
Northwest graduates react after a commencement ceremony on Saturday as streamers fly overhead in Bearcat Arena. (Photo by Todd Weddle/Northwest Missouri State University)
Northwest Missouri State University honored its spring graduates during four commencement ceremonies Friday and Saturday, awarding a record 1,659 degrees while celebrating students’ journeys and offering encouragement to embrace the unknowns ahead.
During his opening remarks, University President Dr. Lance Tatum noted the graduates join a community of Northwest alumni numbering more than 85,000 people living throughout the world. He encouraged the graduates to serve positively in their professions and communities.

Northwest President Dr. Lance Tatum delivered remarks during the spring commencement ceremonies. (Photo by Lilly Cook/Northwest Missouri State University)

Dr. Matt Baker, the president of Emporia State University, addressed graduates and their families as Northwest's spring commencement speaker. (Photo by Lilly Cook/Northwest Missouri State University)
“You will quickly learn that the value of your Northwest degree will not remain stagnant,” Tatum said. “It will increase or decrease in value over time. We ask for your help to ensure your degree continues to grow in value.”
Dr. Matt Baker, who began work in March as the president of Emporia State University after decades of work in student affairs at Northwest, returned to deliver the weekend’s commencement addresses. Baker called the opportunity a special honor and a homecoming, having known and worked alongside many of the graduating students. Northwest, he noted, also is where he met his wife, Jill, an alumna and long-time faculty member in the School of Education, and where the couple raised their family.
During Saturday morning’s ceremony, he was on stage to congratulate his daughter, Avery, as she was honored for completing a bachelor’s degree in applied health science with a sports medicine emphasis.
“You’ve worked hard, you’ve sacrificed, you’ve adapted and you’ve persevered to reach this milestone,” Baker told graduates. “Some of you arrived here with a clear plan. Others discovered your path along the way, and many of you had to navigate challenges you never expected – academic, personal and global. Yet, here you are. That matters, and you should be proud of it.”
While reflecting on his 30-plus years in Maryville and at Northwest, Baker offered three life lessons for graduates to carry with them. He encouraged graduates to be thankful for their journeys and the people who supported them, to look forward and embrace life’s adventures and unknowns, and to choose joy.
“When I look back on my own journey, the moments that shaped me most were not the ones where everything went according to my plan,” Baker said. “They were the moments that forced me to adapt, to rethink and to grow. So pursue your ambitions but also pursue your curiosity. Travel if you can. Serve others. Try things that are new. Invest in relationships. Build a life that is not only successful but meaningful and rich with experience. Your career will be important, but your life – your full, complex, unpredictable life – is what will truly matters.”

Dr. Rose Marie Ward, the provost and vice president of academic affairs at Northwest, greets a graduate as she crosses the commencement stage on Saturday. (Photo by Todd Weddle/Northwest Missouri State University)
The commencement ceremonies celebrated 1,659 students, ranging in age from 19 to 66. Northwest awarded 801 bachelor’s degrees, 660 master’s degrees and 198 education specialist degrees.
Business management, elementary education and psychology were the most common bachelor’s degrees among the graduates, and educational leadership for K-12 was the most common master’s degree.
Northwest awarded posthumous degrees to the families of two students who were on track to complete degrees but died unexpectedly during the spring semester. Joseph Huber, a senior from St. Joseph, Missouri, who was studying a mass media major with a broadcast production emphasis, passed away Jan. 6 from an unexpected illness; Kristina Thomas, also of St. Joseph, was completing her Master of Business Administration degree with a human resource management emphasis and had planned to participate in commencement ceremonies but lost her battle with cancer on April 21.
Geographically, the graduates represented 45 states with about 63 percent of them hailing from locations in Missouri; another 25 percent were from the surrounding states of Iowa, Illinois, Kansas and Nebraska. Northwest celebrated 69 international graduates representing 23 different countries.
Northwest is a coeducational, primarily residential four-year university that offers a broad range of undergraduate and selected graduate programs on its Maryville campus and through Northwest Online.
Founded in 1905, Northwest boasts a graduation rate in the 95th percentile among its peers. Additionally, results of the Ruffalo Noel Levitz Student Satisfaction Inventory show Northwest students are more satisfied than students at national peers, and 78 percent of Northwest students report they would repeat their University experience, compared to 75 percent of students surveyed nationally at their respective institutions.
Furthermore, the University is a national model for student success and career placement with 93 percent of bachelor’s degree earners and 98 percent of master’s degree earners securing employment or continuing their education within six months of completing a degree at Northwest, according to the most recent data.
Northwest places a high emphasis on profession-based learning to help graduates get a jumpstart on their careers while maintaining competitive tuition rates and generous financial assistance to help minimize the financial barriers students may face when pursuing a college degree.
Students have opportunities to build their résumés with experiences on campus in nearly every area of study, including the Horace Mann Laboratory School, National Public Radio affiliate KXCV, the R.T. Wright Farm, Mozingo Outdoor Education Recreation Area, a partnership with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency or Knacktive, a student-driven integrated digital marketing communications agency. In conjunction with its emergency and disaster management program, Northwest organizes and hosts Missouri Hope, an annual mass casualty training exercise that attracts first responders and emergency workers from throughout the nation.
The University’s vibrant and diverse learning community also offers more than 150 student organizations, and textbooks and a laptop are included in tuition, saving students an estimated $6,900 over four years. Northwest offers 1,200 student employment positions, allowing students to build professional skills through its internationally benchmarked student employment program.
For more information about Northwest and its performance, visit www.nwmissouri.edu/aboutus/facts/.