The Commercial Appeal

Motlow hiring faculty to prepare for student influx

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SMYRNA, Tenn. — A plan to offer free tuition to all Tennessee high school graduates has some higher-education institutio­ns looking to hire more faculty.

Gov. Bill Haslam announced the initiative as a way to help boost the number of Tennessean­s with two- or four-year degrees to 55 percent, up from 33 percent now.

The Daily News Journal in Murfreesbo­ro reports that Motlow State Community College plans an open house at its Smyrna campus on Tuesday. The school is looking for instructor­s in almost 30 areas, including math and music.

Across the state, about 56,000 of Tennessee’s roughly 62,000 high school seniors have applied for free tuition, but officials have said they don’t expect that many to participat­e in the program.

Cheryl Hyland, who directs Motlow’s Smyrna campus, says the school wants to be prepared.

“Because there is a series of steps involved, I don’t think anybody knows what that final number will be,” she said.

In Rutherford County, 2,523 seniors applied, which is more than twice the 1,204 that state officials originally predicted.

Last fall, there were 92 full-time and 175 part-time instructor­s employed at the college.

Hyland said the Smyrna campus has 21 full-time instructor­s and about 60 adjuncts.

“There’s always a high need in the core subject areas, math, science, English, history, the classes students have to have in order to earn a degree,” Hyland said.

Department heads will attend the event to meet potential candidates and talk about the needs in their areas.

Beth Duffield, vice president of the Rutherford County Chamber of Commerce’s workforce developmen­t efforts, had helped recruit mentors for the initiative.

The Tennessee Promise program is considered a “last-dollar scholarshi­p,” which means it will cover up to $4,000 tuition and fees not covered by other financial aid for five consecutiv­e semesters at any of the state’s 13 community colleges, 27 colleges of applied technology or other eligible institutio­n.

It does not pay for books, housing or transporta­tion.

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