Engineering Technology degree programs;
- And approved converting the graduate tuition set through corporate partnerships to the in-state tuition rate, as recommended by the Finance and Personnel Committee.
Finally, the board approved Delanie McDonald of Carthage, Tennessee, for a one-year term as student trustee, beginning July 1, replacing Samantha Eisenberg.
McDonald, who earned her undergraduate degree from MTSU in May, is the current student government president, a Buchanan Fellow and a Blue Elite tour guide. She begins pursuit of her master’s degree in higher education administration and supervision at MTSU this fall.
Both Smith and McPhee thanked Eisenberg for her service to the board and welcomed McDonald to her new role.