Mackay Students

What is unique about being a Mackay student?

Nowhere else on campus will you find a more closely-knit community of students than at Mackay. What makes a Mackay student unique is not just the overwhelming support offered by the Mackay faculty and staff, scholarship opportunities, summer internship programs or great career opportunities. It's bigger than that. To be a Mackay student is to be a key part of the Mackay tradition that has continued for close to 100 years.

Just take a look at some of the things our students are involved in here at Mackay, and you'll see why the Mackay experience is unique and why being a Mackay graduate is something to be proud of.

  • Students get an up-close view of a haulpak. Haulpaks are a common site in open-pit mining and are used to transport ore.

  • Students study rock formations at the Geology Summer Field Course, a comprehensive 6-week summer field course in geology.

  • Joe Goss, Captain of the Mackay Muckers mining team, competes in the swede saw event at the 2005 Intercollegiate Mining Competition. This year, the Mackay Muckers will head to Australia where the 2006 competition will take place.

  • Geology and geophysics student, Weston Thelen, uses a laser theodolite for close-in contour mapping. Surveying is a basic skill for all environmental and exploration scientists and engineers.

  • Geology and geophysics student, Weston Thelen, uses a laser theodolite for close-in contour mapping. Surveying is a basic skill for all environmental and exploration scientists and engineers.

  • Students are at work in the mine ventilation teaching and research laboratory. Mine ventilation is of extreme importance to the safety and health of underground miners.

Visit Student Services to find out how you can become a Mackay student!