Minnesota State University Moorhead

Minnesota State University Moorhead
Motto Sacrifice, Service, Loyalty
Type Public
Established 1887
Parent institution
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities System
Endowment $15.6 million [1]
President Anne E. Blackhurst
Provost Joseph Bessie
Administrative staff
266
Students 8,140[2]
Undergraduates 7,568
Postgraduates 572
Location Moorhead, Minnesota, U.S.
Campus Suburban
140 acres (57 ha)
Colors Red, White, and Grey[3]
              
Nickname Dragons
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IINSIC
Website www.mnstate.edu

Minnesota State University Moorhead (MSUM) is a four-year, public university located in Moorhead, Minnesota. The school has an enrollment of 6,624 students and 266 full-time faculty members. MSUM is a part of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities (MnSCU) system. MSUM is located on the western border of Minnesota on the Red River of the North in Moorhead; across the river lies Fargo, North Dakota.

History

The plans for what would become MSUM were laid down in 1885, when the Minnesota State Legislature passed a bill declaring the need for a new state normal school in the Red River Valley, with an eye on Moorhead. The State Senator who proposed the bill, State Senator Solomon Comstock, donated 6 acres (2.4 ha) and appropriated the funds that would go to form Moorhead Normal School, which opened in 1888. In 1921, the State authorized the school to offer the four-year Bachelor of Science degree in Education in order to satisfy the need for high school teachers in northwest Minnesota, and the school became Moorhead State Teachers College.

With the entrance of World War II, the college entered into a contract with the Army Air Corps to train aviation students. After World War II, enrollment swelled to more than 700 students and the school diversified and broadened into both a liberal arts and professional curriculum. The school began offering a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1946 and graduate programs by 1953. As a result of the broadened offerings, by 1957 the name was changed to Moorhead State College. In 1969, the school joined a cooperative cross-registration exchange with neighboring Concordia College and North Dakota State University, creating the Tri-College University. The school continued to increase its number of programs and by 1975, the State Legislature that year granted the school university status under the name Moorhead State University. In 1995, Moorhead State became part of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities (MnSCU) system. On July 1, 2000, the school officially became Minnesota State University Moorhead.

Minnesota State University Moorhead was rated the 18th top liberal arts college in the midwest by TIME magazine in 2008.

Name changes

Lommen Hall, home to Elementary & Early Childhood Education, the Secondary Education, and the Special Education departments.

Presidents of MSUM

  • 1888–1899 Livingston C. Lord
  • 1899–1919 Frank A. Weld
  • 1919–1923 Oliver Dickerson
  • 1923–1941 Ray MacLean
  • 1941–1955 Otto W. Snarr
  • 1955–1958 A.L. Knoblauch
  • 1958–1968 John Neumaier
  • 1968–1994 Roland Dille
  • 1994–2008 Roland Barden
  • 2008–2014 Edna Mora Szymanski
  • 2014–present Anne E. Blackhurst

Academic programs

University rankings
National
Forbes[4] RNP
Regional
U.S. News & World Report[5] 115
Master's University class
Washington Monthly[6] 328
Weld Hall, the oldest building on campus.

MSUM offers 76 undergraduate majors with 99 emphases and 14 graduate degree programs. MSUM's colleges: the College of Arts, Media and Communication; the College of Business and Innovation; the College of Education and Human Services; the College of Humanities and Social Sciences; and the College of Science, Health and the Environment.

MSUM is accredited by 14 national accrediting and certification agencies, including the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools.[7] The MSUM School of Business is fully accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business International (AACSB).[8]

The Nursing program is accredited at both the baccalaureate (BSN) and master’s (MS in nursing) levels by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE). Additional areas of accreditation include: Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences; Athletic Training; and Teacher Education.[9]

MSUM also collaborates with Concordia College and North Dakota State University on a Tri-College University program that offers students the chance to take courses between the three campuses that can be credited toward their degree.

Athletics

Minnesota State University Moorhead teams participate as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's NCAA Division II. The Dragons are a member of the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference (NSIC). The MSUM athletic teams are called the Dragons.

MSUM has a wide variety of intramural sports including flag football, softball, and soccer. Club teams are also available for men's and women's rugby, men's and women's lacrosse, and baseball which compete nationally.

Study abroad programs

MSUM maintains a large number of study abroad programs throughout the world. Programs organic to MSUM include the following:

Asia

Australia

Europe

Publications

MSUM operates the New Rivers Press, a nonprofit literary press founded in 1968.

The campus newspaper is The Advocate, formerlyThe MiSTiC. The MiSTiC was closed by university administration in 1970.[10]

The school also publishes a literary magazine, Red Weather,[11] with the support of the English Department. The yearly publication is a journal of prose, poetry, interviews, photography and art by current undergraduates and graduate students, faculty, staff, and alumni.

Students produce a weekly open-submission literary journal entitled The Yellow Bicycle, a collection of poetry, prose, essays, and reviews.[12]

MSUM produces a daily faculty/staff email newsletter called Dragon Digest[13] and a twice a year publication for its alumni and friends titled Moorhead Magazine.[14]

Dragon Radio

The school's college radio station is KMSC, which airs on AM 1500. KMSC is a student organization that has been set up to run as a Non-profit Educational radio station and serves as an in-house learning facility.[15]

Notable events

MSUM sponsors a Student Academic Conference annually. The Student Academic Conference provides student researchers from each of its colleges with the opportunity to present their work to faculty, administration, peers, and the general public in a formal academic setting.[16] The conference was first offered in 1998.[17]

The conference provides a formal setting for upper class students to present their research from classes required under their major. There is a possibility of the student's research being published or presented at a state, regional, or national conference. The Student Academic Conference is a great opportunity for students and MSUM to gain recognition on a larger scale.

Any major or discipline can present at the conference as long as it abides by conference rules based on which forum the student chooses to present the research. There is an option to orally present using visual aids, Powerpoint, etc..., or the student can construct a poster board displaying key points and results to be presented in a more informal manner taking questions and inquiries from onlookers.

The conference is kicked off by a luncheon for all the participants. For some majors, presenting at the conference is mandatory in which the student presents their discipline's research from their senior seminar or thesis class.

Notable alumni

Notable faculty

CASE Carnegie Foundation Award winners

Minnesota State University Moorhead professors have been recognized with more CASE Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching Professors of the Year designations than any college or university, public or private, in Minnesota, the Dakotas, Iowa, or Wisconsin. One professor has earned CASE Carnegie United States Professor of the Year designation and eleven professors have earned designation as CASE Carnegie Minnesota Professor of the Year.[21][22]

See also

Coordinates: 46°51′59″N 96°45′43″W / 46.8663522°N 96.7620251°W / 46.8663522; -96.7620251[23]

References

  1. http://www.prairiebizmag.com/event/article/id/22774/%5B%5D
  2. "MnSCU Viewbook 2014" (PDF). Minnesota State Colleges and Universities. Retrieved 2015-07-28.
  3. MSUM Visual Identity Guidelines by MSU Moorhead. Retrieved 2016-09-26.
  4. "America's Top Colleges". Forbes. July 5, 2016.
  5. "Best Colleges 2017: Regional Universities Rankings". U.S. News & World Report. September 12, 2016.
  6. "2016 Rankings - National Universities - Masters". Washington Monthly. Retrieved September 6, 2016.
  7. "The Bulletin 2011‐2012: Accreditation/Certification. Minnesota State University Moorhead. 2011.
  8. Ponzillo, Amy. "Minnesota State University, Moorhead Earns AACSB International Accreditation." AACSB International News Release. 2010-01-07.
  9. Minnesota State University Moorhead. 2013.
  10. Shafer, Richard. "Spinning the Zip to Zap: Student Journalist Responsibility and Vulnerability in the Late 1960s." North Dakota Journal of Speech & Theatre. 2000.
  11. Red Weather. Minnesota State University Moorhead, Department of English.
  12. The Yellow Bicycle: an Open-Submission Weekly Literary Journal for MSU Moorhead.
  13. Continews. Archived 2011-08-23 at the Wayback Machine. Minnesota State University Moorhead.
  14. Alumnews. Minnesota State University Moorhead Alumni Foundation.
  15. KMSC Dragon Radio: About.
  16. "Student Academic Conference 2011." Minnesota State University Moorhead. 2011-04-19.
  17. "Student Academic Conference: History." Minnesota State University Moorhead. 2011-04-19.
  18. http://www.nba.com/coachfile/david_joerger/index.html?nav=page
  19. "Chris Tuchscherer MMA Bio". Retrieved 2016-09-26.
  20. Mostert, Mark P. "Mark P. Mostert Vita" (PDF). Regent University. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  21. "U.S. Professors of the Year." Archived 2012-03-20 at the Wayback Machine. Council for the Advancement and Support of Education. Accessed 2011-08-31.
  22. Johnson, Jessie. "Dragons on Fire." OPEN Magazine, pp. 48–53, Fall 2009.
  23. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Minnesota State University - Moorhead
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