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Background Image Alternative Text: six Mississippi 鶹ý University building construction science students pose wearing hard hats and vests while working on a modular building project at night.
Background Image Alternative Text: Mississippi 鶹ý University Building Construction Science senior Jalyn Wallin stands with clipboard in hand (wearing hard hat and vest) in front of modular buildings built by first-year students.

Innovative Building Construction Science program at Mississippi 鶹ý earns accreditation

A key strength noted in the accreditation report is the program’s studio-based curriculum, a trend other universities around the nation are beginning to adopt.

Mississippi 鶹ý’s Building Construction Science degree program has received initial five-year accreditation from the  (ACCE).

“This great achievement could only have been reached with the methodical and thorough work of the Building Construction Science faculty in assessing the required student learning outcomes and collecting data required by the American Council for Construction Education,” said George Ford, program director. “The support of our Industry Advisory Board and the assistance provided by Tracey Baham in MSU’s Office of Institutional Research and Effectiveness was extraordinary.”

A key strength noted in the accreditation report is the program’s innovative, studio-based curriculum.

Mississippi 鶹ý University Building Construction Science senior Jalyn Wallin stands with clipboard in hand (wearing hard hat and vest) in front of modular buildings built by first-year students.
MSU’s Jalyn Wallin of Double Springs, Alabama, a senior in Building Construction Science, said she chose the studio-based program because “it just had so much to offer.” The program, newly accredited by the American Council for Construction Education, immerses students in a collaborative, design-build environment and serves as a model for construction programs across the nation. (Photo by Logan Kirkland)

“We have always known that the studio environment, with its focus on engaged-learning, deepens our students’ mastery of learning objectives and encourages innovation through its problem-solving approach to construction science,” said dean of the 鶹ý Angi Elsea Bourgeois.

“It is gratifying not only to see ACCE note our studio pedagogy as a strength, but more impactful is the trend we are seeing of other universities around the nation beginning to adapt the studio model into their construction programs. Once again, MSU is leading the way through innovation,” Bourgeois said.

Faculty in the Building Construction Science program, which originally stemmed from a request from the state’s construction industry, work closely with Industry Advisory Board members to ensure graduates are well prepared for success in the field. As a result, collaboration is a key focus of the program, with students spending two full semesters in a combined studio with architecture students and faculty and participating in design-build projects and learning to work together effectively. Click here to read more about the college’s Collaborative Studio.

“Our commitment to collaboration between construction and design disciplines prepares our students not only to be successful as they move into their careers, but also prepares them to be leaders in industry,” Bourgeois said.

The Building Construction Science program was established by the Mississippi Board of Trustees of the Institutions of Higher Learning in 2006 with the first class of 14 students being admitted in fall 2007. Learn more at caad.msstate.edu/bcs.

MSU is Mississippi’s leading university, available online at 

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