2018-19 Academic Catalog

Introduction

This is an archived copy of the 2018-19 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.msstate.edu.

ONE-HUNDRED THIRTY-SIXTH ANNUAL BULLETIN
Volume XCIII

2018-2019

Mississippi State University is a comprehensive, doctoral degree granting, land-grant university. It forms part of a cohesive community with the growing city of Starkville, population 25,000. Located in the eastern part of north-central Mississippi, the university is 125 miles northeast of Jackson, 165 miles southeast of Memphis, and 150 miles west of Birmingham. It is served by U.S. Highway 82, state highways 12 and 25, and by commercial air service through Golden Triangle Regional Airport, 14 miles east of campus.

Mississippi State University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges to award baccalaureate, masters, specialist, and doctoral degrees. Contact the Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia 30033-4097 or call (404) 679-4500 for questions about the accreditation of Mississippi State University.

Mississippi State University comprises the following academic units: the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, including the School of Human Sciences; the College of Architecture, Art, and Design, including the School of Architecture; the College of Arts and Sciences; the College of Business, including the Richard C. Adkerson School of Accountancy; the James Worth Bagley College of Engineering, including the Swalm School of Chemical Engineering; the College of Forest Resources; the College of Veterinary Medicine; the College of Education; the Graduate School; the Judy and Bobby Shackouls Honors College; and the Center for Distance Education. Four regional research and extension centers representing both the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station (MAFES) and the Mississippi State University Extension Service are located in different parts of the state. MAFES conducts research at 16 off-campus sites throughout the state. The Mississippi State University Extension Service offers programs and services in all 82 counties of Mississippi. Supporting the academic and educational programs of the total university are the Mitchell Memorial Library and branch libraries.

Mississippi State University operates off-campus sites with undergraduate and graduate programs in Meridian, Miss., as well as the School of Architecture's fifth-year program in Jackson, Miss.

Several centers and institutes perform specialized teaching, research or service activities.  Among these are the Alliance for System Safety of UAS Through Research Excellence (ASSURE); Center for Cyber Innovation; Institute for Market Studies; Institute for Systems Engineering Research (ISER); Institute for Computational Research in Engineering and Science (ICRES); Center for Safety and Health; High Performance Computing Collaboratory; Mississippi State Chemical Lab (MSCL); National Strategic Planning and Analysis Research Center (nSPARC); Research and Curriculum Unit; Institute for Imaging and Analytical Technologies; Distributed Analytics and Security Institute;  Carl Small Town Center; Gulf Coast Community Design Studio; Biological and Physical Sciences Research Institute; Center for Computational Sciences; Cobb Institute of Archaeology; Institute for the Humanities; Stennis Institute of Government and Community Development; Center for Family Enterprise Research; Center for Entrepreneurship and Outreach; Center for Retail and Cotton Product Development; Center for Educational Partnerships; Early Childhood Institute; Mississippi Writing/Thinking Institute; National Research and Training Center on Blindness and Low Vision; T.K. Martin Center for Technology and Disability; Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems (CAVS) and CAVS Extension; Center for Computer Security Research (CCSR); High Voltage Laboratory; Institute for Clean Energy Technology (ICET); Raspet Flight Research Laboratory (RFRL); Forest and Wildlife Research Center; Franklin Furniture Institute; Extension Service; Center for Governmental and Community Development; Southern Rural Development Center;  Center for Environmental Health Sciences; Energy Institute; Geosystems Research Institute (GRI); Institute for Genomics, Biocomputing and Biotechnology (IGBB); International Institute; Mississippi Water Resources Research Institute; Northern Gulf Institute (NGI); Social Science Research Center (SSRC); and Sustainable Energy Research Center (SERC).

The grounds of the University are comprised of about 4,200 acres, including farms, pastures, and woodlands. The net investment in buildings and grounds is approximately $1 billion.

The university began as the Agricultural and Mechanical College of the State of Mississippi, one of the national land-grant colleges established after Congress passed the Morrill Act in 1862. It was created by the Mississippi Legislature on February 28, 1878, to fulfill the mission of offering training in agriculture, horticulture and the mechanical arts . . . without excluding other scientific and classical studies, including military tactics. The College received its first students in the fall of 1880 in the presidency of Stephen D. Lee. In 1887, Congress passed the Hatch Act, which provided for the establishment of the Agricultural Experiment Station in 1888. Two other pieces of federal legislation provided funds for extending the mission of the College: in 1914, the Smith-Lever Act called for instruction in practical agriculture and home economics to persons not attendant or resident, thus creating the state-wide effort which led to Extension offices in every county in the State; and, in 1917, the Smith-Hughes Act provided for the training of teachers in vocational education.

By 1932, when the Legislature renamed the College as Mississippi State College, it consisted of the Agricultural Experiment Station (1887), the College of Engineering (1902), the College of Agriculture (1903), the School of Industrial Pedagogy (1909), the School of General Science (1911), the College of Business and Industry (1915), the Mississippi Agricultural Extension Service (1915), and the Division of Continuing Education (1919). Further, in 1926 the College had received its first accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. By 1958, when the Legislature again renamed the institution, as Mississippi State University, the Office of the Graduate School had been organized (1936), doctoral degree programs had begun (1951), the School of Forest Resources had been established (1954), and the College of Arts and Sciences had been created (1956). The College of Architecture admitted its first students in 1973. The College of Veterinary Medicine admitted its first class in 1977, and the School of Accountancy was established in 1979.

Past Presidents of the College/University

  1. Stephen D. Lee (1880-1899)
  2. John Marshall Stone (1899-1900)
  3. John Crumpton Hardy (1900-1912)
  4. George Robert Hightower (1912-1916)
  5. William Hall Smith (1916-1920)
  6. David Carlisle Hull (1920-1925)
  7. Buz M. Walker (1925-1930)
  8. Hugh Critz (1930-1934)
  9. George Duke Humphrey (1934-1945) 
  10. Fred Tom Mitchell (1945-1953)
  11. Benjamin F. Hilbun (1953-1960)
  12. Dean W. Colvard (1960-1966)
  13. William L. Giles (1966-1976)
  14. James D. McComas (1976-1985)
  15. Donald W. Zacharias (1985-1997)
  16. Malcolm Portera (1998-2001)
  17. J. Charles Lee (2001-2006)
  18. Robert H. Foglesong (2006-2008)
     

Vision and Mission Statements

Vision

Mississippi State University will be a leading public research university that is globally aware and involved, accessible and responsive to the many constituencies it serves, and fully integrated with the intellectual, social, and economic development of the state, while delivering excellent programs of teaching, research, and service.

Mission

Mississippi State University is a public, land-grant university whose mission is to provide access and opportunity to students from all sectors of the states diverse population, as well as from other states and countries, and to offer excellent programs of teaching, research, and service.

Enhancing its historic strengths in agriculture, natural resources, engineering, mathematics, and natural and physical sciences, Mississippi State offers a comprehensive range of undergraduate and graduate programs; these include architecture, the fine arts, business, education, the humanities, the social and behavioral sciences, and veterinary medicine.

The university embraces its role as a major contributor to the economic development of the state through targeted research and the transfer of ideas and technology to the public, supported by faculty and staff relationships with industry, community organizations, and government entities.

Building on its land-grant tradition, Mississippi State strategically extends its resources and expertise throughout the entire state for the benefit of Mississippis citizens, offering access for working and place-bound adult learners through its Meridian Campus, Extension, and distance learning programs. Mississippi State is committed to its tradition of instilling among its students and alumni ideals of diversity, citizenship, leadership, and service.

President's Cabinet / Officers of the University

Name Title
MARK E. KEENUM, Ph.D. President of the University
JUDITH L. BONNER, Ph.D. Provost and Executive Vice President
GREGORY A. BOHACH, Ph.D. Vice President for Agriculture, Forestry, and Veterinary Medicine
REGINA Y. HYATT, Ph.D. Vice President for Student Affairs
JOHN P. RUSH Vice President for Development and Alumni
DAVID R. SHAW, Ph.D. Vice President for Research and Economic Development
AMY B. TUCK Vice President for Campus Services
DON A. ZANT Vice President for Finance and Chief Financial Officer
JOAN L. LUCAS General Counsel
RASHEDA BODDIE-FORBES Assistant Vice President for Multicultural Affairs
JOHN COHEN Director of Athletics

Academic Deans

Name Title
JUDITH L. BONNER, Ph.D. Provost and Executive Vice President
RICHARD L. BLACKBOURN, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Education
TERRY D. CRUSE, Ph.D. Administrative Director and Head of Campus, MSU-Meridian
PETER L. RYAN, Ph.D. Interim Dean of the Graduate School
FRANCES N. COLEMAN, M.L.S. Dean of Libraries
RICKEY TRAVIS, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences
KENT H. HOBLET, D.V.M. Dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine
GEORGE M. HOPPER, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Forest Resources and Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
JASON M KEITH, Ph.D. Dean of the Bagley College of Engineering
SHARON L. OSWALD, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Business
CHRISTOPHER A. SNYDER, Ph.D. Dean of the Shackouls Honors College
JAMES L. WEST, M.Arch. Dean of the College of Architecture, Art and Design

Board of Trustees of State Institutions of Higher Learning

State of Mississippi

Officers of the Board

Name Title
SHANE HOOPER President
ALFRED RANKINS, JR Commissioner

Board Members

STEVEN CUNNINGHAM
THOMAS DUFF
BRADFORD JOHNSON DYE, III
ANN H. LAMAR
JEANNE CARTER LUCKEY
BRUCE MARTIN
ALFRED MCNAIR, JR.
EDDIE (CHIP) MORGAN, JR.
GEE OGLETREE
HAL PARKER
JOHN W. (WALT) STARR

The Board maintains offices at 3825 Ridgewood Road, Jackson, Mississippi.