Intelligent.com Announces Best Online Masters in Training And Development Degree Programs for 2021
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Degree holders gain increased earning potential with career opportunities upon graduation from these top ranked online programs. SEATTLE (PRWEB) May 13, 2021
Intelligent.com, a trusted resource for online degree rankings and higher education planning, has announced the top online programs for 2021. The comprehensive research guide is based on an assessment of 1,280 accredited colleges and universities in the nation. Each program is evaluated based on curriculum quality, graduation rate, reputation, and post-graduate employment. The methodology also uses an algorithm which collects and analyzes multiple rankings into one score to easily compare each school.
Congressman Bennie Thompson addresses Jackson State University 2021 graduates
Congressman Bennie Thompson addresses Jackson State University 2021 graduates
By Jackie Hampton,
JSU 2021 Undergraduate Speaker, Congressman Bennie Thompson PHOTOS BY JACKIE HAMPTON
The ceremony for the 2021 Undergraduate Class of Jackson State University was held at 9 a.m., Saturday May 8, at Veteran’s Memorial Stadium in Jackson, MS. The keynote speaker was U. S. Mississippi Congressman Bennie Thompson, 2nd District. There were hundreds of attendees present and the ceremony was also live streamed.
Thompson said to the students, “For the past four, five, six and maybe seven years you have struggled to get to this day and all the late nights and early mornings have paid off.” He told the graduates that they represented the hopes and dreams of those in the audience that were proud of them for the momentous milestone they had reached.
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I first saw the photo at a street fair in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, in October 2011. I was at the Historic Mobile Street Renaissance Festival, an annual celebration of Hattiesburg’s Black downtown. That afternoon, Mobile Street filled with thousands of people spending their Saturday in the sun, drinking sweet tea and eating soul food with their friends and neighbors. I was new in town, and I was excited to join them.
Sitting in the window of an abandoned shop was a black-and-white picture of 12 Black men. They appear in two rows, five seated and seven standing. Each man is wearing a suit and politely holding his hat off to the side. There are at least two generations present, as evidenced by their hairlines and facial features. Their faces carry mixed expressions. Most of them look serious, but some are smiling. One man even appears to be smirking, like he knows a secret. In their regal suits and poses, their faces are frozen in time. As the crowd meandered by, these
Gulf and Ship Island Building set for USM blue economy renaissance A historic building in downtown Gulfport is becoming the blueprint for continued growth in South Mississippi’s Blue Economy. (Source: WLOX) By Bill Snyder | May 12, 2021 at 2:09 PM CDT - Updated May 12 at 2:28 PM
GULFPORT, Miss. (WLOX) - A historic building in downtown Gulfport is becoming the blueprint for continued growth in South Mississippi’s Blue Economy.
The University of Southern Mississippi is setting up its business accelerator for the present and future at the Gulf and Ship Island Railroad Building.
“This building was built in 1902 by Joseph Jones, and Joseph Jones came from Pennsylvania and he was an oilman,” said Anita Arguelles, Southern Miss Ocean Enterprise brand manager.
MSMS student recipient of $40K Amazon engineering scholarship
MSMS student Samuel Hill (left) and engineering faculty member Danielle Grimes. Source: MSMS
Sam Hill received the Amazon Future Engineer scholarship to continue studying computer science at a college of his choosing.
Posted: May 12, 2021 1:36 PM
Updated: May 12, 2021 1:37 PM
Posted By: Zac Carlisle
COLUMBUS, Miss. (WTVA) - A senior at the Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science (MSMS) is the recipient of a $40,000 Amazon engineering scholarship.
Sam Hill from Laurel received the Amazon Future Engineer scholarship to continue studying computer science at a college of his choosing.
MSMS student Samuel Hill (left) and engineering faculty member Danielle Grimes. Source: MSMS