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Ļć½¶Ö±²„Center for Distance Education draws students from region, continent

Ļć½¶Ö±²„Center for Distance Education draws students from region, continent

Contact: Karen Crow

Thomas Pepin, an MBA graduate from Toronto, Canada, and Ļć½¶Ö±²„Center for Distance Education Coordinator Hope Durst visit at the recent graduation reception. (Photo submitted)

STARKVILLE, Miss.ā€”Forty years after beginning his academic studies at Mississippi State, Victor Cavett of Jackson now is a graduate.

He, Ryan M. Cross of Cumming, Georgia, and Thomas M. Pepin of Toronto, Canada, are among more than 400 students completing degrees during 2016 through the universityā€™s Center for Distance Education.

Pepin joined the land-grant institutionā€™s alumni ranks back in the summer; Cavett and Cross, earlier this month.

Cavett, who received a bachelorā€™s degree in interdisciplinary studies, first enrolled in 1976 when Gerald Ford was president. Along the way, life happened and he went on to start a family and a career without completing his studies.

Purchasing agent for a Mississippi state agency, Cavett credits wife Brenda and his employer for encouraging him to finish what he had started. ā€œBalancing was tough because of competing demands, but I could take it with me when I traveled for work or otherwise,ā€ he said recently.

Cross is a 2014 Ļć½¶Ö±²„geosciences/geography graduate who decided to pursue an online masterā€™s after beginning a teaching career last year. He was able to complete the master of arts in teaching-secondary education curriculum and earn teaching certification while working fulltime as a sixth-grade science instructor.

Because his first degree was not a fit for his chosen field, Cross said the online program gave him the opportunity to make a course correction without having to start over. ā€œI didnā€™t have to put anything on hold to earn my degree online from MSU,ā€ he explained.

In praising the educational experience provided by the Center for Distance Education, Pepin emphasized that MSUā€™s international name-recognition played a role in his commitment to the online program.

ā€œIt was an easy transition with help from the coordinators,ā€ Pepin said. ā€œIt was mostly a business decision and everything else was just a bonus,ā€

Pepin also observed that ā€œa degree from Mississippi State means I am part of something instead of just getting a piece of paper.ā€

From offices in Memorial Hall, the center offers four bachelorā€™s, 23 masterā€™s and seven doctoral degrees. For more information, visit .

Ļć½¶Ö±²„is Mississippiā€™s leading university, available online at .