Missouri State University
Kyle Meadows

Kyle Meadows

  • Major: Health Services
  • High School: Greenfield
  • Hometown: Greenfield, Mass.

Non-traditional student puts it all together

Kyle Meadows’ educational journey has come together like a puzzle.

It started after high school when he witnessed a fatal vehicle accident, which led him to become a volunteer firefighter in Taney County, Missouri in 2004.

The first piece fell into place when Meadows discovered that he loved being a firefighter and enrolled at Ozarks Technical Community College to earn an associate degree in fire science.

While still finishing this degree in 2009, Meadows was hired by Strafford Fire Department in Greene County, Missouri when they first became a full-time career department.

“It was a lot of fun and I got to be part of the department as they were defining themselves,” he said.

Soon, as Meadows realized that firefighters respond to more medical calls than to fires, he began to identify what he liked about this line of work.

“A lot of their response has transitioned into medical calls over the years as more people are needing medical care and buildings are being built better,” the 34-year-old said.

He earned an EMT license in 2009 and the next piece of the puzzle fell into place.

Switching careers

Kyle Meadows in ambulance.

As much as he loved being a firefighter, he did not love the salary that came with working at a small fire department. Meadows also discovered he loved the medical side. So he began to seek a way to advance his professional career.

As pieces of his puzzle began to fit together, Meadows got married and started a family; he knew he wanted more lifelong earning potential. In 2012, he completed his fire science degree, left the fire department and enrolled in paramedic courses at OTC.

That same year, he started working on an ambulance at CoxHealth where his career began to define itself for him. He earned a paramedic license in 2013 and his associate paramedic degree in January of 2014. 

“I had found my calling. This is what I really want to do. I want to advance my career in health care. I realized I could not elevate myself without a better academic resume,” Meadows said.

Getting his bachelor’s degree

Kyle Meadows talking with staffers at CoxHealth.

His investigation led him to Missouri State University’s health services degree in the department of public health and sports medicine.

The degree was attractive because it offered a clinical services option for students who were already allied health professionals with an allied health associate degree.

The health services program provides a foundation of knowledge in health care, health care systems, global health, legal issues, grant writing, leadership, and much more.

“It allows you to use the allied health degree as your first two years as long as you have the Missouri general education requirements. It made me a junior when I started the program,” he said.

Meadows was also attracted to MSU for its cost and reputation. So he enrolled one last time at OTC to complete his Core 42, then transferred to Missouri State.

He loves the program.

“The MSU program is focused on leadership and quality education. This degree will give me a lot of opportunities.”

“The curriculum is focused on what I do every day. That speaks a lot for that program. I tout it to everyone... I keep many of the PowerPoints from classes,” he said.

The online courses have made it feasible for Meadows to go to school and continue to work fulltime.

His next move

Meadows is the system educator for the paramedicine department at CoxHealth.

“We train about 5,000 first responders across Southwest Missouri: Police, Fire, SWAT, EMT’s, Paramedics, Nurses, and community members. We have around 300 personnel and operate our own dispatch center,” he said.

The education aspect of his job excites Meadows and he will continue to further his career with that once he completes his bachelor’s degree in spring 2021.

While it took him a while to figure out exactly what he wanted to do, he chipped away at his goal — sometimes one course at a time.

“My first class was in 2004 and my last class in a master’s degree will be 2022,” he chuckled. “If I could go back and give myself some advice, I would not have finished the fire science degree. I would have gone straight to MSU.”