MTSU boasts first accredited Tourism and Hospitality program of its kind in state

Jack Daniel’s Brand Ambassador Brandi Smith speaks to visitors on the distillery tour path. Local students who want to follow in her shoes now have an accredited hospitality degree path at MTSU. {Photo Courtesy of The Jack Daniel Distillery}

MURFREESBORO — Local students who are interested in the tourism industry and want to keep their talent close to home got some good news this week. Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU) announced this week the accreditation of the Tourism and Hospitality Management program — the first and only of its kind in the state.

Five years after launching, MTSU’s Tourism and Hospitality Management program has been designated as the first and only accredited hospitality degree program in the state.

Providing students with real-world experience as they pursue their degree, the Department of Health and Human Performance major is designed to prepare students for lifelong careers in food and beverage services, hotels, resorts, entertainment venues, festivals, travel agencies and more.

“We are training future leaders for the industry — that next level up,” said associate professor Elizabeth Whalen, program coordinator of Tourism and Hospitality Management. “We are teaching best practices. We are teaching management skills. We are teaching accounting and finance, marketing principles.”

The MTSU program — which earned the designation from the Accreditation Commission for Programs in Hospitality Administration in late spring — has been a work in progress to fit the ever-evolving industry.

Students are required to work in the tourism, hospitality and events industry as part of coursework, logging at least 300 hours in two different semesters — which averages about 20 hours a week — at two different organizations that apply to course credits.

“Students don’t realize how much the industry offers and how many opportunities are available,” said Whalen, who took the helm of the program in 2020. “I have a student graduating at 23 who is getting a job as a regional manager, and you can’t do that without a degree.”

MTSU’s tourism and hospitality degree track started in 2019 and grew out of what was leisure sports management with the tourism focus added. There was a lot of overlap in both degree pathways.

But over the past four years, the curriculum has changed and then the programs separated to have three major areas of focus: tourism, hospitality and event planning, Whalen explained.

Degree paths give direction to students

With tourism, assistant professor Karen Tan teaches students about managing a destination, policymaking and infrastructure development. Whalen’s specialty is the hospitality concentration, which focuses on a property-level objective. Assistant professor Yi “Vanessa” Liu focuses on the events concentration, with courses like weddings and special events and event risk management.

While the program is housed within the College of Behavioral and Health Sciences, tourism and hospitality management students will get a business minor through required coursework in the Jones College of Business.

Whalen noted that “it’s important to have real-world experience in addition to classroom learning. It’s a steppingstone to leadership.”

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