MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Middle Tennessee State University students and School of Agriculture Fermentation Science faculty will be involved with the annual Grape Harvest Day, from 7 to 11 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 9, at Lane Agri-Park, 315 John R. Rice Blvd, in Murfreesboro.
Open to the public, volunteers can learn from Rutherford County master gardeners how to harvest grapes at the Lane Agri-Park vineyard. An MTSU destemmer/crusher and press will be onsite. Participants are a .
(MURFREESBORO) Several thousand Middle Tennessee State University students converged on the Student Union Commons for two days, meeting local businesses, church and religious organizations and restaurants — some seeking full- and part-time employees and some offering donut holes and other goodies.
The new and returning students, plus MTSU staff, met 55 vendors attending “Meet Murfreesboro Tuesday and Wednesday, Aug. 29-30, on the east side of campus.
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MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Middle Tennessee State University Computer Science and Data Science students were not only creating games and dabbling with virtual reality and artificial intelligence at this year’s HackMT event, but also networking and establishing relationships with, hopefully, potential employers.
Joined by representatives from industry partners, MTSU students on 10 teams spent 36 nonstop hours creating apps and more during the annual HackMT and pro .
A Murfreesboro couple with plans to get married soon say it's a miracle they are alive after managing to escape their burning car following a hit-and-run.
MTSU program aims to lower cost of textbooks
Students pay as much as $1500 a year for textbooks
Grant money is helping MTSU ramp up a program that could save students as much as $1,500 a year on textbooks.
and last updated 2021-02-22 23:52:18-05
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. (WTVF) â A new program at Middle Tennessee State University aims to counteract the rising cost of textbooks, by saving students money.
The university received $100,000 in grant money from the Tennessee Board of Regents at the end of last year to support the use of more Open Educational Resources (OER).
Instead of using traditional textbooks, OER allow faculty members to publish information required for courses in an open format. This allows students to use, re-use and download the information. The resources can be accessed online for free, or printed at a significantly lower cost than a standard textbook.