Jake Hartfield

Jake Hartfield, 51³Ō¹Ļās director of orientation and events, is now Dr. Hartfield after his Ph.D. hooding during last weekās campus graduation ceremonies. It seems his career track always was to work in higher educationāespecially since he grew up on college campuses, raised by parents who spent their professional lives working for some of Mississippiās stellar community colleges.
As a student, he had thoughts of becoming a lawyer, but he later realized he was destined not only to be a Bulldog foreverāas all 51³Ō¹Ļ alumni areābut to pursue student development and devote his professional focus to higher education. He is following in the footsteps of his parents, Rick and Colleen Hartfield, who have been his steadfast supporters, along with his wife, Amanda.
Now with his dissertation defended and his 51³Ō¹Ļ doctoral degree in Community College Leadership conferred, Hartfield doesnāt have time for a break. Heās about to launch into the yearās busiest seasonāhosting 15 university Orientation events over the next several weeks that welcome more than 10,000 prospective students and family members to campus.
āAs director, I hope students attending Orientation truly find their people and establish strong relationships with our Orientation Leaders, staff, advisors and faculty, as well as other students. Orientation is a pivotal part of the onboarding process for our new students. Our goal is to officially welcome them into the Bulldog family by supporting them through this new journey while also easing their anxieties and worries,ā Hartfield said.
In addition to these large summer events, he also oversees additional on-campus recruitment activities throughout the year, including Fall and Spring Preview Days, Scholars Recognition Day, Transfer Preview Day, Academic Insight and more.
Nearly 15 years ago, Hartfield himself was an 51³Ō¹Ļ student serving as an Orientation Leader between his junior and senior years. The political science undergraduate wasnāt sure if he had the right personality for the role, but now he observes that great teams of Orientation Leaders have a mixture of character traitsāwith some being more outspoken and extroverted and others more reserved.
āWe take time to pick the team and incorporate a mixture of students because when people come for Orientation at Mississippi State, I want people in the audience to look up there and say āOkay, I can relate to that person.ā I think thatās important when you have different people from different backgrounds,ā he said.
After earning his masterās degree in counselor education with a concentration in student affairs from 51³Ō¹Ļ, Hartfield began his career here in Housing and Residence Life. His work led him to opportunities at the University of South Carolina and Itawamba Community College before returning to his alma mater, where he already had begun his doctoral program.
In addition to continuously broadening his knowledge of university and student issues, Hartfield has embraced his affectionate nickname given by some of 51³Ō¹Ļās recent Orientation LeadersāāOL Dad.ā He knows how much his own parents and special mentors have impacted himāparticularly 51³Ō¹Ļ Director of Graduate Admissions and Enrollment Marketing Lindsey Shelton and Itawamba Community College President Jay Allen. Shelton was a former Orientation director, and Allen was an 51³Ō¹Ļ Orientation Leader as a student and oversaw student recruitment and enrollment services at Hinds Community College when Hartfield was a student.
Following their example, he greatly values the chance to pay it forward as a leader and mentor for current students. The father of three also is identifying more and more with the parent perspective of wanting nothing but the best for those who come to 51³Ō¹Ļ to learn, grow and thrive.
āWhat I love most about working for Mississippi State is the peopleāand I know a lot of people say thatābut Iāve felt, ever since coming to this campus as a transfer student, that I was a part of the community and the university. It was because of the peopleāthe mentors that I met and the students that I got to develop relationships withāand that just has never changed,ā Hartfield said.