| Type | Public |
|---|---|
| Established | 1910 |
| Dean | Ron Walcott |
| Location | ,, |
| Website | http://grad.uga.edu/ |
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TheUniversity of Georgia Graduate School coordinates the graduate programs of all schools and colleges at theUniversity of Georgia inAthens,Georgia,United States. Established in 1910, the University of Georgia Graduate School administers and confers allprofessional,master's anddoctoral degrees. The departments under which instruction and research take place are housed in the other schools and colleges at the university.[1]
The University of Georgia Graduate School is responsible for administering and conferring all professional and research master's and doctoral degrees and has conferred 72,664 degrees to date. The school offers advanced degrees in over 130 areas of discipline and has 6,766 students and approximately 1,600 graduate faculty.[2][3] Many of its academic programs rank among the highest in the nation.
In addition to its administrative functions, the Graduate School provides professional development opportunities for students, including the Dean's Awards, the Innovative and Interdisciplinary Research Grants for doctoral students, Summer Doctoral Research Fellowships, the Emerging Leaders Program, the Three-Minute Thesis Competition, and the Interdisciplinary Certificate in University Teaching.
In recent years, the school has received both regional and national awards for excellence in graduate admissions, and has won competitive grants for research initiatives on doctoral completion and minority attrition at the university. Suzanne Barbour currently serves as dean of the graduate school.[4]
Founded in 1785, the University of Georgia awarded its first graduate degree, a Master of Arts, nearly a century later in 1870. The firstMaster of Artscurriculum was put in place in 1868 during the administration of ChancellorAndrew A. Lipscomb, and the first graduate degrees were awarded in 1870 to Washington Dessau, future chancellorWalter Barnard Hill, and Burgess Smith.[5] By 1877, the university's catalog referenced a requirement to take every course offered by the university in order to qualify for the Master of Arts.
In 1872, graduate degree programs in Civil and Mining Engineering were added. The Master ofAgriculture was authorized in 1875 with the first student, M.L. Morris earning the first such degree in 1876. The Master of Science followed in 1890. Marion M. Hull earned the first M.S. degree in 1892.[6] Fellowships for graduate studies first appeared in the university catalog in 1891. This description mentioned assistance for providing "certain duties such as tutoring slower students".[5]
Prior to 1910, all post-graduate courses were under the direction of a faculty committee. In 1910, the Board of Regents and ChancellorDavid Barrow formally established the Graduate School and appointed Dr.Willis Henry Bocock as its dean. Seven male students enrolled that fall. It would be nearly a decade later before women gained formal admittance; fifty years for African-Americans. The newly formed Graduate School oversaw 12 fields of study. The Master of Arts alone includedphilosophy,math,education,history,political science,rhetoric,English literature,German,Latin,Greek, andRomance languages. By 1913, the four degree programs offered included theMaster of Arts,Master of Science, Master of Science in agriculture and in civil engineering, and the first formal master's degrees were awarded.[6]
TheMaster of Science inforestry was authorized in 1917, followed by the Master of Science ineconomics (later renamed the Master of Science in commerce and eventually theMaster of Business Administration) (1923), the Master of Science inhome economics (1925), the Master of Arts ineducation (1930), the Master of Science inchemistry (1932), and the Master of Science insocial work (1934). In 1935, the firstDoctor of Philosophy degrees in history, biological sciences, and chemistry were offered. The firstPh.D. degrees were conferred in 1940 to Joseph Simeon Jacob (educational psychology) and Horace Montgomery (history).[5] Montgomery went on to author a resolution supporting the university's first minority students and was recognized for his efforts in racially integrating the university.
Additional master's programs (Master of Science in education, Master of Science in agricultural engineering) were established in 1937, and theMaster of Fine Arts (with a major in music or visual arts) was created in 1939. Between 1940 and 1975, more than 10 master's degrees, 1 specialist degree, and 5 doctoral degrees were formalized for graduate study.
In 2010, the graduate school celebrated its centennial anniversary.[7] One hundred years after its formal recognition, the Graduate School offered more than 230 graduate programs to over 7,000 enrolled students and conferred 2,271 degrees. Seventy years after conferring the first two Ph.D. degrees, the Graduate School awarded 420 doctoral degrees, nearly half going to women.
As of August 2017, the University of Georgia Graduate School offered 327 graduate degree programs: 115 doctoral, 140 master's, 15 education specialist, 46 interdisciplinary and 11 online degree programs. The Doctor of Philosophy is offered in 86 disciplines, the Master of Arts in 35 disciplines, and the Master of Science in 50 disciplines. Professional doctoral degrees are offered in education, music, and public health, and professional master's degrees are available in 32 areas.[8]
The university awards the Master of Education in 20 disciplines, the Specialist in Education in 17 disciplines, and the Doctor of Education in 8 disciplines. There are also 29 interdisciplinary degrees available at both the master's and doctoral levels, and certificates in 15 areas are offered as well.
The graduate programs at the University of Georgia continue to rank among the top 100 in the nation, with programs in public affairs, veterinary medicine, printmaking, and multiple education specializations falling within the top 10 according to theU.S. News & World Report 2013 edition of America's Best Graduate Schools.
Other graduate programs to consistently earn high marks from a variety of publications and surveys over the last five years include accounting and both MBA and Executive MBA programs at theTerry College of Business; advertising, public relations, and radio/television in theGrady College of Journalism and Mass Communication; and landscape architecture in theCollege of Environment and Design.[9]
TheNational Research Council’s 2010 report identified six University of Georgia doctoral programs that are among the best in the country.[10] From the more than 5,000 doctoral programs ranked in 62 academic fields at 212 participating universities, University of Georgia programs in Food Science, Public Administration, Exercise Science, Forest Resources, Plant Biology, and Mass Communication ranked in the top 25 of their respective fields.[11]
In 2011, the University of Georgia Graduate School was awarded both the Council of Historically Black Graduate Schools/Educational Testing Service Award for Excellence and Innovation in Graduate Admissions for Recruitment through Graduation, and the Conference of Southern Graduate School/Educational Testing Service Award for Excellence and Innovation in Graduate Admissions.[12]
The Graduate School received two Doctoral Completion grants from the Council of Graduate Schools between 2004 and 2010, and in 2012, received the National Science Foundation-funded grant, Doctoral Initiative on Minority Attrition and Completion, from the Council of Graduate Schools as well.
33°57′15″N83°22′30″W / 33.95411°N 83.37511°W /33.95411; -83.37511