Montana State University
It is located in Bozeman, Montana. About 97 miles outside of Helena; Montana’s capital. With a beautiful landscape of their stunning mountains, I believe that that’s one of their many attractions.
I could not get an accurate number of how many enrollments they were for this year, but through the facts I collected they’re about 13,123-15,294 enrollments of this fall, 2013.
There is a ton of majors to get and a lot in between:
Agricultural
Arts & Agricultural
Business
Education, Health & Human Development
Engineering
Humanities and Social Sciences
Natural Science & Mathematics
Nursing
I’ve laid down a list that describes the different areas that one would have to pay to attend for one semester. All though, it does include if you apply for financial aid and receive it. This list is for students who are currently resign in Montana. These fees do not include out of state/country fees. Transportation will depend on individual’s condition. This is for Undergraduates. The second table will represent the undergraduates not living in Montana.
Undergraduates Living in Montana
Category Semester Year
Tuition/Fee $3,375 $6,750
Room/Board $4,110 $8,220
Books/Supplies $600 $1,200
Personal/Transportation This area depends on student’s condition.
Overall $8,805 $16,170
Undergraduates Not Living in Montana
Category Semester Year
Tuition/Fee $10,357 $20,715
Room/Board $4,110 $8,220
Books/Supplies $600 $1,200
Personal/Transportation This area depends on student’s condition.
Overall $15,067 $30,135
There’s also a variety of sports for males and females. They both have Track and Field, Basketball, Tennis, Skiing, and Cross Country. Although they both have sports neither of each other share in...
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... what you are wanting to read, not something they want you to read. Most of the things are very confusing. Instead of simply giving you an answer they make you read a bunch of stuff. That’s the thing I don’t like. The website also freezes a lot. Like, I’m not sure if it’s my computer, but I highly doubt that, because the website most of the time foreclose on me, so I’d lose my spot and I couldn’t type down what I was looking for so that means I had to start all over again.
I’d like to go to this school, but I don’t think my mom would let me. She wants me to go to a school in Oregon. I want to go to Montana to study, but I’m not sure about it now. It’s too far away and I don’t want to pay rent, so I’ll just go to a University close to where my parents live. I think it has a lovely view, but I won’t go to college just because of it amazing sights and surroundings.
Families and students in grades 6 through 10 may choose to attend and admission is by lottery. Student population is about 300 and there is no cost to attend this alternative public school that operates under the same student budget allocation as other district schools.
In 1970 the nation was in its highest state of controversy. The generation gap that had begun to form in the sixties was now more of a ravine. The youth of America was finally standing up and raising their voices in protest against all the problems that plagued the country they would have control of in years to come. There were many events that helped in feeding the flame in the hearts of Americans. One such event was the Kent State University incident. It is an event that touched the nation and made such a profound mark, and yet it only lasted for thirteen seconds. In the thirteen seconds the Ohio National Guard, along with the rest of government by association, established themselves as the new enemy. All eyes were on them, scrutinizing their every move, pointing out every mistake they made. Interestingly enough, most don’t even really know exactly what went on in those thirteen seconds, but they knew that it left four students dead and nine injured at the hand of the National Guard, so that was enough to strike the hearts on millions. Still today, twenty-nine years later, we still don’t really know what went on. Who fired the first shot, and were they provoked? Was it necessary for the National Guard to be present on this typically calm college campus in the first place? And why did it have to end in such tragedy? There are so many questions, and so many misconceptions about this incident, and like any controversial issue, there are always two sides to the story.
It goes without saying that a person's gender, racial and social origins influence their participation in sports. Particular races and genders often dominate certain sports. African Americans, for example, tend to dominate football and basketball, while Caucasians tend to dominate ice hockey. The same holds true for gender as well. Football is an entirely male dominated sport, while horseback riding, gymnastics and figure skating are much more female oriented. How and why did these divisions come about? Determining the origin of gender goes beyond the scope of this paper, however one can speculate about how gender classifications and stereotypes affect one's role in the sports arena.
The board of trustees in the past couple of years have had to raise tuition a number of times for all students. Within a five year period, the university had an enrollment
Unintentionally, a lot of us have been boxed into institutions that promote gender inequality. Even though this was more prominent decades ago, we still see how prevalent it is in today’s world. According to the authors of the book, Gender: Ideas, Interactions, Institutions, Lisa Wade and Myra Marx Ferree define gendered institutions as “the one in which gender is used as an organizing principle” (Wade and Ferree, 167). A great example of such a gendered institution is the sports industry. Specifically in this industry, we see how men and women are separated and often differently valued into social spaces or activities and in return often unequal consequences. This paper will discuss the stigma of sports, how gender is used to separate athletes, and also what we can learn from sports at Iowa State.
Again, Starkville, Mississippi is the home place of Mississippi State University. Starkville is a rather small city with a population of about 25,000 people. Most residents of Starkville can tell anyone that Mississippi State “makes up the city” (Dew 1). In fact, Starkville is known as “Mississippi’s College Town.” Because Starkville is so small, the community is very close knit and highly supportive of the university. The university itself contains about 20,000 students. In comparison, Louisiana State University holds about 31,000 students. Therefore, Mississippi State is a great choice for anyone looking for a college with plenty of students,
When it comes down to choosing a college or a university to attend, the decision may be hard to make. Students often compare differences and similarities in their college experience between small and big schools when it comes to looking more into the learning environment, housing opportunities, and the entertainment provided.
Choosing the right college can be a tough job. For this I have chosen to attend Xavier University because of its admission requirements, cost, academics, and athletics. I am interested in attending Xavier University because of the location of the school. I know that countless colleges are far more affordable than others, and the acceptance rates are more higher. I also know that most of these colleges are HBCUs. Since my sister is currently attending Xavier University and because this college is a historically black college, this wasn’t a tough decision to make. I am also interested in choosing this college because of how far away it is from home, so I can experience the full life of college. Attending a prehistoric
To satisfy the competitive urge of their students, physical educators held “Play Days” and “Sport Days” for their female students. In a play day, teams from institutions did not play each other, but were comb...
That is where I will be going for my first two years of college. Then for my next two years I plan to go to Iupui University. The major’s I will mostly be taking is Biology and General science. My schooling will take four years. The cost will be about $14,544 dollars for my books and tuition.
They have many fields of studies that anyone can go into, but I’m specifically going for nursing. There’s a lot of classes someone can take for nursing at IUPUI. The housing there is usually around 2,500-3,000 dollars, unless the student is renting a room at an apartment near the school, then it might be around 4,000 a year. They also have a lot of athletic programs there, Including Soccer, Basketball, Volleyball, Tennis, Cross country, Track and field, etc. They also have a lot a lot of intramural sports there like, basketball, dodgeball, soccer, racquetball, flag football, golf, ultimate frisbee, kickball, sand/indoor volleyball, and a couple
...thletes but males and females should stay separated when it comes to sports. This controversial problem is dead and society is ignoring this issue by keeping sports separate between genders and this should stay this way.
There are a variety of sports anyone can play and teams people can join that accommodate to someone's specific needs whether they be handicapped or just want to play a sport to lose weight. Despite the lack of tangible obstacles stopping one sex from being athletic certain sports tend to be characterized as being a games only for women or men. There are accommodations in practically every popular sport for any person to play nevertheless societal pressures stop women from becoming race car drivers and men from becoming ballerinas. Those who go against the norm may find themselves being ridiculed; boys who play wrongly-named feminine sports are generally seen as frail no matter how physically demanding the sport they play is. Although figure
The type of sport adolescents choose to participate in can be considered masculine, feminine, or neutral which causes stereotypes among peers. Society has set the stereotypes for competitive sports based on gender. According to Alley & Hick (2005), “despite legal and social changes, sexist ideology still pervades sport” (p.273). Sports are seen as masculine, male dominated, and males receive higher media coverage and pay than the majority of female sports. The gender stereotype is learned through socialization and “for certain sports appear to be learned by grade school” (Alley & Hicks, 2005. p. 274). Gender role conflicts may appear in some athlete depending on the sport(s) one chooses to participate in, but this can alter by demonstrating acceptance for the opposite gender in sports. It is important to indentifying the social effects of sports participation in both genders and how beneficial it can be to the adolescent. Through sports participation adolescents learn those gender roles are based on self-perception, and not social interactions.
Although women have been accepted within the participation in sports and physical activity, there is still constant controversy surrounding the topic of whether or not female sports can be “considered a ‘real’ sport” (Hall, M. Ann, 2007, pg. 56) or if the female participants can be “viewed as ‘real’ women” (Hall, M. Ann, 2007, pg. 56). This is due to the fact that sports and physical activity has invariably been viewed as strictly for males, to aid in validating their masculinity. It is constantly vocalized that sports considered to be ‘feminine’ ones such as