Local McDonald’s Owner Helping Workers Toward MTSU Degrees

MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee, left, and McGuire Management Group owner/operator Jonathon McGuire shake hands after signing the McGuire True Blue Education Partnership MOU Wednesday, Aug. 4, 2021, at the McDonald’s franchise on Memorial Boulevard. The agreement calls for McGuire employees to attend MTSU tuition-free if they meet qualifying criteria. (MTSU file photo by J. Intintoli)

Students taking advantage of the partnership between McGuire Restaurant Group and Middle Tennessee State University are thriving, with one student employee already graduated and several more preparing to walk across the stage inside Murphy Center very soon.

Two of those students, Michael Johnson and Ariane Raines, say they are reaching goals faster than they had ever imagined because of this unique partnership forged in fall 2021 in which McGuire Restaurant Group pays 100% of a qualifying employee’s tuition at MTSU.

“I think I would have gotten a degree eventually, but without this deal, I don’t think I would have been able to be as aggressive,” said Johnson, who is an area supervisor for a group of six McDonald’s restaurants operated by McGuire in Murfreesboro. “Maybe I would have stopped when I earned my associate degree, but even if I didn’t, I would have only been able to take a class at a time.”

Raines, now 44, started with McDonald’s originally because the company was offering tuition assistance. Then, she said, “life happened.”

“My education was put on the back burner, but it was always something I wanted for myself and my family,” she said. “I was ecstatic when I learned about this partnership and that it allowed me the flexibility of continuing to work and get my degree.”

Because of the financial boost, both Johnson and Raines have progressed quickly through MTSU’s Applied Leadership Program in University College with the help of their employer and prior learning assessment.

‘Aren’t just flipping burgers’

Using PLA, students leverage one of the biggest advantages MTSU can give to its adult students who are finishing their degrees. Students convert eligible prior work, training and certifications into college credit and use up to 60 credits toward electives. Students do all of this for the cost and time of a three-credit-hour course.

Johnson earned 47 hours, the equivalent of more than 14 classes — far more than he expected when he signed up for the course. He’s on schedule to graduate in May.

“The class was actually eye-opening because I realized how much work I’d done at McDonald’s over the last 10 years,” said Johnson, who started with McDonald’s in 2011 and became a general manager with McGuire Restaurant Group four years later, quickly being promoted to director of training and development.

“People who haven’t worked in fast food don’t understand what all goes into it. We aren’t just flipping burgers. We go through a lot of leadership training, and it was interesting to have that experience,” he said.

Becoming a better manager

Raines said she found the PLA course gratifying because she had felt stagnant academically, even though she had risen to a general manager position at McGuire Restaurant Group. She’s on track to graduate in 2023.

“I think when you are in a place where you have felt that way, it helps you see the value of what you have done with the time you have been out of school,” she said.

The Applied Leadership Program puts adult students together to teach them valuable skills they can immediately take back to the workplace. Raines said those courses not only made her a better leader but have also helped her make long-lasting connections with her classmates.

“I have been doing this for a long time, and these courses have helped me develop the skill set to see what needs to happen to facilitate growth among my team members,” she said. “We are managing 75 to 100 people at the restaurant, and their needs and goals are all different.”

Jonathan McGuire, the man behind the partnership and the owner/operator of McGuire Management Group, says the partnership is already paying dividends with longtime employees and new members of their “McFamily.”

McGuire Management operates 20 McDonald’s restaurants, 10 in Murfreesboro, seven in Nashville/Antioch, Tennessee, and others in Columbia, Centerville and White Bluff.

“At McGuire Management Group we are committed to investing in our people,” McGuire said. “By providing our team the opportunity to complete their education we are investing in their future and in our community’s future. It is our belief that this investment will pay dividends for generations to come, and we are proud to be able to provide this amazing benefit.”

Johnson said that McGuire has always been supportive, and this partnership is only the latest way he has shown he is committed to helping his employees grow and advance their careers.

“(Jonathon) has always said that this partnership is an investment for him because it’s an investment in (his employees),” Johnson said.

Strong university support

Nearly 40 McGuire employees are currently enrolled at MTSU and actively taking classes. Johnson says that he thinks his coworkers, especially the older adults, see how successful those in the program have been, and that is influencing them to follow a similar path.

He added that the partnership would not be as successful as it is without help from Peggy Carpenter, assistant dean of University College.

“She is just the best,” Johnson said. “She helps our people out so much, and had, several times, to drop whatever she is doing and come answer questions for any of us.”

“It has been an honor to work with the McGuire Restaurant Group and their employees on this educational partnership,” said Carpenter, who oversees the partnership for MTSU. “Jonathan McGuire has a passion for helping his employees grow, which shows in his commitment to the partnership. There will be more and more success stories from people who may have never thought a college degree was possible for them.”

Johnson has big plans for himself after he graduates in the spring. He has a goal to become director of operations for McGuire whenever that position opens up. He also is considering pursuing his master’s degree, something he would have never imagined doing before last year.

“I’ve found that as I’ve gotten a little bit older, I value education more and take it much more seriously,” he said. “It’s helped me grow into a better manager and employee.”

If you are interested in learning more about the partnership, visit MTSU.edu/McDonalds.

McGuire Restaurant Group general manager and MTSU student Michael Johnson, shown here at the Memorial Boulevard McDonald’s restaurant in Murfreesboro, is on track to earn his bachelor’s degree in Applied Leadership in spring 2023 thanks to a partnership between McGuire and MTSU that pays full tuition for qualifying employees returning to school to obtain their degrees. (MTSU file photo by J. Intintoli)
MTSU student Ariane Raines, a general manager for McGuire Restaurant Group’s local McDonald’s restaurants, is taking advantage of a partnership between McGuire and the university that pays full tuition for qualifying employees returning to school to obtain their degrees. Raines is on track to earn her degree in Applied Leadership in 2023.(Submitted photo)
This file photo shows an up-close shot of an employee uniform logo for McGuire Restaurant Group, which operates 20 McDonald’s restaurants, including 10 in Murfreesboro, and others around the region. McGuire and MTSU forged a partnership in 2021 that pays full tuition for qualifying employees returning to school to obtain their degrees. (MTSU file photo)

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