T H E UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Fact Book 2005

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1 T H E UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA Fact Book 2005

2 Fact Book 2005 Cover The Arch The Arch, honored symbol of the University of Georgia, serves as the traditional entrance to historic North campus. Modeled after the State of Georgia s Great Seal, the three columns stand for wisdom, justice, and moderation. Built in 1858 by the Athens Foundry, the Arch originally supported heavy iron gates used to secure the campus. Photo by Tori Bauer

3 THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FACT BOOK th Edition Edited By: Marsha R. Allen Office of Institutional Research 110 East Clayton Street, Suite 725 The University of Georgia Athens, Georgia Published By: Office of Institutional Research Karen Webber Bauer, Director 110 East Clayton Street, Suite 725 The University of Georgia Athens, Georgia (706) (706) , fax Printed By: The University of Georgia Printing Department George W. Smith, Manager Printing Building 210 River Road Athens, Georgia Copyright 2005 By: The University of Georgia Office of the Vice President for Research 609 Boyd Graduate Studies Research Center Athens, Georgia Web All material contained in this book is also available at the Office of Institutional Research website. This book is intended as a reference and may be quoted using accepted scholarly citation without permission. Reproduction of complete tables, figures, or text must include a University of Georgia Fact Book 2005 notation and page number. ii

4 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page List of Figures... vi GENERAL INFORMATION About the Institution... 2 The Mission of The University of Georgia... 3 The University of Georgia Strategic Plan... 4 ADMINISTRATION Board of Regents... 6 Board of Regents Staff... 6 Senior Administrative Officers... 7 Deans of Colleges and Schools... 7 The Arch Foundation for the University of Georgia: Trustees... 9 ADMISSIONS New Freshmen: Fall Terms Mean Scholastic Aptitude Test Scores for Entering Freshmen: Fall Terms High Schools of Entering Freshmen: Fall Semester Academic Scholarships: Fall Terms 2004 and Undergraduate Transfers: Fall Terms Colleges and Universities from Which Undergraduate Students Transferred to The University of Georgia: Fall Semester Graduate School Admissions: Fall Terms Average Entrance Test Scores of Accepted Degree-Seeking Graduate Students: Fall Terms ENROLLMENT Fall Term Enrollment by Class: Enrollment by College and School: Fall Terms Enrolled Foreign Students by Country of Origin and UGA Student Level: Fall Semester Enrollment by State of Origin and UGA Student Level: Fall Semester Enrolled Georgia Residents by County of Residence and UGA Student Level: Fall Semester Characteristics of Enrolled Students by Class: Fall Semester Retention Rates for First-Time Full-Time Undergraduates: Entering Cohorts DEGREES CONFERRED Degrees Conferred by School or College and Degree Level: Fiscal Year Degrees Conferred by Degree Level: Fiscal Years Through Summary of Degrees Conferred by Program Classification: Fiscal Year Undergraduate Degree Programs and Majors Graduate and Professional Degree Programs and Majors Graduation Rates for First-Time Full-Time Undergraduates: Entering Cohorts Popular Degree Majors: Fall Semester iii

5 ACADEMIC INFORMATION Total University Student Credit Hours: Fiscal Year Honors Program Enrollment and Sections: Academic Year Honors Program Awards: Fiscal Years UGA Study Abroad and Exchange Program Countries: Academic Year Participation in Study Abroad at the University of Georgia: Academic Years Through UGA Study Abroad and Exchange Programs: Academic Years Through Graduate Assistantships: Fall Semester Graduate Fellowships and Assistantships Awarded Through the Graduate School: Fall Semester Tuition and Fees: Fall Spring Estimated Cost of Attendance: Academic Years Through Annual Cost of Attendance for Resident Undergraduates, UGA and Selected Peers: Academic Year National Academic Awards Earned by UGA Students University of Georgia Libraries: National Rankings STUDENT RELATED INFORMATION Student Financial Aid Programs: Fiscal Year Student Housing Summary: Fall Social Sororities and Fraternities Participation in Social Sororities and Fraternities: Fall Honorary Fraternities and Societies UGA Career Center: Class of 2004 Career Plans UGA National Alumni Association Board of Directors University of Georgia Alumni by State of Residence University of Georgia Alumni by Georgia County of Residence University of Georgia Athletic Association Intercollegiate Athletes at The University of Georgia: Fall Semester Public Safety Statistics: January 1, December 31, FACULTY AND STAFF Full-Time Faculty and Allied Professional Staff by Rank and Function: Fall Tenure Status of Full-Time Faculty By Rank and Gender: Fall Full-Time Faculty By Rank and Ethnicity: Fall Full-Time Faculty by Age Range and Rank: Fall Full-Time Graduate Faculty Membership by Rank: Fall Highest Earned Degrees of Full-Time Faculty by Rank: Fall Average Academic Year Salaries of Instructional Faculty, UGA and Selected Peers: Academic Year University Employees by Occupational Classification: October 31, University Employees by Occupational Classification and Ethnicity: October 31, University Employees by Occupational Classification and Gender: October 31, iv

6 FINANCIAL INFORMATION Sources of Revenue: Fiscal Year Revenue by Source: Fiscal Years Through Expenditures by Function: Fiscal Year Expenditures by Function: Fiscal Years Through Total Sponsored Awards by Project Type: Fiscal Years Through Sources of Research Funds: Fiscal Years Total Sponsored Awards by Agency: Fiscal Year Total Sponsored Awards for Research by Funding Source: Fiscal Year Sponsored Research Activity by Major Unit: Fiscal Year Total Sponsored Awards for Instruction by Funding Source: Fiscal Year Sponsored Instructional Activity by Major Unit: Fiscal Year Total Sponsored Awards for Cooperative Extension by Funding Source: Fiscal Year Sponsored Cooperative Extension Activity by Major Unit: Fiscal Year Total Sponsored Awards for Public Service by Funding Source: Fiscal Year Sponsored Public Service Activity by Major Unit: Fiscal Year Sources of All Public Service and Outreach Funds: Fiscal Year PHYSICAL FACILITIES University Buildings by Use, Athens Campus: Fall Semester Number of Rooms by Basic Room Type, Athens Campus: Fall Semester Utilization of Instructional Facilities: Fall Semester Space Assignment by Room Use and Building Location (Square Feet): Fall Space Assignment by Program Classification and Building Location (Square Feet): Fall Building Summary by Year of Completion: Athens Campus Fall Academic and Administrative Buildings, Date of Initial Occupancy, Athens Campus: Fall Major Building Projects by Date of Completion: Major Building Projects Currently Under Construction: Fall Authorized Projects In Design Phase: Fall University of Georgia Land Holdings: Fall CAMPUS MAP AND LEGEND University of Georgia Map Legend v

7 LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1. The University of Georgia Administrative Organization... 8 Figure 2. Freshman Applicants by Admission Status: Fall Terms Figure 3. SAT Scores for Entering Freshmen: Fall Terms Figure 4. Total Enrollment: Fall Terms Figure 5. Distribution of Total Enrollment by State of Origin: Fall Semester Figure 6. Distribution of Enrolled Georgia Residents by County: Fall Semester Figure 7. Degrees Conferred by Level: Fiscal Year Figure 8. Degrees Conferred by Level: Fiscal Years Through Figure 9. Average Graduation Rates for First-Time Full-Time Undergraduates: Entering Cohorts Figure 10. Total University Student Credit Hours: Fiscal Years 2001 Through Figure 11. UGA Study Abroad and Exchange Program Countries Figure 12. Increase in Study Abroad Participation: Academic Years Through Figure 13. UGA Study Abroad and Exchange Program Growth: Academic Years To Figure 14. Distribution of Alumni by State Figure 15. Distribution of Resident Georgia Alumni by County of Residence Figure 16. Scholarship Athletes at the University of Georgia: Fall Semesters Figure 17. Highest Earned Degrees of Full-Time Professorial Faculty: Fall Figure 18. Average Academic Year Salary of Instructional Faculty, University of Georgia (All Ranks): Fall Terms Figure 19. Full-Time University Employees by Occupational Classification Figure 20. Distribution of Revenue by Source: Fiscal Year Figure 21. Distribution of Expenditures by Function: Fiscal Year Figure 22. Total Sponsored Awards by Project Type: Fiscal Year Through Figure 23. Distribution of Space by Building Age, Athens Campus: Fall Figure 24. University of Georgia Athens Campus Map vi

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9 ABOUT THE INSTITUTION History and Location: Chartered by the Georgia General Assembly on January 27, 1785, the University of Georgia is the nation s first state-chartered university. In 1872, the University of Georgia was designated the state s land grant institution and in 1980 was accorded sea grant college status. The University s main campus is located in Athens-Clarke County, Georgia, approximately 60 miles northeast of the state capital of Atlanta. Academic Schools and Colleges: The University is comprised of fifteen schools and colleges: Agricultural and Environmental Sciences; Arts and Sciences; Business; Education; Environment and Design; Family and Consumer Sciences; Forest Resources; Graduate School; Journalism and Mass Communication; Law; Pharmacy; Public Health; Public and International Affairs; Social Work; and Veterinary Medicine. Academic Programs and Degrees Conferred: The University of Georgia is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools as well as a variety of discipline-specific accrediting agencies. Academic offerings include 19 bachelor s degrees in over 150 major fields, 30 master s degrees in 128 major fields, the specialist in education degree in 20 major fields, 3 doctoral degrees in 90 major fields, and professional degrees in Law, Pharmacy, and Veterinary Medicine. During the academic year, the University awarded 6,160 bachelor s degrees, 1,705 master s and specialist degrees, 424 doctoral degrees, and 394 professional degrees. Faculty: Full-time professorial faculty for the fall 2005 totaled 1, % of the full-time faculty were tenured or tenure-track and 94% hold the doctorate or other terminal degree. Average salaries for the fiscal year 2005 were $92,800 for professors, $64,700 for associate professors, and $57,700 for assistant professors. Enrollment: Fall 2005 enrollment totaled 33,660, which included 25,204 undergraduates, 6,835 graduate students, and 1,621 first professional students. 90% of undergraduates and 70% of graduate and professional students were enrolled on a full-time basis. The undergraduate student body was 44% male and 15.8% minority. 881 undergraduate and 1,230 graduate and professional students were from 128 foreign countries. Honors program enrollment neared 2,700 students and over 1,700 students participated in UGA study abroad programs. Admissions/Retention: 4,711 first-time freshmen enrolled for the fall % of all admitted freshmen enrolled and 38% of all freshman applicants enrolled. The average total SAT score for entering freshmen was ,063 or 86% of new freshmen attended 389 Georgia high schools. On average, 92% of first-time full-time freshmen return for their sophomore year. 57% of all undergraduate transfer applicants were accepted and 843 enrolled for the fall % of accepted new graduate students enrolled in the fall Costs: Academic year tuition and fees were $4,628 for resident undergraduates and $16,848 for nonresident undergraduates. Total estimated cost of attendance for resident undergraduates was $13,804. This amount included tuition and mandatory fees, books and supplies, room and board, and other expenses. Finance: For fiscal year 2005, total revenues exceeded $1.17 billion, and included $395 million from state appropriations. 16.2% of total operating expenditures were designated for instruction and 22.5% for research. Sponsored awards for fiscal year 2005 totaled $222,403,760. Physical Facilities: The University occupies and maintains close to 18 million square feet of space. The main campus includes 380 buildings for a total of 13,965,718 square feet. Five major building projects were completed during 2005 for a total cost of over $13.3 million. The University s fall 2005 land holdings totaled 42,247 acres in 32 Georgia counties. 2

10 THE MISSION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA The University of Georgia, a land-grant and sea-grant university with statewide commitments and responsibilities, is the state's flagship institution of higher education. It is also the state s oldest, most comprehensive and most diversified institution of higher education. Its motto, "to teach, to serve, and to inquire into the nature of things," reflects the University's integral and unique role in the conservation and enhancement of the state's and nation's intellectual, cultural, and environmental heritage. The University of Georgia shares with the other research universities of the University System of Georgia the following core characteristics: a statewide responsibility and commitment to excellence and academic achievements having national and international recognition; a commitment to excellence in a teaching/learning environment dedicated to serve a diverse and well-prepared student body, to promote high levels of student achievement, and to provide appropriate academic support services; a commitment to excellence in research, scholarship, and creative endeavors that are focused on organized programs to create, maintain, and apply new knowledge and theories; that promote instructional quality and effectiveness; and that enhance institutionally relevant faculty qualifications; a commitment to excellence in public service, economic development, and technical assistance activities designed to address the strategic needs of the State of Georgia along with a comprehensive offering of continuing education designed to meet the needs of Georgia's citizens in life-long learning and professional education; a wide range of academic and professional programming at the baccalaureate, master's, and doctoral levels. With its statewide mission and core characteristics, the University of Georgia endeavors to prepare the University community and the State for full participation in the global society of the twenty-first century. Through its programs and practices, it seeks to foster the understanding of and respect for cultural differences necessary for an enlightened and educated citizenry. It further provides for cultural, ethnic, gender, and racial diversity in the faculty, staff, and student body. The University is committed to preparing the University community to appreciate the critical importance of a quality environment to an interdependent global society. As a comprehensive land-grant sea-grant institution, the University of Georgia offers baccalaureate, master's, doctoral, and professional degrees in the arts, humanities, social sciences, biological sciences, physical sciences, agricultural and environmental sciences, business, environmental design, family and consumer sciences, forest resources, journalism and mass communication, education, law, pharmacy, social work, and veterinary medicine. The University attracts students nationally and internationally as well as from within Georgia. It offers the state's broadest array of possibilities in graduate and professional education, and thus a large minority of the student body is postbaccalaureate. The predominantly Georgian undergraduate student body is a mix of highly qualified students originally admitted as freshmen and selected transfer students principally from other University System institutions. With original scholarship, basic and applied research, and creative activities constituting an essential core from which to draw, the impact of the land-grant sea-grant mission is reflected throughout the state. Cooperative extension, continuing education, public service, experiment stations, and technology transfer are all designed to enhance the well-being of the citizens of Georgia through their roles in economic, social, and community development. As it has been historically, the University of Georgia is responsive to the evolution of the state's educational, social, and economic needs. It aspires through its strategic planning to even closer contact and interaction with public and private institutions throughout the state as well as with the citizens it serves. 3

11 THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA STRATEGIC PLAN The institutional goal of the University of Georgia is to provide the best possible education to its students; the best possible service to the citizens of the state of Georgia and beyond; and research, discovery and creative achievement of the highest order to benefit Georgia, the nation, and the world. Achieving the University of Georgia s institutional goal requires the following elements: Comprehensive strength in undergraduate educational programs Premier graduate and professional programs A faculty of national and international distinction Premier research and scholarship A culturally diverse and inclusive academic community Strong ties between the University and external constituencies A comprehensive learning community and a working environment of high quality A leading outreach program to extend knowledge and expertise to the people of the State and beyond The University of Georgia Strategic Plan comprises the set of strategic plans which delineate plans of primary organizational units and an institutional strategic plan. The institutional plan is used as the compass by which operational plans are developed. Operational plans include: the academic plan, including research, outreach and public service, and student affairs; the physical plan, which includes plans for capital outlay, renovation, and maintenance of the University s physical plant; the plan for external relations, which includes plans for a capital campaign; an organizational and personnel plan, which includes plans for faculty and staff development; the financial plan for the institution; and an institutional communications and marketing plan that outlines how these plans should be articulated to public and key constituencies, both internal and external In order to achieve its vision for the future, the University of Georgia is engaging three strategic directions to be carried out at the institutional, college, and unit levels: Building the new learning environment Investing in its research endeavors Competing in a global economy Source: Associate Provost for Institutional Effectiveness 4

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13 BOARD OF REGENTS Regent Residence District Term of Office J. Timothy Shelnut Chair Augusta Twelfth Patrick S. Pittard Vice Chair Atlanta Ninth Hugh A. Carter, Jr. Atlanta State-at-Large William H. Cleveland Atlanta State-at-Large Donald M. Leebern, Jr. McDonough State-at-Large Doreen Stiles Poitevint Bainbridge State-at-Large Joel O. Wooten, Jr. Columbus State-at-Large W. Mansfield Jennings, Jr. Hawkinsville First Julie Ewing Hunt Tifton Second Martin W. NeSmith Claxton Third Wanda Yancey Rodwell Stone Mountain Fourth Elridge W. McMillan Atlanta Fifth Michael J. Coles Kennesaw Sixth Richard L. Tucker Lawrenceville Seventh Connie Cater Macon Eighth James R. Jolly Dalton Tenth Joe Frank Harris Cartersville Eleventh Allan Vigil Morrow Thirteenth BOARD OF REGENTS STAFF Position Chancellor Senior Vice Chancellor of Academics and Fiscal Affairs Senior Vice Chancellor of External Activities and Facilities Senior Vice Chancellor of Support Services Vice Chancellor - Academics, Faculty and Student Affairs Vice Chancellor - Facilities Vice Chancellor - Fiscal Affairs Vice Chancellor - Information & Instructional Technology/CIO Associate Vice Chancellor - Faculty Affairs Associate Vice Chancellor - Human Resources Associate Vice Chancellor - Internal Audit Associate Vice Chancellor - Legal Affairs Associate Vice Chancellor - Media and Publications Associate Vice Chancellor - P-16 Initiatives Associate Vice Chancellor - Strategic Research & Analysis Associate Vice Chancellor - Student Affairs Staff Member Corlis Cummings, Interim Daniel S. Papp Thomas E. Daniel Corlis Cummings Frank A. Butler Linda M. Daniels William R. Bowes Randall A. Thursby John T. Wolfe, Jr. William H. Wallace, Jr. Ronald B. Stark Elizabeth E. Neely Arlethia Perry-Johnson Jan Kettlewell Cathie M. Hudson Tonya Lam 6

14 SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS Office Officer President Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Vice Provost for Academic Affairs Associate Provost and Chief Information Officer Associate Provost and University Librarian Associate Provost for Institutional Diversity Associate Provost for Institutional Effectiveness Associate Provost for International Affairs Vice President for Instruction and Associate Provost Vice President for Public Service and Outreach and Associate Provost Vice President for Research and Associate Provost Vice President for Student Affairs and Associate Provost Senior Vice President for External Affairs Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration Michael F. Adams Arnett C. Mace, Jr. Jere W. Morehead Barbara A. White William G. Potter Arthur N. Dunning, Interim Robert G. Boehmer Judith D. Shaw, Interim Delmer D. Dunn Arthur N. Dunning David C. Lee Rodney D. Bennett Steven W. Wrigley Henry M. Huckaby DEANS OF COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS College/School Franklin College of Arts and Sciences (1801) School of Law (1859) College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences (1859) Wilson College of Pharmacy (1903) Warnell School of Forest Resources (1906) College of Education (1908) Graduate School (1910) Terry College of Business (1912) Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication (1915) College of Family and Consumer Sciences (1933) College of Veterinary Medicine (1946) School of Social Work (1964) College of Environment and Design (2001) School of Public and International Affairs (2001) College of Public Health (2005) Dean Garnett S. Stokes Rebecca H. White J. Scott Angle Svein Øie Richard L. Porterfield Louis A. Castenell, Jr. Maureen Grasso P. George Benson Leonard N. Reid, Interim Sharon Y. Nickols Sheila W. Allen, Interim Maurice C. Daniels John Francis Crowley III Thomas P. Lauth Phillip L. Williams, Interim (Date college or school established) 7

15 . Figure 1 THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ADMINISTRATIVE ORGANIZATION OCTOBER 2005 BOARD OF REGENTS CHANCELLOR PRESIDENT SR VICE PRESIDENT FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION SR VICE PRESIDENT ACADEMIC AFFAIRS AND PROVOST SR VICE PRESIDENT EXTERNAL AFFAIRS VICE PRESIDENT STUDENT AFFAIRS & ASSOC PROVOST VICE PRESIDENT RESEARCH & ASSOC PROVOST VICE PRESIDENT INSTRUCTION & ASSOC PROVOST VICE PRESIDENT PUB SVC & OUTRCH & ASSOC PROVOST VICE PROVOST ACADEMIC AFFAIRS ASSOC PROVOST ACADEMIC FISCAL AFFAIRS ASSOC PROVOST & CHIEF INFO OFFICER ASSOC PROVOST INSTITUTIONAL DIVERSITY ASSOC PROVOST INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTIVENESS ASSOC PROVOST INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS ASSOC PROVOST & UNIVERSITY LIBRARIAN DEAN COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL & ENVIRON SCI DEAN COLLEGE OF BUSINESS DEAN COLLEGE OF ENVIRONMENT & DESIGN DEAN SCHOOL OF FOREST RESOURCES DEAN COLLEGE OF JOURNALISM & MASS COMM DEAN COLLEGE OF PHARMACY DEAN SCHOOL OF PUBLIC & INTERNTL AFFAIRS DEAN COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE DEAN COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES DEAN COLLEGE OF EDUCATION DEAN COLLEGE OF FAMILY & CONSUMER SCI DEAN GRADUATE SCHOOL DEAN SCHOOL OF LAW DEAN COLLEGE OF PUBLIC HEALTH DEAN SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK. *Detailed organization charts available at 8

16 THE ARCH FOUNDATION FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA TRUSTEES Term Trustees Residence Expires Michael F. Adams Athens Ex Officio, Voting Earl Dale Barrs Macon 2008 Robert D. Bishop Athens 2008 Jenny Lynn Bradley Savannah 2006 Otis A. Brumby, Jr. Marietta 2009 James Edward Butler, Jr. Columbus 2007 Charles Edward Campbell Atlanta 2008 William R. Childs Athens Ex Officio, Non-Voting Frederick E. Cooper Atlanta 2009 Chester C. Davenport Bethesda, MD 2007 Robert Glenn Edge Atlanta 2008 James Don Edwards Athens 2007 Nancy Felson Athens Ex Officio, Voting Norman Sears Fletcher Rome 2009 F. Sheffield Hale Atlanta 2008 Andrew Murphy Head Atlanta 2009 Henry M. Huckaby Athens Ex Officio, Non-Voting Sarah Corn Irby Atlanta 2009 Arnett C. Mace, Jr. Athens Ex Officio, Non-Voting M. Louise McBee Athens 2006 John F. McMullan Atlanta 2006 Donald A. Perry Atlanta 2006 Robert E. Ratajczak, Jr. Athens Ex Officio, Non-Voting Swann Seiler Savannah 2006 John Phinizy Spalding Atlanta 2009 Mary Virginia Terry Jacksonville, FL 2006 Larry D. Thompson Purchase, NY 2008 Ramsey Thompson Way Hawkinsville 2007 Steven W. Wrigley Athens Ex Officio, Voting 9

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19 NEW FRESHMEN FALL TERMS Fall % Applied % Applied % Accepted Term Applied Accepted Accepted Enrolled Enrolled Enrolled 1996* 12,930 7, , ,513 8, , ,728 8, , ,402 8, , ,869 7, , ,984 7, , ,786 8, , ,813 8, , ,267 8, , ** 12,326 7, , *New students in Developmental Studies and Evening School not included. +Effective Fall Semester 2002, new freshmen include Summer and Fall first-time matriculants. Due to the growth of the First Year College Summer Experience, a realistic look at new first-year students includes Summer and Fall first-year students. **Includes students displaced by Hurricane Katrina. Figure 2 FRESHMAN APPLICANTS BY ADMISSION STATUS FALL TERMS ,000 APPLIED 13,000 12,000 11,000 10,000 ACCEPTED 9,000 8,000 7,000 6,000 5,000 ENROLLED 4,000 3,000 2, FALL TERM Source: Office of Institutional Research, SIRS 12

20 MEAN SCHOLASTIC APTITUDE TEST SCORES FOR ENTERING FRESHMEN FALL TERMS Verbal Score Mathematics Score Total Score Fall Number UGA Nat'l State UGA Nat'l State UGA Nat'l State Term of Scores Mean Mean Mean Mean Mean Mean Mean Mean Mean , , , , , Note: Due to rounding, the UGA Total Score may not equal the sum of the UGA Verbal and Math Scores. Figure 3 SAT SCORES FOR ENTERING FRESHMEN FALL TERMS UGA 1200 TOTAL SCORES NATIONAL STATE FALL TERMS Source: Office of Institutional Research, The College Board 2005 Profile of College-Bound Seniors 13

21 HIGH SCHOOLS OF ENTERING FRESHMEN FALL SEMESTER 2005 High School Students High School Students Oconee County, Watkinsville 109 Evans, Evans 19 Milton, Alpharetta 83 Heritage, Conyers 19 Brookwood, Snellville 78 Peachtree Ridge, Suwanee 19 G. Walton Comprehensive, Marietta 77 Woodward Academy, College Park 19 Northview, Duluth 69 Blessed Trinity Catholic, Roswell 18 Lassiter, Marietta 67 Central, Macon 18 Roswell, Roswell 66 Sandy Creek, Tyrone 18 Kennesaw Mountain, Kennesaw 58 Wesleyan, Atlanta 18 Chattahoochee, Alpharetta 56 Etowah, Woodstock 17 Centennial, Roswell 55 Meadowcreek, Norcross 17 South Forsyth, Cumming 55 North Atlanta, Atlanta 17 Collins Hill, Suwanee 53 Winder-Barrow, Winder 17 Lakeside, Evans 52 Chapel Hill, Douglasville 16 Alan C. Pope, Marietta 51 Holy Innocents Episcopal, Atlanta 16 McIntosh, Peachtree City 49 Stratford Academy, Macon 16 Duluth, Duluth 43 Berkmar, Lilburn 15 North Springs, Atlanta 42 Carrollton, Carrollton 15 Cedar Shoals, Athens 41 Houston County, Warner Robins 15 Parkview, Lilburn 41 John S. Davidson Fine Arts, Augusta 15 Westminster Schools, Atlanta 41 Dalton, Dalton 14 Clarke Central, Athens 39 Druid Hills, Atlanta 14 Starr's Mill, Fayetteville 38 East Coweta, Sharpsburg 14 Dunwoody, Dunwoody 37 First Presbyterian Day, Macon 14 Harrison, Kennesaw 35 Greater Atlanta Christian, Norcross 14 Marist, Atlanta 33 Jackson Cnty Comprehensive, Jefferson 14 Athens Academy, Athens 32 Mill Creek School, Hoschton 14 North Gwinnett, Suwanee 32 Rome, Rome 14 Wheeler, Marietta 32 St. Vincent's Academy, Savannah 14 Columbus, Columbus 31 South Cobb, Austell 14 St. Pius X Catholic, Atlanta 30 Tift County, Tifton 14 Fayette County, Fayetteville 28 Tucker, Tucker 14 Lovett, Atlanta 28 Camden County, Kingsland 13 South Gwinnett, Snellville 28 Darlington, Rome 13 Chamblee, Chamblee 27 Eastside, Covington 13 Greenbrier, Evans 26 George Walton Academy, Monroe 13 Norcross, Norcross 26 Mt. Zion, Jonesboro 13 Riverwood, Atlanta 26 North Hall, Gainesville 13 Glynn Academy, Brunswick 25 Ringgold, Ringgold 13 Lakeside, Atlanta 25 Savannah Christian Preparatory, Savannah 13 Grayson, Loganville 24 Savannah Country Day, Savannah 13 McEachern, Powder Springs 24 Valdosta, Valdosta 13 Union Grove, McDonough 24 Academy of Richmond County, Augusta 12 Sequoyah, Canton 23 Deerfield-Windsor, Albany 12 Sprayberry Senior, Marietta 23 Forsyth Central, Cumming 12 Dacula, Dacula 22 Gainesville, Gainesville 12 Morgan County, Madison 22 Habersham Central, Mt. Airy 12 North Cobb, Kennesaw 22 Mount de Sales Academy, Macon 12 Marietta, Marietta 21 Statesboro, Statesboro 12 Shiloh, Snellville 21 Stephens County, Toccoa 12 Central Gwinnett, Lawrenceville 20 Franklin County, Carnesville 20 Subtotal, 102 Georgia High Schools 2,787 Madison County, Danielsville 20 Total, 389 Georgia High Schools 1,276 Campbell, Smyrna 19 TOTAL 4,063 Source: Office of Institutional Research 14

22 ACADEMIC SCHOLARSHIPS FALL TERMS 2004 AND 2005 Scholarship Program New Continuing Total Freshmen Students Scholarships Harris National Merit/Achievement UGA Foundation Fellowships Charter Bernard Ramsey Honors Bradley - Turner Leadership Scholars Transfer Scholarship Vice Presidential Georgia Incentive Goizueta Foundation Scholarship TOTALS ,293 1,315 Source: Student Financial Aid UNDERGRADUATE TRANSFERS FALL TERMS Fall % of Applied % of Applied % of Accepted Term Applied Accepted Accepted Enrolled Enrolled Enrolled ,040 1, , ,171 1, , ,719 2, , ,903 2, , ,934 2, , ,521 2, , * 3,539 2, , * 3,352 1, , * 2,269 1, * 2,326 1, * Does not include Gwinnett, Tifton or Griffin enrollments Source: Office of Undergraduate Admissions 15

23 COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES FROM WHICH UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS TRANSFERRED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FALL SEMESTER 2005 College/University Students College/University Students Gainesville College 119 South Georgia College 6 Georgia Perimeter College 95 Georgia Southwestern State University 5 Georgia State University 40 Truett-McConnell College 5 Young Harris College 40 Reinhardt College 3 Kennesaw State University 38 Southern Polytechnic State University 3 Georgia Southern University 36 East Georgia College 2 Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College 25 Emmanuel College 2 Valdosta State University 23 Georgia Institute of Technology 2 Middle Georgia College 20 LaGrange College 2 Gordon College 19 Mercer University, Macon 2 Augusta State University 16 Albany State University 1 Darton College 16 Andrew College 1 North Georgia College & State University 15 Atlanta Christian College 1 Columbus State University 14 Atlanta Metropolitan College 1 State University of West Georgia 13 Brewton-Parker College 1 Georgia College and State University 12 Chattahoochee Technical College 1 Georgia Military College 12 Fort Valley State University 1 Macon State College 12 Morehouse College 1 Armstrong Atlantic State University 10 Savannah State University 1 Bainbridge College 10 Shorter College 1 Clayton College and State University 9 Thomas College 1 Berry College 7 Dalton State College 7 Total, 45 Georgia Colleges 657 Piedmont College 6 Source: Office of Undergraduate Admissions 16

24 GRADUATE SCHOOL ADMISSIONS FALL TERMS Fall % Applied % Applied % Accepted Terms Applied Accepted Accepted Enrolled Enrolled Enrolled ,515 2, , ,416 2, , ,039 2, , ,976 2, , ,601 2, , ,134 2, , ,761 2, , ,782 2, , ,367 2, , ,366 3, , AVERAGE ENTRANCE TEST SCORES OF ACCEPTED DEGREE-SEEKING GRADUATE STUDENTS FALL TERMS Fall GRE GREQ GRE GRE GMAT Terms Verbal Quantitative Analytical Writing Total Source: Graduate Admissions 17

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27 FALL TERM ENROLLMENT BY CLASS Class Freshman (FR)* 4,891 5,483 5,986 6,054 5,926 6,029 5,673 6,072 5,663 5,314 Sophomore (SO) 5,123 4,712 5,238 5,804 5,571 5,698 5,692 5,485 5,317 5,533 Junior (JR) 5,215 5,504 6,019 5,570 5,995 6,031 6,333 6,218 6,245 6,232 Senior (SR) 6,016 7,196 5,943 6,253 6,283 6,638 6,798 7,007 7,080 7,253 Developmental Studies Irregular & Transient Graduate (GR) 5,418 5,375 5,329 5,540 5,709 5,975 6,462 6,922 6,304 6,265 Professional (PR) 2,364 1,082 1,201 1,332 1,366 1,513 1,496 1,541 1,594 1,621 Total Regular Enrollment 29,228 29,515 29,892 30,771 31,085 32,119 32,683 33,461 32,394 32,421 University Studies** (465) (244) (236) (306) (320) (271) (232) (317) (316) (332) Correspondence/Indep Study UGA at Gwinnett Undergraduate Graduate UGA at Griffin** (14) UGA at Tifton** (21) (44) (54) TOTAL*** 29,404 29,693 30,009 30,912 31,288 32,317 32,941 33,878 33,405 33,660 * Fall Semester 2002 total Freshmen includes 9 Adult College students. ** University Studies, UGA at Griffin, and UGA at Tifton students are counted in their respective class levels. + Prior to Fall 2004, graduate students enrolled in courses at UGA at Gwinnett are included in the total graduate enrollment. *** Fall Semester 2005 total enrollment includes 69 students displaced by Hurricane Katrina. Figure 4 TOTAL ENROLLMENT FALL TERMS ,000 30,000 25,000 ENROLLMENT 20,000 15,000 10,000 5, FR SO JR FALL TERMS SR GR PR OT Total Freshmen includes Freshmen and Developmental Studies students. Other (OT): Includes Correspondence/Independent Study, Irregular & Transient, and UGA at Gwinnett students. Source: Registrar's Office and Office of Institutional Research 20

28 ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGE AND SCHOOL FALL TERMS College/School AGRICULTURAL & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Undergraduate 1,049 1,178 1,199 1,245 1,217 Graduate Total 1,409 1,561 1,592 1,645 1,585 ARTS AND SCIENCES Undergraduate 12,229 12,947 14,512 14,589 14,555 Graduate 1,855 1,626 1,652 1,680 1,704 Total 14,084 14,573 16,164 16,269 16,259 BUSINESS Undergraduate 6,334 4,481 2,733 1,816 1,862 Graduate Total 6,967 5,277 3,501 2,341 2,381 EDUCATION Undergraduate 2,548 2,491 2,573 2,484 2,313 Graduate 2,234 2,454 2,768 2,419 2,348 Total 4,782 4,945 5,341 4,903 4,661 ENVIRONMENT AND DESIGN Undergraduate Graduate Total FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES Undergraduate 988 1,134 1,305 1,585 1,495 Graduate Total 1,105 1,254 1,427 1,706 1,613 FOREST RESOURCES Undergraduate Graduate Total JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATION Undergraduate Graduate Total , ,057 LAW Professional Graduate Total

29 CONT'D: ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGE AND SCHOOL FALL TERMS College/School PHARMACY Professional Graduate Total PUBLIC HEALTH Undergraduate 142 Graduate 84 Total 226 PUBLIC AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Undergraduate 869 1,008 1,176 1,266 Graduate Total 1,045 1,204 1,411 1,489 SOCIAL WORK Undergraduate Graduate Total VETERINARY MEDICINE Professional Graduate Total BIOMEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES INSTITUTE Graduate 19 1 Total 19 1 TOTAL REGULAR ENROLLMENT Undergraduate 24,630 24,715 24,998 24,496 24,535 Professional 1,514 1,497 1,541 1,594 1,621 Graduate 5,975 6,462 6,922 6,304 6,265 Total 32,119 32,674 33,461 32,394 32,421 CONTINUING EDUCATION Adult College 9 Corr/Indep Study Total UGA AT GWINNETT Undergraduate Graduate* (498) (632) Total ,037 TOTAL UNIVERSITY ENROLLMENT Total Undergraduate 24,828 24,982 25,415 25,019 25,204 Total Professional 1,514 1,497 1,541 1,594 1,621 Total Graduate 5,975 6,462 6,922 6,792 6,835 Total 32,317 32,941 33,878 33,405 33,660 * Prior to Fall 2004, graduate students enrolled in courses at UGA at Gwinnett are included in the graduate enrollment of their respective schools and colleges. Source: Registrar's Office and Office of Institutional Research 22

30 ENROLLED FOREIGN STUDENTS BY COUNTRY OF ORIGIN AND UGA STUDENT LEVEL FALL SEMESTER 2005 Prof/ Prof/ Home Country Ugrad Grad Total Home Country Ugrad Grad Total Afghanistan 1 1 Jordan 5 5 Albania 1 1 Kazakhstan 3 3 Argentina Kenya Armenia 3 3 Korea, Republic of Australia Latvia Azerbaijan 2 2 Lebanon 1 1 Bahamas Liberia Bangladesh Libya 1 1 Barbados Lithuania 1 1 Belarus Macedonia 1 1 Belgium Malawi 1 1 Belize 1 1 Malaysia Bosnia and Herzegovina 9 9 Mexico Botswana Moldova Brazil Morocco 2 2 British Virgin Islands 3 3 Mozambique 1 1 Bulgaria Nepal Burkina 1 1 Netherlands 3 3 Cambodia 2 2 Netherlands Antilles 1 1 Cameroon New Zealand 2 2 Canada Nicaragua 2 2 Cayman Islands 1 1 Nigeria Chile Norway China Pakistan Colombia Panama Congo 2 2 Peru Costa Rica 4 4 Philippines Croatia Poland Cuba 1 1 Romania Cyprus Russia Czech Republic 5 5 Sao Tome and Principe 1 1 Dem. People's Rep. of Korea 2 2 Saudi Arabia Denmark Senegal 2 2 Dominica Serbia and Montenegro Dominican Republic 2 2 Sierra Leone Ecuador Singapore 3 3 Egypt Slovakia El Salvador Slovenia 1 1 Eritrea Somalia 6 6 Ethiopia South Africa Finland 1 1 Spain France Sri Lanka 2 2 Gambia Sudan 1 1 Georgia 1 1 Sweden Germany Switzerland Ghana Syria 1 1 Greece Taiwan Grenada 1 1 Thailand Guatemala Trinidad and Tobago Guyana Tunisia Haiti Turkey Honduras Uganda Hong Kong Ukraine Hungary 3 3 United Kingdom Iceland United Republic of Tanzania 1 1 India Uruguay 6 6 Indonesia Uzbekistan Iran Venezuela Iraq 1 1 Vietnam Iraq-Saudi Arabia NE 1 1 Yemen 1 1 Ireland Zaire 1 1 Israel Zambia 1 1 Italy 3 3 Zimbabwe Jamaica Japan TOTALS, 128 Countries 881 1,230 2,111 Note: Includes both resident and nonresident aliens. Country of origin is country of residence at time of application. Source: Office of Institutional Research 23

31 ENROLLMENT BY STATE OF ORIGIN AND UGA STUDENT LEVEL FALL SEMESTER 2005 Under- Prof/ Under- Prof/ State graduate Graduate Total State graduate Graduate Total Alabama Nevada Alaska New Hampshire Arizona New Jersey Arkansas New Mexico California New York Colorado North Carolina Connecticut North Dakota Delaware Ohio District of Columbia Oklahoma Florida Oregon Georgia 21,489 5,075 26,564 Pennsylvania Hawaii Rhode Island Idaho South Carolina Illinois South Dakota Indiana Tennessee Iowa Texas Kansas Utah Kentucky Vermont Louisiana Virginia Maine Washington Maryland West Virginia Massachusetts Wisconsin Michigan Wyoming Minnesota U.S. Associations Mississippi Puerto Rico Missouri Virgin Islands Montana Foreign, Unknown 882 1,234 2,116 Nebraska TOTALS 25,204 8,456 33,660 Note: State of origin is the state of residence at the time of application to the University. Source: Office of Institutional Research 24

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33 ENROLLED GEORGIA RESIDENTS BY COUNTY OF RESIDENCE AND UGA STUDENT LEVEL FALL SEMESTER 2005 Under- Grad/ Under- Grad/ Under- Grad/ County Grad Prof Total County Grad Prof Total County Grad Prof Total Appling Fannin Oglethorpe Atkinson Fayette Paulding Bacon Floyd Peach Baker Forsyth Pickens Baldwin Franklin Pierce Banks Fulton 2, ,276 Pike Barrow Gilmer Polk Bartow Glascock Pulaski Ben Hill Glynn Putnam Berrien Gordon Quitman 0 Bibb Grady Rabun Bleckley Greene Randolph Brantley Gwinnett 3, ,818 Richmond Brooks Habersham Rockdale Bryan Hall Schley 4 4 Bulloch Hancock Screven Burke Haralson Seminole Butts Harris Spalding Calhoun Hart Stephens Camden Heard 9 9 Stewart Candler Henry Sumter Carroll Houston Talbot Catoosa Irwin Taliaferro Charlton Jackson Tattnall Chatham Jasper Taylor Chattahoochee Jeff Davis Telfair Chattooga Jefferson Terrell Cherokee Jenkins Thomas Clarke ,635 Johnson Tift Clay Jones Toombs Clayton Lamar Towns Clinch Lanier Treutlen 4 4 Cobb 2, ,846 Laurens Troup Coffee Lee Turner Colquitt Liberty Twiggs Columbia Lincoln Union Cook Long Upson Coweta Lowndes Walker Crawford Lumpkin Walton Crisp Macon Ware Dade Madison Warren Dawson Marion Washington Decatur McDuffie Wayne DeKalb 1, ,453 McIntosh Webster 2 2 Dodge Meriwether Wheeler Dooly Miller White Dougherty Mitchell Whitfield Douglas Monroe Wilcox Early Montgomery Wilkes Echols 0 Morgan Wilkinson Effingham Murray Worth Elbert Muscogee Emanuel Newton TOTAL 21,489 5,075 26,564 Evans Oconee Source: Office of Institutional Research 26

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35 CHARACTERISTICS OF ENROLLED STUDENTS BY CLASS FALL SEMESTER 2005 Frosh* Soph Junior Senior Irreg/ Trans Cont Educ Total Ugrad Prof Grad Grand Total Total Class 5,329 5,533 6,453 7, ,204 1,621 6,835 33,660 Matriculation Status New Matriculant 5,305 4,906 4,327 4, , ,451 23,799 Transfer ,021 2, ,617 1, ,692 Former UGA Student ,338 3,169 Registration Status Full-Time 5,240 5,351 5,973 6, ,730 1,560 4,384 28,674 Part-Time , , ,451 4,986 Full-Time Equivalent 5,294 5,475 6,275 6, ,183 1,593 5,708 31,484 Sex Male 2,150 2,344 2,857 3, , ,859 14,349 Female 3,176 3,168 3,533 4, , ,933 18,911 Not Reported Ethnic Origin American Indian Asian/Pacific Islander , ,731 Black/African-American , ,106 Hispanic Multiracial White 4,238 4,601 5,376 6, ,416 1,263 4,499 26,178 Not Reported ,269 Residence Status - Fees In-State 4,672 4,800 5,810 6, ,395 1,433 4,222 28,050 Out-of-State , ,674 Out-of-State Fee Waived ,266 2,924 Senior Citizen Tuition Waived Age 17 or under ,237 4,580 2, , , ,755 6, , ,360 13, , ,302 3, ,358 1, and older Average Age * Includes Developmental Studies students. Source: Office of Institutional Research 28

36 RETENTION RATES FOR FIRST-TIME FULL-TIME UNDERGRADUATES ENTERING COHORTS Percentage Still Enrolled or Graduated as of the Following Fall Term Class and Year 1Yr 2Yrs 3Yrs 4Yrs 5Yrs 6Yrs UGA Freshmen Average Transfer Sophomores Average Transfer Juniors Average Notes: Retention rate is the percentage of students in a given cohort who are enrolled the following fall term or who have graduated between matriculation and that fall term (USG definition). UGA Freshman cohorts include both summer and fall matriculants. Sophomore and Junior Transfer cohorts include fall matriculants only. Source: Office of Institutional Research 29

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39 DEGREES CONFERRED BY SCHOOL OR COLLEGE AND DEGREE LEVEL FISCAL YEAR 2005 Degree Level School or College Bachelor's Master's* Professional Doctoral Total Agricultural and Environmental Sciences Arts and Sciences 2, ,732 Business 1, ,549 Education ,443 Environment and Design Family and Consumer Sciences Forest Resources Journalism and Mass Communication Law Pharmacy Public and International Affairs Social Work Veterinary Medicine TOTAL 6,160 1, ,683 Figure 7 DEGREES CONFERRED BY LEVEL FISCAL YEAR 2005 DOCTORAL 5.0% *MASTER'S 19.6% BACHELOR'S 70.9% PROFESSIONAL 4.5% * Includes Specialist degrees Source: Office of Institutional Research 32

40 DEGREES CONFERRED BY DEGREE LEVEL FISCAL YEARS THROUGH Fiscal Year Degree Level Bachelor's 4,833 5,392 5,702 5,727 6,160 Master's* 1,310 1,377 1,435 1,612 1,705 Professional Doctoral TOTAL 6,813 7,573 7,935 8,167 8,683 Figure 8 DEGREES CONFERRED BY LEVEL ACADEMIC YEARS THROUGH ACADEMIC YEAR ,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 DEGREES CONFERRED BACHELOR'S MASTER'S* PROFESSIONAL DOCTORAL * Includes Specialist degrees Source: Office of Institutional Research 33

41 SUMMARY OF DEGREES CONFERRED BY PROGRAM CLASSIFICATION FISCAL YEAR Degree Level Program or Field of Study* Bachelor's Degrees 1st Prof Degrees Master's Degrees** Doctoral Degrees Total Degrees Agriculture, Ag Operations, & Related Sciences Architecture & Related Services Area, Ethnic, Cultural, & Gender Studies 9 9 Biological & Biomedical Sciences Business, Management, Marketing & Related Support Services 1, ,673 Communication, Journalism, & Related Programs Communications Technologies & Support Services Computer & Information Sciences & Support Services Education ,340 Engineering English Language & Literatures/Letters Family & Consumer Sciences/Human Sciences Foreign Languages, Literatures, & Linguistics Health Professions & Related Clinical Sciences History Legal Professions & Studies Liberal Arts & Sciences, General Studies & Humanities Mathematics & Statistics Multi/Interdisciplinary Studies Natural Resources & Conservation Parks, Recreation, Leisure & Fitness Studies Philosophy & Religious Studies Physical Sciences Psychology Public Administration & Social Service Professions Security & Protective Services Social Sciences Visual & Performing Arts TOTAL 6, , ,683 * Program/Field classifications and degree levels defined by the National Center for Educational Statistics (NCES) in the Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) ** Includes Specialist degrees (Ed.S.). Source: Office of Institutional Research 34

42 UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE PROGRAMS AND MAJORS COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES Bachelor of Science in Agriculture Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Engineering Bachelor of Science in Applied Biotechnology Bachelor of Science in Biological Engineering Bachelor of Science in Environmental Sciences Bachelor of Arts Bachelor of Fine Arts Bachelor of Music Bachelor of Science Bachelor of Science in Chemistry Agribusiness Agricultural Communications Agricultural Economics Agricultural Education Agricultural Educ - Tifton Agriscience & Environ Systs Animal Health Animal Science Avian Biology Agricultural Engineering Applied Biotechnology Biological Engineering Entomology Environmental Econ & Mgmt Environmental Chemistry African-American Studies Anthropology Art History Classical Culture Cognitive Science Comparative Literature Criminal Justice Dance Economics English Film Studies French Geography Geology German Germanic & Slavic Language Greek History Art Art Education Ceramics Dance Digital Media Drawing Fabric Design Graphic Design Music Composition Music Education Music Performance Music Theory Music Therapy (Applied areas in Music: baritone, bassoon, cello, clarinet, double bass, Biochemistry & Molecular Biology Biology Cellular Biology Chemistry Computer Science Entomology Genetics Geography Geology Honors Interdisc Studies Chemistry Biological Science Dairy Science Food Science Honors Interdisc Studies Horticulture Landscape & Grounds Mgmt Poultry Science Turfgrass Management Environmental Resource Science Water & Soil Resources Honors Interdisc Studies Interdisciplinary Studies Italian Japanese Language & Lit Latin Linguistics Mathematics Music Philosophy Religion Romance Languages Russian Sociology Spanish Speech Communication Studio Art Theatre Women s Studies Interdisciplinary Studies Interior Design Jewelry & Metalwork Painting Photography Printmaking Scientific Illustration Sculpture electronic music, flute, French horn, guitar, harp, harpsichord, oboe, percussion, piano, saxophone, trombone, trumpet, tuba, viola, violin, voice) Interdisciplinary Studies Mathematics Microbiology Physics Physics & Astronomy Plant Biology Pre-Engineering Pre-Medicine Pre-Veterinary Medicine Psychology Statistics 35

43 UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE PROGRAMS AND MAJORS COLLEGE OF BUSINESS COLLEGE OF EDUCATION COLLEGE OF ENVIRONMENT & DESIGN COLLEGE OF FAMILY & CONSUMER SCIENCES SCHOOL OF FOREST RESOURCES COLLEGE OF JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATION COLLEGE OF PUBLIC HEALTH SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK UGA at GWINNETT Bachelor of Business Administration Bachelor of Science in Education Bachelor of Landscape Architecture Bachelor of Science Bachelor of Science in Family & Consumer Sciences Bachelor of Science in Forest Resources Bachelor of Arts in Journalism Bachelor of Science in Environmental Health Bachelor of Science in Health Promotion Bachelor of Arts Bachelor of Social Work College of Arts & Sciences College of Business College of Education Accounting Economics Finance General Business International Business Management Business Education Communication Sciences & Disorders Early Childhood Education English Education Exercise & Sport Science Foreign Language Education Health & Physical Education Marketing Education Mathematics Education Landscape Architecture Ecology Child & Family Development CFD-Early Childhood Educ: PreK-2 nd grade Consumer Economics Consumer Foods Consumer Journalism Dietetics Fisheries & Aquaculture Forestry Advertising Broadcast News Honors Interdisc Studies Magazines Environmental Health Health Promotion International Affairs Political Science Social Work Bachelor of Arts Bachelor of Science Bachelor of Business Administration Bachelor of Science in Education Management Information Systems Marketing Real Estate Risk Management & Insurance Middle School Education Recreation & Leisure Studies Science Education Science Education Biology Science Educ Chemistry Social Science Education Special Education Sport Studies Technological Studies Family & Consumer Sci Education Fashion Merchandising Furnishings & Interiors Housing Nutrition Science Water & Soil Resources Wildlife Newspapers Public Relations Publication Management Telecommunication Arts Interdisciplinary Studies Biology Interdisciplinary Studies General Business Instructional Psychology, Training & Technology Science Education Special Education School of Social Work Bachelor of Social Work Social Work 36

44 GRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL DEGREE PROGRAMS AND MAJORS COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES Master of Science Master of Agricultural Economics Master of Agricultural Extension Master of Agricultural Leadership Master of Animal & Dairy Science Master of Crop & Soil Science Master of Food Technology Master of Plant Protection & Pest Management Doctor of Philosophy Master of Applied Mathematical Science Master of Arts Master of Arts for Teachers Agricultural Economics Agricultural Engineering Agronomy Animal Science Biological Engineering Dairy Science Entomology Agricultural Economics Agricultural Extension Agricultural Leadership Animal & Dairy Science Crop & Soil Sciences Food Technology Environmental Economics Food Science Horticulture Plant Pathology Poultry Science Toxicology: Entomology, Poultry Science Plant Protection & Pest Management: Crop & Soil Science, Entomology, Horticulture Agricultural Economics Food Science Agronomy Horticulture Animal & Dairy Science Plant Pathology Animal Nutrition Poultry Science Biological & Agricultural Toxicology: Entomology, Engineering Poultry Science Entomology Applied Mathematical Science: Computer Science, Mathematics, Statistics Anthropology Art History Classical Language Comparative Literature English French Geography German Greek History English French German Latin Linguistics Mathematics Music Philosophy Religion Romance Languages Sociology Spanish Speech Communication Romance Languages Spanish Master of Fine Arts Art Theatre Master of Music Music Master of Science Artificial Intelligence Biochemistry & Molecular Biology Cellular Biology Chemistry Computer Science Genetics Geography Geology Marine Sciences Microbiology Physics Plant Biology Psychology Statistics Doctor of Musical Arts Doctor of Philosophy Music Anthropology Art Biochemistry & Molecular Biology Cellular Biology Chemistry Comparative Literature Computer Science Drama English Genetics Geography Geology History Life-Span Development Psychology Linguistics Marine Sciences Mathematics Microbiology Music Philosophy Physics Plant Biology Psychology Romance Languages Sociology Speech Communication Statistics 37

45 GRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL DEGREE PROGRAMS AND MAJORS COLLEGE OF BUSINESS COLLEGE OF EDUCATION Master of Accountancy Accounting Master of Arts Business Administration Economics Master of Business Administration Business Administration Master of Internet Technology Internet Technology Master of Marketing Research Marketing Research Doctor of Philosophy Business Administration Economics Master of Art Education Art Education Master of Arts Communication Sciences & Health Promotion & Behavior Disorders Physical Education & Education Sports Studies Educational Psychology Recreation & Leisure Studies Master of Arts for Teachers Occupational Studies Master of Education Adult Education College Student Affairs Administration Communication Sciences & Disorders Early Childhood Education Educational Administration & Policy Educational Psychology English Education Exercise Science Guidance & Counseling Health Promotion & Behavior Human Resource & Org Development Music Education Instructional Technology Mathematics Education Middle School Education Occupational Studies Physical Education Sports Studies Reading Education Recreation & Leisure Studies Science Education Social Science Education Special Education Teaching Additional Languages Master of Music Education Master of Science Educational Psychology Exercise Science Specialist in Education Adult Education Art Education Communication Sciences Disorders Early Childhood Education Educational Administration & Policy Educational Psychology English Education Guidance & Counseling Instructional Technology Mathematics Education Languages Doctor of Education Doctor of Philosophy Adult Education Art Education Education of Gifted Educational Leadership Educational Psychology Higher Education Mathematics Education Music Education Adult Education Communication Science & Disorders Counseling & Student Personnel Services Counseling Psychology Early Childhood Education Educational Psychology Elementary Education Exercise Science Higher Education Instructional Technology Language Education Middle School Education Music Education Occupational Studies Physical Education Sports Studies Reading Education School Psychology Science Education Social Science Education Special Education Teaching Additional Occupational Studies Physical Education Sports Studies Reading Education Science Education Social Science Education Special Education Mathematics Education Middle School Education Occupational Studies Physical Education & Sports Studies Reading Education Recreation & Leisure Studies Science Education Social Foundations of Education Social Science Education Special Education 38

46 COLLEGE OF ENVIRONMENT & DESIGN COLLEGE OF FAMILY & CONSUMER GRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL DEGREE PROGRAMS AND MAJORS Master of Historic Preservation Historic Preservation Master of Landscape Architecture Landscape Architecture Master of Science Conservation Ecology & Sustainable Development Ecology Toxicology Doctor of Philosophy Ecology Toxicology Master of Family & Consumer Child & Family Development Home Economics Sciences Foods & Nutrition SCIENCES Master of Science Child & Family Development Foods & Nutrition Housing & Consumer Economics SCHOOL OF FOREST RESOURCES COLLEGE OF JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATION SCHOOL OF LAW Doctor of Philosophy Child & Family Development Foods & Nutrition Housing & Consumer Economics Master of Forest Resources Forest Resources Master of Science Forest Resources Toxicology Doctor of Philosophy Forest Resources Toxicology Master of Arts Journalism & Mass Communication Doctor of Philosophy Mass Communication Textiles, Merchandising & Interiors Toxicology Foods & Nutrition Textile Sciences Toxicology Foods & Nutrition Juris Doctor Law Master of Laws Law COLLEGE OF Master of Science Pharmacy PHARMACY Toxicology Clinical & Administrative Sciences Toxicology Pharmaceutical & Biomedical Sciences Doctor of Pharmacy Pharmacy Doctor of Philosophy Pharmacy Toxicology Clinical & Administrative Sciences Toxicology Pharmaceutical & Biomedical Sciences COLLEGE OF PUBLIC Master of Arts Health Promotion & Behavior HEALTH Master of Public Health Public Health Master of Science Environmental Health Toxicology Doctor of Philosophy Health Promotion & Behavior Toxicology SCHOOL OF PUBLIC Master of Arts Political Science AND INTERNATIONAL Master of Public Administration Public Administration AFFAIRS Doctor of Philosophy Political Science Public Administration SCHOOL OF SOCIAL Master of Arts Nonprofit Organizations WORK Master of Social Work Social Work Doctor of Philosophy Social Work COLLEGE OF Master of Avian Medicine Avian Medicine VETERINARY Master of Food Animal Medicine Food Animal Medicine MEDICINE Master of Science Anatomy Toxicology Pathology Infectious Diseases Toxicology Physiology & Pharmacology Pharmacology Physiology Veterinary Pathology Toxicology Infectious Diseases BIOMEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES INSTITUTE Doctor of Veterinary Medicine Doctor of Philosophy Doctor of Philosophy Veterinary Medicine Infectious Diseases Pharmacology Physiology Toxicology Infectious Diseases Neuroscience Toxicology Pathology Toxicology Physiology & Pharmacology Veterinary Pathology 39

47 GRADUATION RATES FOR FIRST-TIME FULL-TIME UNDERGRADUATES ENTERING COHORTS Cumulative Percentage Graduated Since Matriculation Class and Year 1Yr 2Yrs 3Yrs 4Yrs 5Yrs 6Yrs UGA Freshmen Average Transfer Sophomores Average Transfer Juniors Average Note: UGA Freshmen cohorts include both summer and fall matriculants. Sophomore and Junior Transfer cohorts include fall matriculants only. Source: Office of Institutional Research 40

48 Figure 9 AVERAGE GRADUATION RATES FOR FIRST-TIME FULL-TIME UNDERGRADUATES ENTERING COHORTS SOPHOMORES TRANSFER JUNIORS TRANSFER SOPHOMORES 60 PERCENT GRADUATED UGA FRESHMEN LAPSED TIME IN YEARS Data from page 40 Source: Office of Institutional Research 41

49 POPULAR DEGREE MAJORS FALL SEMESTER 2005 Enrollment by UGA Student Level Major Undergraduate Professional Graduate Total Biology 1,010 1,010 Psychology Art Law Pharmacy Business Administration English Political Science Special Education History Social Work Veterinary Medicine Accounting Landscape Architecture Early Childhood Education Speech Communication Finance Sociology International Affairs Marketing Child & Family Development Chemistry Economics Advertising Management Computer Science Mathematics Education Consumer Economics Note: Includes only those students officially accepted to a major program of study. Source: Office of Institutional Research 42

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51 TOTAL UNIVERSITY STUDENT CREDIT HOURS FISCAL YEAR Credit Hour Lower Upper Professional Graduate Division Source Division Division Division Master's Doctoral Total Regular Enrollment 399, ,696 56,310 81,723 65, ,678 UGA at Gwinnett* 388 7, , ,098 In-Service Education 663 1,727 8, ,742 Independent Study 6,008 4, ,028 Studies Abroad 1,594 8, ,653 Subtotal 408, ,775 56,403 99,717 67, ,199 Military ,039 TOTAL 408, ,142 56,403 99,717 67, ,238 * Effective Fall Semester 2002 Figure 10 TOTAL UNIVERSITY STUDENT CREDIT HOURS FISCAL YEARS 2001 THROUGH , , , , , , , , , , Source: Office of Institutional Research 44

52 School/Students/Sections Summer Fall Spring Total Agricultural & Environmental Sciences, Environment & Design and Veterinary Medicine Students Sections Arts & Sciences Students 115 1,820 1,518 3,453 Sections Business Students Sections Education and Family & Consumer Sciences Students Sections Journalism & Mass Communication Students Sections Public and International Affairs Students Sections Total Students 162 2,556 2,240 4,958 Sections Average Students Per Section Agricultural & Environmental Sci, Environment & Design and Veterinary Medicine Arts & Sciences Business Education and Family & Consumer Sciences Journalism & Mass Communication Public and International Affairs Total Note: Does not include enrollment in directed study honors courses. Source: Office of Institutional Research HONORS PROGRAM ENROLLMENT AND SECTIONS ACADEMIC YEAR HONORS PROGRAM AWARDS FISCAL YEARS Graduates Graduates With Graduates with Year With Honors High Honors Highest Honors Source: Honors Program 45

53 UGA STUDY ABROAD AND EXCHANGE PROGRAM COUNTRIES ACADEMIC YEAR Argentina Australia Austria Barbados Belize Botswana Brazil Burkina Faso Canada Chile Costa Rica Croatia Cuba Ecuador England Fiji Finland France Germany Ghana Greece Hungary India Ireland Italy Japan Lesotho Mexico Morocco Netherlands New Zealand Northern Ireland Norway Peru Portugal Republic of Georgia Russia Scotland South Africa South Korea Spain Switzerland Taiwan Tanzania Trinidad and Tobago Uganda Ukraine Venezuela Vietnam Wales Figure 11 UGA STUDY ABROAD AND EXCHANGE PROGRAM COUNTRIES Source: Office of International Education 46

54 PARTICIPATION IN STUDY ABROAD AT THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ACADEMIC YEARS THROUGH Number of Study Abroad Participants Percent Increase in Study Abroad over Previous Year Percent of Graduating Seniors who Studied Abroad Academic Year ,244 1,308 1,441 1,641 1, % 5.14% 10.17% 13.88% 6.60% 15.26% 16.85% 17.52% 17.87% 20.82% Figure 12 INCREASE IN STUDY ABROAD PARTICIPATION ACADEMIC YEARS THROUGH % 1600 PARTICIPANTS % 15% 10% 5% GRADUATING SENIORS ACADEMIC YEAR 0% Number of Study Abroad Participants Percent of Graduating Seniors who Studied Abroad Source: Office of International Education 47

55 UGA STUDY ABROAD AND EXCHANGE PROGRAMS ACADEMIC YEARS THROUGH Traditional Nontraditional Academic Exchange Study Abroad Study Abroad Total Year Programs Programs Programs Programs * Notes: Exchange Programs involve small numbers of UGA students trading places with students from partner institutions overseas. Students take classes at the partner institution with professors and students from the host country or with other international students. Study Abroad Programs typically involve UGA professors taking a group of UGA students abroad and teaching the courses. Nontraditional Study Abroad Programs include internships, research and activities arranged by a UGA professor but involving very small numbers of students. Although more non-traditional programs existed in earlier years, the OIE has no documentation of these activities. *During , the Office of International Education implemented a moratorium on new exchanges and cancelled several partnerships to pursue a strategic growth initiative. These measures ensure that the existing partnerships are productive and fiscally sound. Figure 13 UGA STUDY ABROAD AND EXCHANGE PROGRAM GROWTH ACADEMIC YEARS TO ACADEMIC YEAR NUMBER OF PROGRAMS Exchange Programs Traditional Study Abroad Programs Nontraditional Study Abroad Programs Source: Office of International Education 48

56 GRADUATE ASSISTANTSHIPS FALL SEMESTER 2005 Number of Number of Type Assistantships Assistants Graduate Assistants 1,235 1,174 Graduate Laboratory Assistants Graduate Research Assistants 1,039 1,013 Graduate Teaching Assistants Veterinary Medicine Graduate Assistants Total 3,304 3,193 Source: UGA Budget System GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS AND ASSISTANTSHIPS AWARDED THROUGH THE GRADUATE SCHOOL FALL SEMESTER 2005 Number of Type Assistants National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Fellows 6 Graduate Research Assistants 93 Graduate Nonteaching Assistants 280 Total 379 Source: Dean of the Graduate School 49

57 TUITION AND FEES FALL SPRING 2006 Nonresident Total Total Resident Additional Student Resident Nonresident Tuition Tuition Fees Tuition & Fees Tuition & Fees 12 or more Semester Hours Undergraduate $ 1, $ 6, $ $ 2, $ 8, Graduate 2, , , , Business (MACC) 2, , , , Business (MBA) 3, , , , Education+ 2, , , , Forest Resources 2, , , , Landscape Architecture (BLA) 2, , , , Landscape Architecture (MLA) & Historic Preservation (MHP) 2, , , , Law 4, , , , Pharmacy 3, , , , Public & International Affairs (MPA) 2, , , , Social Work (MSW) 2, , , , Veterinary Medicine* 5, , , UGA at Gwinnett ** Undergraduate 1, , , , Graduate 2, , , , Agriculture (MFT) 4, , , , Business (MBA, MIT) 6, , , , Public & International Affairs (MPA) 2, , , , Social Work (MSW) 2, , , , UGA at Griffin++ 1, , , , UGA at Tifton*** 1, , , , Ramsey Student Ctr-Physical Student Fees Total Activity Athletic Health Activities Technology Transportation Semester * The College of Veterinary Medicine joined the SREB common market in Fall Students from participating states enroll on an in-state basis. ** Students enrolled at Gwinnett University Center have the option to assess the student fee package which includes the student activity fee, student athletic fee, Health Center fee, and Ramsey Center fee. The fee package totals $ and must be paid in its entirety. *** Undergraduate students enrolled at the Tifton Campus are assessed student activity and health fees. These fees allow students to receive applicable services at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College which is adjacent to the UGA at Tifton Campus. + Fee structure is applicable only to students enrolled in certain graduate programs in Counseling and Human Development Services, Communication Sciences and Disorders and Teacher Education. ++ Undergraduate students enrolled at the Griffin campus are assessed student activity and technology fees. Source: Bursar's Office, Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration 50

58 ESTIMATED COST OF ATTENDANCE ACADEMIC YEARS THROUGH Academic Year Cost of Attendance* $9, $9, $9, $10, $10, $11, $11, $12, $12, $13,804 *This estimated cost of attending the University of Georgia for an academic year is used by the Office of Student Financial Aid to determine aid eligibility for undergraduate Georgia residents; it includes tuition, fees, room and board, and personal expenses. Source: Office of Student Financial Aid ANNUAL COST OF ATTENDANCE FOR RESIDENT UNDERGRADUATES UGA AND SELECTED PEERS ACADEMIC YEAR Sorted by Total Costs In-State Books & Room & Other Institution Tuition & Fees Supplies Board Expenses* Total University of California - Davis $7,557 $1,415 $10,234 $2,025 $21,231 Indiana University - Bloomington $6,777 $740 $7,000 $4,320 $18,837 University of Maryland - College Park $7,410 $909 $7,791 $2,696 $18,806 University of Colorado - Boulder $4,341 $1,187 $7,564 $3,312 $16,404 University of Missouri - Columbia $6,622 $900 $6,220 $2,618 $16,360 Texas A & M University $5,955 $1,186 $6,887 $2,310 $16,338 University of Oregon $5,490 $900 $6,894 $2,350 $15,634 Iowa State University $5,426 $850 $5,958 $3,086 $15,320 University of Iowa $5,396 $840 $5,882 $3,110 $15,228 Arizona State University $4,064 $838 $6,574 $3,726 $15,202 Michigan State University $6,999 $826 $5,502 $1,420 $14,747 Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University $5,838 $1,573 $4,288 $2,868 $14,567 University of Nebraska - Lincoln $5,268 $850 $5,555 $2,554 $14,227 University of Kansas $4,737 $750 $5,216 $3,336 $14,039 North Carolina State University $4,282 $800 $6,496 $1,700 $13,278 University of Georgia $4,272 $750 $6,006 $1,740 $12,768 *Other Expenses includes items such as laundry, transportation, entertainment, and furnishings. Source: National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) 51

59 NATIONAL ACADEMIC AWARDS EARNED BY UGA STUDENTS Rhodes Scholarships Scholar Year Scholar Year R. P. Brooks 1904 E. T. Booth, Jr H. L. J. Williams 1908 Benson E. L. (Lane) Timmons 1938 E. W. Moise 1911 Morris B. Abram 1939 George S. Whitehead 1916 Robert Edge 1960 F. W. Harrold 1919 Fred F. Manget 1973 E. Way Highsmith 1922 Robert M. Sutherland 1996 H. M. Cleckley 1924 Scott A. Hershovitz 1998 Allen Post 1927 Beth Shapiro 1999 Thomas J. Hamilton, Jr Adam S. Cureton 2003 Milton P. Jarnigan III 1931 Gates Cambridge Scholarships Scholar Year Scholar Year Semil P. Choksi 2001 Yi S. Lee 2002 William Hollingsworth 2002 Amanda Casto 2004 Barry M. Goldwater Scholarships Scholar Year Scholar Year Thomas A. Bryan 1995 Steven C. Smith 2001 Robert M. Sutherland 1995 Lakshmi Swamy 2001 Katherine M. Kurkjian 1996 Jennifer Gibson 2002 Adrian J. Daigle 1997 Kathryn Smith 2002 Jennifer A. Harrelson 1997 Jennifer Srygley 2002 Laura L. Feldman 1998 John Woodruff 2002 Jessica L. Metcalf 1998 Amanda M. Casto 2003 William B. Schomaker 1998 Laura E. Downs 2003 Dhea M. Tolla 1998 Rebekah Rogers 2004 Melissa Bugbee 1999 Amy Sexauer 2004 Rachel J. Wisniewski 1999 James C. Tarr 2004 Beth N. Orcutt 2001 Melissa A. Cabinian 2005 Paul P. Pollack 2001 Caelin A. Cubenas 2005 Marshall Scholarships Scholar Year Scholar Year Joseph Harris 1965 Joseph Wolpin 2004 John H. Woodruff 2003 Matthew Crim 2005 Andrew W. Mellon Fellowships Scholar Year Scholar Year Stephen J. Tate 1996 Robin McGill 2004 Howard J. Keeley 1997 Rachel Wahlig 2004 Harry S. Truman Scholarships Scholar Year Scholar Year Jonathan Gould 1982 Bonny I. Ling 1997 Frank Hanna 1982 R. Patrick Lucas 1997 John Hammond 1986 Ellen J. Sutherland 1998 David Kleber 1988 Virginia L. Barton 2003 Meredith Hobbs 1989 Matthew Crim 2004 Chaly Jo Wright 1992 Sarah Sattelmeyer 2004 Amanda Wojtalik

60 CONT'D: NATIONAL ACADEMIC AWARDS EARNED BY UGA STUDENTS Morris K. Udall Scholarships Scholar Year Scholar Year Kacie Moreno-Schoen 2003 National Collegiate Athletic Association Postgraduate Scholarships Scholar Sport Year Scholar Sport Year Julia Boros Golf 1998 Kelly Miller Basketball 2001 Jenni Beathard Gymnastics 1999 Marc P. Lindsay Swimming 2002 Sarah Miller Swimming 1999 Brian P. Scannell Swimming 2002 Matt Stinchcomb Football 1999 Johnathan C. Stinchcomb Football 2002 Kristy Kowal Swimming 2000 Corrin Drakulich Track and Field 2004 Jennifer Mihalik Swimming 2000 Julie Hardt Swimming 2004 Joey Pitts Tennis 2000 Kinsey Rowe Gymnastics 2004 Kim Black Swimming 2001 Samantha J. Arsenault Swimming 2005 Phi Kappa Phi National Graduate Fellowships Scholar Year Scholar Year Paul Matthews 1990 Laura A. Feldman 1999 Nevada Waugh 1992 Cynthia E. Lester 2000 Amanda Wojtalik 1995 Tina Rakkhit 2002 Stephen J. Tate 1996 Julie Orlemanski 2004 Jennifer A. Harrelson 1998 Fulbright Grants Scholar Year Scholar Year Joe N. Caudell, Australia 1998 Divya Balakrishnan, India 2002 Amanda B. Clinton, Colombia 1998 Andrew Byrd, Italy 2002 Jane G. Peacock, Spain 1998 Jason Craggs, Norway 2002 Diane M. Sanzone, Iceland 1998 Jawad Qureshi, Syria 2002 Kimberly A. Winter, Bolivia 1998 Michele Terray, Finland 2002 Vance Byrd, Germany 1999 Christopher Anderson, Chile 2003 Robert A. Feldman, Germany 1999 Michael Gumert, Indonesia 2003 Joshua Head, Austria 1999 Kathryn Stepp, Germany 2003 Julia A. March, Brazil 1999 Carrie Strickland, Norway 2003 Christopher Merz, Germany 1999 Jeffrey Thompson, Argentina 2003 Joel Tanenbaum, Israel 1999 Joseph Wolpin, Russia 2003 Elizabeth Anderson, Costa Rica 2000 Keith E. Kennetz, Germany 2004 Rachel Hildebrandt, Germany 2000 Ariana Pitchon, Chile 2004 Stefanie Schlitz, Iceland 2000 Anastasia D. Wright, Taiwan 2004 Colt Valenti, Italy 2000 Christopher Holland, India 2005 Leslie Alexander, Japan 2001 Kathryn Marsden, France 2005 Pegues H. Joost, Netherlands 2001 Amy Sexauer, Germany 2005 Jeannette R. Long, Germany 2001 Lindsay Stallcup, Costa Rica 2005 Source: Honors Program 53

61 UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA LIBRARIES NATIONAL RANKINGS 2003 Increase Total ARL (Decrease) Total Resources/Services 6/30/2003 Ranking* 2003 to /30/2004 Library Resources Volumes 3,955, ,607 4,028,611 Microforms 6,418, ,197 6,487,755 Maps 622,371 ** 1, ,945 Current Serials & Periodicals 51, ,669 67,268 Library Staff Professional (2) 82 Support (15) 186 Total (includes student assistants) (34) 318 Library Expenditures Materials $ 9,868, $ 426,214 $ 10,294,637 Salaries & Wages 9,304, ,329 9,446,428 Binding & Other Expenditures 1,558,572 ** (27,902) 1,530,670 Other Expenditures 279,699 ** (7,430) 272,269 Total Expenditures $ 21,010, $ 533,211 $ 21,544,004 Library Services Interlibrary Lending 55,833 ** (8,754) 47,079 Interlibrary Borrowing 8,328 ** 1,195 9,523 Total Circulation 508,986 ** (52,937) 456,049 *Ranking among the 111 academic libraries of the Association of Research Libraries **Category not ranked by ARL. Source: University Librarian and Associate Provost, University of Georgia Library Statistics 54

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63 STUDENT FINANCIAL AID PROGRAMS FISCAL YEAR 2005 Undergraduate Graduate/Professional Number of Amount Number of Amount Student Aid Programs Awards Awarded Awards Awarded Grants/Scholarships Federal Pell Grants 3,419 $8,676,820 $ Federal Supplemental Grants ,001 HOPE Scholarships 17,489 74,537, ,813,590 HOPE Promise Scholarships ,512 HOPE Teacher Scholarships 5 8, ,499 Athletic Scholarships 665 4,986, ,342 Regents Opportunity Scholarships Institutional Grants/Scholarships 2,421 3,487, ,672,330 State Other Grants/Scholarships , ,532 Federal Other Grants/Scholarships , ,462 Other (External) Grants/Scholarships 2,194 3,488, ,526 Georgia LEAP 55 49,999 Subtotal 28,267 $98,090,664 1,481 $4,547,281 Loans Perkins Loans 492 $1,245, $2,380,220 Federal Parent Loans 1,183 9,292,553 Federal Direct Loans-Subsidized 4,260 14,771,987 3,070 20,678,660 Federal Direct Loans-Unsubsidized 5,281 19,279,789 2,653 19,279,637 Institutional Loans 3 6,000 State Other Loans 5 4, ,795 Other Loans 424 2,909, ,862,829 Subtotal 11,648 $47,509,326 6,352 $44,208,141 Student Employment Federal Work-Study Programs 405 $722, $17,494 TOTALS 40,320 $146,322,509 7,845 $48,772,916 Unduplicated Number of Student Aid Recipients 21,794 4,065 Total Unduplicated Number 25,859 Total Amount $195,095,425 Note: Includes aid administered by the Office of Student Financial Aid (OSFA) as well as aid reported to OSFA by student donors, colleges/schools, etc. Does not include aid received by nonresident aliens. Source: Office of Student Financial Aid 56

64 STUDENT HOUSING SUMMARY FALL 2005 Student Residences Summary Number of Type of Residence Buildings Occupancy Capacity Women's Residence Halls 3 1,213 1,199 Coeducational Residence Halls 17 5,594 5,635 Subtotal Residence Halls 20 6,807 6,834 Family and Graduate Housing * University-Owned Sorority Houses Sorority-Owned Houses Subtotal Sorority Houses University-Owned Fraternity Houses Fraternity-Owned Houses Professional Fraternity-Owned Houses Subtotal Fraternity Houses TOTAL 85 8,933 * 8,493 Student Housing Summary Number of Type of Residence Buildings Occupancy Capacity Women's Student Housing 21 2,159 2,196 Men's Student Housing Coeducational Housing 17 5,594 5,635 Family and Graduate Housing * TOTAL 85 8,933 * 8,493 * 555 family and graduate apartments house 650 students and 330 spouses and children who are not students, for a total of 980 occupants. University Village Building B, containing 24 apartments, is closed for renovation. Source: Executive Director of Housing, Greek Life Office 57

65 SOCIAL SORORITIES AND FRATERNITIES Date Established Date Established Sorority on Campus Sorority on Campus Alpha Chi Omega 1938 Gamma Phi Beta 1982 Alpha Delta Pi 1933 Kappa Alpha Theta 1937 Alpha Gamma Delta 1923 Kappa Delta 1924 Alpha Kappa Alpha 1971 Kappa Kappa Gamma 1947 Alpha Omicron Pi 1934 Phi Mu 1921 Chi Omega 1922 Pi Beta Phi 1936 Delta Delta Delta 1933 Sigma Delta Tau 1924 Delta Gamma 1967 Sigma Gamma Rho 1988 Delta Phi Epsilon 1935 Sigma Kappa 1964 Delta Sigma Theta 1969 Zeta Phi Beta 1977 Delta Zeta 1987 Zeta Tau Alpha 1949 Date Established Date Established Fraternity on Campus Fraternity on Campus Alpha Epsilon Pi 1926 Phi Beta Sigma 1974 Alpha Gamma Rho 1927 Phi Delta Theta 1871 Alpha Kappa Lambda 1995 Phi Gamma Delta 1871 Alpha Phi Alpha 1969 Phi Kappa Psi 1968 Alpha Tau Omega 2003 Phi Kappa Tau 1974 Beta Theta Pi 1984 Pi Kappa Alpha 1950 Chi Phi 1867 Pi Kappa Phi 1908 Chi Psi 2003 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 1915 Delta Chi 1999 Sigma Chi 1866 Delta Sigma Phi 2001 Sigma Nu 1872 Delta Tau Delta 1882 Sigma Phi Epsilon 1873 Kappa Alpha 1868 Sigma Pi 1966 Kappa Alpha Psi 1971 Tau Epsilon Phi 1991 Kappa Sigma 1901 Tau Kappa Epsilon 1919 Lambda Chi Alpha 1915 Theta Chi 1971 Omega Psi Phi 1973 Zeta Beta Tau 1948 PARTICIPATION IN SOCIAL SORORITIES AND FRATERNITIES FALL 2005 Sororities 3,409 (24% of Undergraduate Females) Fraternities 2,099 (19% of Undergraduate Males) Total 5,508 (22% of Total Undergraduates) Source: Office of the Dean of Students, Greek Life Office 58

66 HONORARY FRATERNITIES AND SOCIETIES Date Date Honorary Established Honorary Established Fraternities/Societies on Campus Fraternities/Societies on Campus Abeneefoo Kuo Honor Society 1987 Golden Key National Honor Society 1978 Aghon Society 1920 Iota Tau Alpha 2005 Alpha Epsilon Delta (Pre-Medicine) 1932 Kappa Delta Epsilon 1956 Alpha Kappa Delta 1965 Kappa Kappa Psi Band Fraternity 1999 Alpha Lambda Delta 1934 Lambda Pi Eta 2000 Alpha Phi Sigma 1996 Mortar Board National Honor Society 1939 Alpha Psi Omega 2005 National Society of Collegiate Scholars 1999 Alpha Tau Alpha 2005 Omicron Delta Kappa 1934 Alpha Upsilon Alpha 1987 Phi Alpha Theta History Honor Society 1956 Alpha Zeta 1914 Phi Eta Sigma 1938 Beta Beta Beta Biological Honor Society 1987 Phi Sigma Pi 1994 Brass Gavel Leadership Society 1989 Phi Sigma Tau 1973 Chi Sigma Iota, Gamma Beta Chapter 1989 Pi Kappa Lambda 1968 Dean William Tate Honor Society 1990 Pi Sigma Alpha 2005 Delta Epsilon Iota 1998 Psi Chi Honor Society 1929 Eta Sigma Phi (Classics Society) 2000 Sigma Tau Delta 1992 Gamma Iota Sigma 1975 Xi Sigma Pi 1941 Note: This list represents those organizations categorized as "Honor" groups and registered with the Department of Student Activities as of September 9, Source: Department of Student Activities 59

67 UGA CAREER CENTER CLASS OF 2004 CAREER PLANS Respondents 6 to 12 Months After Graduation Status Number of Respondents Percent Employed 1, Attending Graduate School Seeking Employment Not Seeking Employment Completing Volunteer Service 26 <1 Returning to Home Country 3 <1 TOTAL Responding 3,042 Top 20 Employers Hiring UGA Class of 2004 (listed alphabetically) Accenture Publix Bell South Pricewaterhouse Coopers Chick Fil-A, Inc. Progressive Insurance Deloitte and Touch LLP Pulte Homes Emory University State of Georgia Ernst & Young Sun Trust Ferguson Enterprises, Inc. The University of Georgia Hewitt Associates United Parcel Service Liberty Mutual Walgreens Phillip Morris USA, Inc. Wal-Mart Top 10 Graduate and Professional Schools for UGA Class of 2004 (listed alphabetically) Emory University New York University Georgia State University The University of Georgia Medical College of Georgia The University of North Carolina Medical College of South Carolina The University of Tennessee Mercer University Valdosta State University The Graduation Survey provides a snapshot of postgraduation career status for each class. Each year, the Career Center surveys the graduating class ( August, December, and May graduates) through a variety of methods including paper, , postcards, and follow-up phones calls. Source: UGA Career Center 60

68 UGA NATIONAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS Officers Member Residence Office Swann Seiler Savannah President Trey Paris Atlanta Vice President Tim Keadle Lilburn Treasurer Betty Hudson McLean, VA Secretary Dink NeSmith Athens Immediate Past President Deborah Dietzler Athens Executive Director Executive Committee Member Phil Blount, Ex Officio Harriette Bohannon Maxine Burton Gary Hill Ralph Jernigan Steve Jones Jeff Jowdy Lewis Massey Palmer Sanford Residence Lawrenceville Augusta Athens Atlanta Tucker Athens Brentwood, TN Norcross Smyrna Source: Alumni Relations 61

69 UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ALUMNI BY STATE OF RESIDENCE State Alumni State Alumni Alabama 3,392 New Hampshire 192 Alaska 166 New Jersey 1,199 Arizona 692 New Mexico 297 Arkansas 430 New York 2,692 California 3,820 North Carolina 7,807 Colorado 1,466 North Dakota 35 Connecticut 635 Ohio 1,182 Delaware 201 Oklahoma 290 District of Columbia 540 Oregon 496 Florida 10,615 Pennsylvania 1,470 Georgia 143,591 Rhode Island 123 Hawaii 193 South Carolina 7,214 Idaho 148 South Dakota 34 Illinois 1,415 Tennessee 4,354 Indiana 647 Texas 3,586 Iowa 222 Utah 234 Kansas 297 Vermont 134 Kentucky 917 Virginia 4,886 Louisiana 1,113 Washington 814 Maine 183 West Virginia 275 Maryland 1,964 Wisconsin 434 Massachusetts 991 Wyoming 99 Michigan 676 American Territories 120 Minnesota 405 U.S. Associations, APO & FPO 188 Mississippi 704 International 3,644 Missouri 665 Unknown 16,777 Montana 150 Nebraska 113 TOTAL* 235,150 Nevada 223 * As of October 5, 2005 Source: Information Technology for External Affairs 62

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71 UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ALUMNI BY GEORGIA COUNTY OF RESIDENCE County Alumni County Alumni County Alumni Appling 132 Fannin 247 Oglethorpe 1,065 Atkinson 60 Fayette 1,853 Paulding 405 Bacon 106 Floyd 1,287 Peach 284 Baker 29 Forsyth 2,139 Pickens 428 Baldwin 580 Franklin 624 Pierce 198 Banks 357 Fulton 19,637 Pike 167 Barrow 1,507 Gilmer 246 Polk 263 Bartow 787 Glascock 23 Pulaski 157 Ben Hill 196 Glynn 1,455 Putnam 327 Berrien 150 Gordon 451 Quitman 10 Bibb 2,601 Grady 211 Rabun 326 Bleckley 183 Greene 388 Randolph 82 Brantley 54 Gwinnett 12,783 Richmond 2,063 Brooks 91 Habersham 754 Rockdale 1,220 Bryan 257 Hall 3,295 Schley 30 Bulloch 717 Hancock 44 Screven 154 Burke 190 Haralson 126 Seminole 102 Butts 191 Harris 398 Spalding 702 Calhoun 88 Hart 444 Stephens 567 Camden 278 Heard 31 Stewart 46 Candler 118 Henry 1,491 Sumter 333 Carroll 876 Houston 1,438 Talbot 37 Catoosa 317 Irwin 96 Taliaferro 26 Charlton 57 Jackson 2,137 Tattnall 125 Chatham 3,597 Jasper 155 Taylor 70 Chattahoochee 16 Jeff Davis 105 Telfair 136 Chattooga 148 Jefferson 183 Terrell 93 Cherokee 2,869 Jenkins 68 Thomas 567 Clarke 9,823 Johnson 110 Tift 753 Clay 27 Jones 443 Toombs 320 Clayton 900 Lamar 191 Towns 155 Clinch 57 Lanier 25 Treutlen 61 Cobb 11,975 Laurens 708 Troup 523 Coffee 477 Lee 281 Turner 131 Colquitt 474 Liberty 166 Twiggs 80 Columbia 2,003 Lincoln 109 Union 257 Cook 87 Long 16 Upson 340 Coweta 1,240 Lowndes 752 Walker 383 Crawford 118 Lumpkin 258 Walton 2,157 Crisp 306 Macon 139 Ware 478 Dade 136 Madison 1,040 Warren 51 Dawson 259 Marion 31 Washington 270 Decatur 302 McDuffie 333 Wayne 264 DeKalb 12,059 McIntosh 113 Webster 20 Dodge 199 Meriwether 172 Wheeler 46 Dooly 132 Miller 96 White 419 Dougherty 1,351 Mitchell 243 Whitfield 1,091 Douglas 753 Monroe 307 Wilcox 76 Early 159 Montgomery 81 Wilkes 312 Echols 61 Morgan 649 Wilkinson 77 Effingham 273 Murray 207 Worth 200 Elbert 566 Muscogee 1,674 Emanuel 238 Newton 1,084 Evans 87 Oconee 3,193 TOTAL* 143,591 * As of October 5, 2005 Source: Information Technology for External Affairs 64

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73 Faculty Members Alumni Members (con't) Emeritus Members (con't) William E. Barstow Bill Archer III John D. Kehoe Patricia Bell-Scott Thomas W. Lawhorne, Jr. Charles B. Knapp Ed J. Larson Dudley Moore Wyck A. Knox, Jr. Sarajane Love Patrick S. Pittard Paul Kurtz Anne Sweaney Donald Leebern III Scott Weinberg Emeritus Members Donald M. Leebern, Jr. Ira E. Aaron W. Worth McDougald Elected Student Representative Allan W. Barber Kirby R. Moore Joseph Lariscy J. Ralph Beaird Thomas A. Nash, Jr. Richard Y. Bradley W. H. NeSmith Student Athlete Representatives William T. Bradshaw J. Reid Parker Sadie Knowles Gary A. Couvillon William M. Powell D. J. Shockley Johnny Crawford S. Andy Roddenbery Maurice Daniels Frank W. Seiler Alumni Members J. Don Edwards H. Jackson Turner Robert D. Bishop Mark Hanna Lamar T. Wansley Robert Dicks Charles W. James Source: Athletic Director UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Board of Directors Michael F. Adams, Chairman Hank M. Huckaby, Treasurer Jere W. Morehead, Faculty Chairman Administrators Athletic Director Senior Associate Athletic Director Associate Athletic Director and Senior Women Administrator Assistant Athletic Director Emeritus Georgia Student Educational Fund Georgia Head Coaches Baseball Basketball, Men's Basketball, Women's Equestrian Football Golf, Men's Golf, Women's Gymnastics Soccer Softball Swimming & Diving Tennis, Men's Tennis, Women's Track Volleyball Damon M. Evans Frank Crumley Carla Williams Virginia Whitehead William C. Hartman, Chairman David Perno Dennis Felton Andy Landers Meghan Boenig Mark Richt Christopher Haack Todd McCorkle Suzanne Yoculan Patrick Baker Lu Harris-Champer Jack Bauerle Manuel Diaz Jeff Wallace Wayne Norton Stefani Legall 66

74 INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FALL SEMESTER 2005 Scholarship Non-Scholarship Total Sport Men Women Men Women Men Women Baseball Basketball Equestrian Football Golf Gymnastics Soccer Softball Swimming Tennis Track Volleyball TOTAL Figure 16 SCHOLARSHIP ATHLETES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FALL SEMESTERS SCHOLARSHIP ATHLETES FALL TERM MEN WOMEN Source: Athletic Director 67

75 PUBLIC SAFETY STATISTICS JANUARY 1, DECEMBER 31, 2004 Total Total Total Status of Victim Reported Offenses Cases Residence Faculty/ Guest/ UGA Type of Offense Offenses Unfounded Cleared Hall Student Staff Visitor Property Death Investigation 1 1 Sex Offenses Bodily Injury and Other Related Offenses Robbery 1 1 Burglary Motor Vehicle Theft Larceny Total Building Vending Machine 3 3 Shoplifting 1 1 Vehicle Parts Entering Auto Bicycles Other Criminal Property Damage Fraud Stalking Arson Bomb Threats 2 2 DUI Public Drunkenness Underage Possession Narcotics and Drugs Obstruction of Officer Weapon Laws TOTAL 1, Total Number of Above Motivated by Hate 5 Source: UGA Police Department 68

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77 FULL-TIME FACULTY AND ALLIED PROFESSIONAL STAFF BY RANK AND FUNCTION FALL 2005 Rank Assoc Asst Subtotal Rsch* Serv** Function Prof Prof Prof Inst Faculty Lect Assoc Assoc Libr Other+ Total Administration Student Welfare Libraries Instruction , ,915 General Research Ag Experiment Station Coop Extension Service Extension & Public Service TOTAL , ,960 * Senior Research Scientists, Associate Research Scientists, Assistant Research Scientists, Agricultural Research Scientists, Research Scientists, Research Associates, Postdoctoral Associates. ** Senior Public Service Associates, Public Service Associates, Public Service Assistants, Public Service Representatives, Extension Associates, Public Service Specialists. + Academic Professionals, Administrative Staff, Physicians, Clinical Ranks. TENURE STATUS OF FULL-TIME FACULTY* BY RANK AND GENDER FALL 2005 Tenure Status Tenured Non-Ten/On Track Non-Ten Position Total Rank & Gender No. % No. % No. % No. % Professor Male % 3 100% 3 100% % Female % % Total % 3 100% 3 100% % Associate Male % 19 70% % Professor Female % 8 30% 1 100% % Total % % 1 100% % Assistant Male 1 100% % 24 55% % Professor Female % 20 45% % Total 1 100% % % % Instructor Male 1 20% 21 54% 22 50% Female 4 80% 18 46% 22 50% Total 5 100% % % Total Male % % 48 55% 1,216 70% Female % % 39 45% % Total 1, % % % 1, % *Includes full-time, temporary faculty Source: Office of Institutional Research 70

78 FULL-TIME FACULTY BY RANK AND ETHNICITY FALL 2005 Rank Associate Assistant Professor Professor Professor Instructor Total Ethnicity No % No % No % No % No % American Indian 3 * 1 * 4 * Asian/Pacific Islander 38 5% 26 5% 47 12% 2 5% 113 7% Black/African Amer 29 4% 39 7% 26 7% 1 2% 95 6% Hispanic 8 1% 14 3% 16 4% 2 5% 40 2% White % % % 39 88% 1,471 85% Not Reported 1 * 1 * 2 * Total % % % % 1, % *Less than 1.0% Age Total Up In Rank Rank No % No % No % No % No % No % Professor 1 * % % % % Associate Professor 64 12% % % 38 7% % Assistant Professor 22 6% % % 20 5% 3 1% % Instructor 4 9% 19 43% 9 20% 8 18% 4 9% % Total 26 2% % % % % 1, % *Less than 1.0% FULL-TIME FACULTY BY AGE RANGE AND RANK FALL 2005 FULL-TIME GRADUATE FACULTY MEMBERSHIP BY RANK FALL 2005 Rank Professor Associate Professor Assistant Professor Instructor Total Total Graduate Faculty Membership Full-Time % Total % of Faculty Graduate University No. % No. Faculty Rank % % 89% % % 85% % % 67% 44 3% 0% 0% 1, % 1, % 80% Source: Office of Institutional Research 71

79 HIGHEST EARNED DEGREES OF FULL-TIME FACULTY BY RANK FALL 2005 Rank No. % No. % No. % No. % No. % No. % Professor % 44 6% 27 4% 3 * % % % Associate Professor % * Assistant Professor % Instructor % TOTAL 1,491 86% 158 9% 64 4% 11 1% 1 * % 1, % * Less than one percent ** Includes Specialist degrees Doctoral Master's** Professional Bachelor's Other Total Figure 17 HIGHEST EARNED DEGREES OF FULL-TIME PROFESSORIAL FACULTY FALL 2005 PROFESSIONAL 4% MASTER'S** 9% BACHELOR/OTHER 1% DOCTORAL 86% Source: Office of Institutional Research 72

80 AVERAGE ACADEMIC YEAR SALARIES OF INSTRUCTIONAL FACULTY UGA AND SELECTED PEERS ACADEMIC YEAR Ranked by All Ranks Salaries Associate Assistant Institution Name 1. University of Maryland - College Park Professor $111,000 Professor $76,300 Professor $75,200 All Ranks* $87, University of California - Davis $103,300 $68,800 $60,700 $85, University of Iowa $102,800 $69,100 $61,700 $82, Michigan State University $101,800 $73,700 $59,700 $81, Indiana University - Bloomington $101,800 $70,700 $61,300 $78, University of Colorado - Boulder $100,600 $72,700 $63,000 $77, Texas A & M University $100,200 $70,300 $60,600 $77, Arizona State University $102,500 $68,900 $61,400 $76, University of Nebraska - Lincoln $93,900 $68,100 $57,600 $75, North Carolina State University $94,800 $70,300 $61,900 $74, Virginia Polytechnic Institute $96,800 $68,800 $59,100 $73, University of Kansas $92,400 $65,200 $54,500 $73, University of Georgia $92,800 $64,700 $57,700 $73, Iowa State University $93,300 $70,600 $59,600 $72, University of Missouri - Columbia $94,300 $65,900 $53,500 $70, University of Oregon $83,600 $59,000 $54,400 $61,700 * All Ranks includes the ranks of instructor, lecturer and the category of "No Rank." Eleven or twelve-month salaries are converted to a standard academic-year basis by applying a factor of 81.8% (9/11) with the exception of Arizona State and Texas A & M where a factor of 75% has been applied and California - Davis where a factor of 86.3% has been applied. Figure 18 AVERAGE ACADEMIC YEAR SALARY OF INSTRUCTIONAL FACULTY UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA (ALL RANKS) FALL TERMS ,000 74,000 73,000 72,600 72,500 73,800 72,000 71,000 70,400 70,000 69,000 68,000 68,200 67,000 66,000 65, FALL TERM Source: American Association of University Professors 73

81 UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEES BY OCCUPATIONAL CLASSIFICATION October 31, 2005 Employees As Of 10/31/05 Occupational Classification Full-Time Part-Time Total Executive/Admin/Managerial Faculty 2, ,956 Other Professional 3, ,215 Clerical/Secretarial 1, ,444 Technical/Paraprofessional Skilled Crafts Service/Maintenance 1, ,176 Total 8, ,838 Figure 19 FULL-TIME UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEES BY OCCUPATIONAL CLASSIFICATION FACULTY 27.3% OTHER PROFESSIONAL 33.7% CLERICAL/ SECRETARIAL 14.9% EXEC/ADMIN/ MANAGERIAL 3.8% SERVICE MAINTENANCE 12.8% SKILLED CRAFTS 4.5% TECHNICAL/PARA- PROFESSIONAL 2.9% NOTE: Emloyees are assigned to an occupational classification based on their University System of Georgia job category (effective Fall 2003). Totals do not include temporary classified employees. Source: Office of Human Resources 74 74

82 UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEES BY OCCUPATIONAL CLASSIFICATION AND ETHNICITY October 31, 2005 Occupational Classification* American Indian Asian/Pac Islander Black/African American Ethnic Origin Multi- Hispanic racial N % N % N % N % N % N % N % N % Exec/Admin/Mgr Faculty , , Other Professional , , Clerical/Secretarial , , Technical/Paraprof Skilled Crafts Service/Maintenance , Total , , , White Not Reported Total UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEES BY OCCUPATIONAL CLASSIFICATION AND GENDER October 31, 2005 Male Female Total Occupational Classification N % N % N % Executive/Administrative/Managerial Faculty 1, , , Other Professional 1, , , Clerical/Secretarial , , Technical/Paraprofessional Skilled Crafts Service/Maintenance , Total 4, , , NOTE: Emloyees are assigned to an occupational classification based on their University System of Georgia job category (effective Fall 2003). Totals do not include temporary classified employees. Source: Office of Human Resources 75

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85 SOURCES OF REVENUE FISCAL YEAR Percent Sources Revenue of Total State of Georgia Resident Instruction $316,250, % Forestry Research 842, % Agricultural Experiment Station 40,100, % Cooperative Extension Service 31,697, % Marine Extension Service 1,448, % Marine Institute 940, % Veterinary Medical Experiment Station 2,220, % Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital 470,899 * Minority Business Enterprises 473,416 * Athens and Tifton Veterinary Labs 40,727 * Veterinary Medicine Agriculture Research 911, % Total State of Georgia $395,397, % Federal Appropriations Agricultural Experiment Station $4,435, % Cooperative Extension Service 7,101, % Total Federal Appropriations $11,537, % Student Tuition and Fees Resident Instruction $213,768, % Student Activities 3,274, % Total Student Tuition and Fees $217,043, % Sales, Services, and Miscellaneous Sources Teaching and Service Departments $42,274, % Agricultural Experiment Station 4,487, % Cooperative Extension Service 2,335, % Marine Extension Service 582,463 * Marine Institute 10,088 * Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital 8,149, % Student Activities 1,669, % Total Sales, Services, and Miscellaneous Sources $59,508, % Gifts, Grants, and Research Contracts (State, Federal, and Private)** $380,459, % Auxiliary Enterprises $110,525, % Endowment $863, % TOTAL $1,175,335, % * Less than 0.1% ** Includes Student Aid This schedule excludes amounts for Plant Funds. Source: Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration 78

86 REVENUE BY SOURCE FISCAL YEARS THROUGH Source Fiscal Year State of Georgia 44.2 % 45.8 % 44.7 % 44.1 % 43.5 % 42.2 % 41.3 % 38.0 % 34.7 % 33.6 % Counties of Georgia* * * * * Federal Appropriations Student Tuition and Fees Sales, Services and Miscellaneous Gifts, Grants, Contracts Auxiliary Enterprises Endowment * County vouchers no longer included as revenue effective fiscal year Source: Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration Figure 20 DISTRIBUTION OF REVENUE BY SOURCE FISCAL YEAR AUXILIARY ENTERPRISES ENDOWMENT 9.4% 0.1% STATE OF GEORGIA 32.4% GIFTS, GRANTS, CONTRACTS 33.6% 5.0% SALES, SERVICES, MISCELLANEOUS 18.5% STUDENT TUITION AND FEES 1.0% FEDERAL APPROPRIATIONS 79

87 EXPENDITURES BY FUNCTION FISCAL YEAR Percent Budgetary Function Expenditures of Total Instruction $188,607, % Research Resident Instruction $182,866, % Forestry Research 1,264, % Agricultural Experiment Station 73,352, % Marine Extension Service 712, % Marine Institute 1,256, % Veterinary Medical Experiment Station 2,220, % Athens & Tifton Veterinary Laboratories 160,706 * Veterinary Medicine Agriculture Research 909, % Subtotal $262,743, % Public Service Resident Instruction $68,372, % Cooperative Extension Service 53,125, % Marine Extension Service 2,541, % Minority Business Enterprises 473,416 * Athens & Tifton Veterinary Laboratories 4,695, % Subtotal $129,208, % Academic Support Resident Instruction $85,405, % Agricultural Experiment Station 261,557 * Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital 9,237, % Subtotal $94,904, % Student Services Resident Instruction $18,283, % Student Activities 4,005, % Subtotal $22,288, % Institutional Support $53,068, % Physical Plant Resident Instruction $66,385, % Agricultural Experiment Station 4,494, % Cooperative Extension Service 1,594, % Marine Extension Service 165,869 * Marine Institute 52,783 * Subtotal $72,694, % Scholarships and Fellowships Resident Instruction $238,366, % Agricultural Experiment Station 22,216 * 2,000 * Subtotal $238,391, % Auxiliary Enterprises $105,318, % TOTAL $1,167,224, % * Less than 0.1 percent. This schedule excludes amounts for Plant Funds. Source: Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration 80

88 EXPENDITURES BY FUNCTION FISCAL YEARS THROUGH Fiscal Year Function Instruction 18.7 % 18.5 % 18.7 % 17.6 % 16.7 % 16.7 % 16.9 % 16.7 % 16.7 % 16.2 % Research Public Service Academic Support Student Services Institutional Support Physical Plant Scholarships and Fellowships Auxiliary Enterprises Source: Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration Figure 21 DISTRIBUTION OF EXPENDITURES BY FUNCTION FISCAL YEAR PHYSICAL PLANT SCHOLARSHIPS AND FELLOWSHIPS 20.4% AUXILIARY ENTERPRISES 9.0% INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT 4.5% 6.2% INSTRUCTION 16.2% STUDENT SERVICES 1.9% 8.1% ACADEMIC SUPPORT 11.2% PUBLIC SERVICE 22.5% RESEARCH 81

89 TOTAL SPONSORED AWARDS BY PROJECT TYPE FISCAL YEARS THROUGH Fiscal Year Project Type Cooperative Extension 8,019,192 8,414,074 5,878,351 8,461,372 10,124,617 Instruction 14,551,883 17,029,380 25,145,792 21,462,085 18,301,611 Public Service 28,840,366 39,723,342 49,925,266 38,013,957 34,533,291 Research Agricultural Experiment Station* 31,809,537 37,255,529 31,148,402 33,003,138 35,699,829 General Research* 91,146, ,096, ,607, ,906, ,744,412 Research (Total) 122,955, ,352, ,756, ,909, ,444,241 Total $174,367,070 $204,519,275 $230,705,675 $227,846,992 $222,403,760 Figure 22 TOTAL SPONSORED AWARDS BY PROJECT TYPE FISCAL YEARS THROUGH Millions GEN RESCH EXP STATION PUBLIC SERV INSTRUCTION COOP EXT * General Research and Agricultural Experiment Station awards have historically been combined at UGA; the total represents all research awards to the institution. Source: Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President for Research and Associate Provost 82

90 SOURCES OF RESEARCH FUNDS FISCAL YEAR State Research Research Appropriated Funds Grants and Budgetary Unit Funds From Sales Contracts Total Biomedical and Health Sciences Institute 758,559 1,014,902 1,773,461 Cancer Center of Excellence , ,613 Carpet Apparel Textile Initiative 232, ,836 Center for Applied Genetic Technology - RI 1,915,880 1,915,880 Center for Applied Isotope Study 1,190, ,192 1,302,528 Center for Tropical & Emerging Global Diseases 129,869 4,495,880 4,625,749 Central Research Stores 141, , ,760 College of Agriculture & Env. Sciences-AES 1,656,250 34,876,028 36,532,278 College of Agriculture & Env. Sciences-General 37,126 37,126 College of Arts and Sciences 36,157,512 39,769,222 75,926,734 College of Education 6,134,211 7,780,465 13,914,676 College of Education - UGA at Gwinnett 84,170 84,170 College of Environment & Design 1,444,146 2,493,945 3,938,091 College of Family & Consumer Sciences 2,276,254 1,855,369 4,131,623 College of Journalism and Mass Communication 1,093, ,393 1,728,656 College of Pharmacy 2,306,858 7,584,374 9,891,232 College of Veterinary Medicine 6,120,506 8,157,153 14,277,659 Complex Carbohydrate Research Center 2,297,109 9,136,826 11,433,935 Division of Academic Enhancement 161, ,763 EITS Special Systems Support 239, ,271 Faculty of Engineering 336, ,204 Food Processing Initiative 527, ,835 General Institutional Expenses 3,314,642 3,314,642 Georgia Research Alliance 1,246,000 1,246,000 Gerontology 92,954 92,954 Graduate School 775, ,891 Honors Program 94,425 94,425 Institute for Behavioral Research 673,160 8,625,620 9,298,780 Institute of Bioinformatics 63,634 63,634 Institute of Ecology-Research 965,002 1,212,879 2,177,881 Institute of Higher Education 279, ,272 Institutional Diversity 18,013 18,013 Marine Extension Service 2,308,840 2,308,840 Marine Institute 1,044, ,210 1,248,783 Office of Disability Services 1,092 1,092 Pulp and Paper Initiative 435, ,775 Regent's Center for Learning Disorders 5,000 5,000 Research Consortium Projects 751, ,932 Research Matching Grants 495, ,915 Research Support 6,075,571 6,075,571 Savannah River Ecology Laboratory 296,183 10,655,740 10,951,923 School of Forest Resources 2,809,191 3,205,240 6,014,431 School of Law 1,527,886 5,000 1,532,886 School of Public & International Affairs 2,259,908 1,831,367 4,091,275 School of Social Work 594,703 1,380,330 1,975,033 Sea Grant Program 125,358 1,486,320 1,611,678 Senior VP for Academic Affairs Units 3,232,529 3,232,529 Staff Benefits - RI 282, ,551 Terry College of Business 6,088, ,485 6,215,018 UGA Hazardous Materials 273, ,626 UGARF Senior Faculty Research Grant 5,940,720 5,940,720 VP for Instruction Units 321, ,500 VP for Public Service & Outreach Units 121, ,123 VP Office for Research 4,407,495 1,059,153 5,466,648 VP for Research - Services 3,167,510 1,342,176 4,509,686 VP for Student Affairs Units 7,620 7,620 Total Research $ 103,764,110 $ 1,809,376 $ 159,444,241 $ 265,017,727 Veterinary Medicine Agriculture Research 2,220,856 2,220,856 Veterinary Medicine Experiment Station 911, ,363 Grand Total $ 106,896,329 $ 1,809,376 $ 159,444,241 $ 268,149,946 Source: Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President for Research and Associate Provost 83

91 TOTAL SPONSORED AWARDS BY AGENCY FISCAL YEAR Agricultural General Experiment Public Cooperative Funding Source Research Stations Instruction Service Extension Total Federal Agencies Center for Disease Control 1,955,289 38,015 1,993,304 Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit (Gulf) 51,533 51,533 Coop Ecosystem Studies Unit (Piedmont) 137, , ,498 Institute of Museum & Library Services 2,325 2,325 National Aero. and Space Administration 491, ,000 National Endowment for the Arts 300, ,000 National Institutes of Health 38,488, ,000 28,896 39,357,156 National Science Foundation 20,983, , , ,720 22,179,432 National Security Agency 72,026 72,026 Peace Corps 10,000 10,000 Small Business Administration 2,296,798 2,296,798 US Agency for International Development 2,500, ,659 2,746,659 US Department of Agriculture 1,681,311 13,845,419 99,998 1,541,204 4,146,505 21,314,437 US Department of Agriculture/Hatch 3,912,944 3,912,944 US Department of Air Force 103, , ,785 US Department of Army 23,514 23,514 US Department of Commerce 2,317, ,856 60, ,906 3,471,697 US Department of Defense 90, , ,000 US Department of Education 454,333 5,569, ,042 6,463,067 US Department of Energy 13,081, ,976 24, ,628 13,510,205 US Department of Health & Human Svcs 508, , ,285 US Department of Interior 865,920 80, ,358 73,500 1,622,459 US Department of Labor 105, ,490 US Department of Navy 75,895 75,895 US Department of State 506, ,556 1,202,767 US Department of Transportation 45,000 45,000 US Environmental Protection Agency 957,522 23,558 19, ,737 1,375,937 US Forest Service 65,000 65,000 US Institute of Peace 87,440 87,440 Total Federal Agencies 83,042,229 23,680,365 6,257,920 6,351,001 5,011, ,342,653 Foundation/Other 1 18,665,599 6,711,632 3,216,239 8,278,018 2,950,383 39,821,871 Industrial/Corporate 4,187,457 1,620, , , ,731 7,458,498 International Organizations 2,073, ,893 6,000 84,000 2,533,215 State Agencies 3,633,239 1,417,128 2,371,888 18,322,937 1,919,567 27,664,759 Other UGA Related UGA Athletic Association 1,231,237 12,000 1,243,237 University of Georgia Foundation 2 4,540, ,037 4,355, , ,510,331 University of Georgia Research Fdn, Inc. 3 7,601,641 1,227,556 8,829,197 Total Other UGA Related 12,142,566 1,900,593 5,586, , ,582,765 Grand Total $ 123,744,412 $ 35,699,829 $ 18,301,611 $ 34,533,291 $ 10,124,618 $ 222,403,761 1 Includes agencies and nonprofit associations like American Heart Association, American Cancer Society, other universities, and non- Georgia state agencies. 2 Includes gifts for research, endowment payments, and construction funds. 3 Includes gifts for research, royalties, research project support, and the UGARF 5% indirect cost return to departments. Source: Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President for Research 84

92 TOTAL SPONSORED AWARDS FOR RESEARCH BY FUNDING SOURCE FISCAL YEAR Funding Source Federal Agencies Center for Disease Control $ 1,993,304 Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit (Gulf) 51,533 Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit (Piedmont) 137,416 National Aeronautical and Space Administration 491,000 National Institutes of Health 39,328,260 National Science Foundation 21,854,212 National Security Agency 72,026 US Agency for International Development 2,500,000 US Department of Agriculture 15,526,730 US Department of Agriculture/Hatch 3,912,944 US Department of Air Force 330,785 US Department of Army 23,514 US Department of Commerce 3,220,957 US Department of Defense 90,000 US Department of Education 454,333 US Department of Energy 13,282,626 US Department of Health & Human Services 769,285 US Department of Interior 946,601 US Department of Navy 75,895 US Department of State 506,211 US Department of Transportation 45,000 US Environmental Protection Agency 957,522 US Forest Service 65,000 US Institute of Peace 87,440 Total Federal Agencies 106,722,594 Foundation/Other 1 25,377,231 Industrial/Corporate 5,807,675 International Organizations 2,443,215 State Agencies 5,050,367 Other UGA Related University of Georgia Foundation 2 5,213,962 University of Georgia Research Foundation, Inc. 3 8,829,197 Total Other UGA Related 14,043,159 Grand Total 4 $ 159,444,241 Total 1 Includes agencies and nonprofit associations like American Heart Association, American Cancer Society, other universities, and non-georgia state agencies. 2 Includes gifts for research, endowment payments, and construction funds. 3 Includes gifts for research, royalties, research project support, and the UGARF 5% indirect cost return to departments. 4 General Research and Agricultural Experiment Station awards have historically been combined at UGA; the total represents all research awards to the institution. Source: Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President for Research and Associate Provost 85

93 SPONSORED RESEARCH ACTIVITY BY MAJOR UNIT FISCAL YEAR College, School, or Unit Total College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences - AES $ 34,876,028 College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences - General 37,126 College of Arts and Sciences 39,769,222 College of Business 126,485 College of Education 7,780,465 College of Environment and Design 2,493,945 College of Family and Consumer Sciences 1,855,369 College of Journalism and Mass Communication 635,393 College of Pharmacy 5,151,921 College of Public Health 2,432,453 College of Veterinary Medicine 8,157,153 School of Forest Resources 3,205,240 School of Law 5,000 School of Public and International Affairs 1,831,367 School of Social Work 1,380,330 Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Units 3,232,529 Vice President for Instruction Units 321,500 Vice President for Public Service and Outreach Units 121,123 Vice President for Research Units 46,023,972 Vice President for Student Affairs Units 7,620 TOTAL $ 159,444,241 Source: Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President for Research and Associate Provost 86

94 TOTAL SPONSORED AWARDS FOR INSTRUCTION BY FUNDING SOURCE FISCAL YEAR Funding Source Total Federal Agencies Institute of Museum & Library Services $ 2,325 National Endowment for the Arts 300,000 National Institutes of Health 28,896 National Science Foundation 208,500 US Department of Agriculture 99,998 US Department of Education 5,569,692 US Department of Energy 24,951 US Environmental Protection Agency 23,558 Total Federal Agencies 6,257,920 Foundation/Other 1 3,216,239 Industrial/Corporate 863,293 International Organizations 6,000 State Agencies 2,371,888 Other UGA Related UGA Athletic Association 1,231,237 University of Georgia Foundation 2 4,355,034 Total Other UGA Related 5,586,271 TOTAL $ 18,301,611 1 Includes agencies and nonprofit associations like American Heart Association, American Cancer Society, other universities, and non-georgia state agencies. 2 Includes gifts for research, endowment payments, and construction funds. SPONSORED INSTRUCTIONAL ACTIVITY BY MAJOR UNIT FISCAL YEAR College, School, or Unit Total College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences - AES $ 45,511 College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences - General 330,509 College of Arts & Sciences 1,204,344 College of Business 2,784,531 College of Education 5,534,351 College of Environment & Design 69,754 College of Family & Consumer Sciences 17,293 College of Journalism & Mass Communication 188,298 College of Pharmacy 286,998 College of Veterinary Medicine 1,725,315 School of Forest Resources 325,349 School of Law 565,425 School of Public and International Affairs 6,404 School of Social Work 611,643 Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Units 1,337,251 Senior Vice President for External Affairs Units 49,147 Senior Vice President for Finance & Administration 2,091,411 Vice President for Public Service & Ourtreach Units 57,932 Vice President for Student Affairs Units 1,070,145 TOTAL $ 18,301,611 Source: Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President for Research and Associate Provost 87

95 TOTAL SPONSORED AWARDS FOR COOPERATIVE EXTENSION BY FUNDING SOURCE FISCAL YEAR Funding Source Federal Agencies US Department of Agriculture $ 4,146,505 US Department of Commerce 189,906 US Department of Defense 120,000 US Department of Interior 73,500 US Department of Labor 105,490 US Environmental Protection Agency 375,737 Total Federal Agencies 5,011,138 Foundation/Other 1 2,950,383 Industrial/Corporate 242,731 State Agencies 1,919,567 University of Georgia Foundation TOTAL $ 10,124,618 Total 1 Includes agencies and nonprofit associations like American Heart Association, American Cancer Society, other universities, and non-georgia state agencies. 2 Includes gifts for research, endowment payments, and construction funds. SPONSORED COOPERATIVE EXTENSION ACTIVITY BY MAJOR UNIT FISCAL YEAR College, School, or Unit Total Cooperative Extension Service $ 9,910,804 School of Forest Resources 213,814 TOTAL $ 10,124,618 Source: Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President for Research and Associate Provost 88

96 TOTAL SPONSORED AWARDS FOR PUBLIC SERVICE BY FUNDING SOURCE FISCAL YEAR Funding Source Total Federal Agencies Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit (Piedmont) $ 119,082 National Science Foundation 116,720 Peace Corps 10,000 Small Business Administration 2,296,798 US Agency for International Development 246,659 US Department of Agriculture 1,541,204 US Department of Commerce 60,834 US Department of Education 439,042 US Department of Energy 202,628 US Department of Interior 602,358 US Department of State 696,556 US Environmental Protection Agency 19,120 Total Federal Agencies 6,351,001 Foundation/Other 1 8,278,018 Industrial/Corporate 544,799 International Organizations 84,000 State Agencies 18,322,937 UGA Athletic Association 12,000 University of Georgia Foundation 2 940,536 TOTAL $ 34,533,291 1 Includes agencies and nonprofit associations like American Heart Association, American Cancer Society, other universities, and non-georgia state agencies. 2 Includes gifts for research, endowment payments, and construction funds. SPONSORED PUBLIC SERVICE ACTIVITY BY MAJOR UNIT FISCAL YEAR College, School, or Unit Total College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences - General $ 2,614,635 College of Arts & Sciences 303,940 College of Business 6,500 College of Education 3,860,428 College of Environment & Design 310,950 College of Family & Consumer Sciences 2,640,360 College of Journalism & Mass Communication 432,699 College of Pharmacy 48,100 College of Veterinary Medicine 4,926,178 School of Forest Resources 454,342 School of Law 3,120,744 School of Public & International Affairs 1,009,717 School of Social Work 1,665,062 Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Units 61,832 Senior Vice President for External Affairs 72,392 Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration Units 106,728 Vice President for Instruction Units 509,699 Vice President for Public Service & Outreach Units 10,764,151 Vice President for Research Units 1,590,213 Vice President for Student Affairs Units 34,621 TOTAL $ 34,533,291 Source: Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President for Research and Associate Provost 89

97 SOURCES OF ALL PUBLIC SERVICE AND OUTREACH FUNDS FISCAL YEAR State Revenue From Contracts Total Public Appropriated Sales, Services, and Service and Budgetary Unit Funds and Fees Grants Outreach Resident Instruction Agricultural & Environmental Sciences $377,647 $14,935 $42,520 $435,102 Arts and Sciences 73,491 49, , ,720 Business 326, ,595 58,293 1,305,635 Carl Vinson Institute of Government 6,798,610 2,731,336 5,286,047 14,815,993 State Botanical Garden of Georgia 1,079, , ,261 1,591,244 Education 726, ,784 4,119,789 5,389,413 Environment and Design 49, , , ,583 Family & Consumer Sciences 1,224, ,260 4,989,787 6,470,631 Forest Resources 162,976 47, , ,396 Georgia Center (Auxiliary excluded) 4,451,549 7,073, ,479 11,835,367 J. W. Fanning Institute for Leadership 980, , ,041 1,775,676 Journalism & Mass Communication 169,069 19, , ,035 Law 592,393 65,599 2,324,129 2,982,121 Pharmacy 711, ,847 24, ,762 Public Health 5,000 Public & International Affairs 27,162 10, , ,870 Social Work 398,589 10,857 1,377,162 1,786,608 Small Business Development Center 3,206, ,166 2,597,655 6,023,794 Veterinary Medicine 2,141,828 2,316,542 1,346,208 5,804,578 Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost 990,218 22, ,505 1,202,549 Senior Vice President for External Affairs 55,324 86,337 Senior Vice President for Finance & Administration , Vice President for Instruction 1,105,704 1,431,855 2,537,559 Vice President for Public Service and Outreach 1,875,907 27, ,902 2,095,024 Vice President for Research and Associate Provost 180,557 79, ,976 1,231,833 Vice President for Student Affairs 45,575 45,575 Total Resident Instruction $27,657,237 $15,729,754 $27,974,235 $71,361,226 Minority Business Enterprises 473, ,416 Marine Extension Service 1,448, , ,456 2,869,759 Athens and Tifton Veterinary Labs 40,727 4,654,586 4,695,313 Cooperative Extension Service 38,808,440 * 2,325,632 13,495,171 54,629,243 Total Public Service and Outreach Funds $68,428,660 $18,637,849 $46,962,448 $134,028,957 Percent of Total 51.0% 14.0% 35.0% 100.0% * Includes $7,101,579 of Federal Smith-Lever funds Source: Vice President for Public Service and Outreach and Associate Provost 90

98

99 UNIVERSITY BUILDINGS BY USE ATHENS CAMPUS FALL SEMESTER 2005 Principal Use Number of Gross Area % Total Square of Buildings Buildings Square Feet* Footage Administration , % Academic 153 6,124, % Public Service , % Residential 53 2,512, % Student Services 22 1,203, % University Support 110 3,424, % TOTAL ,965, % * Does not include leased space. NUMBER OF ROOMS BY BASIC ROOM TYPE ATHENS CAMPUS FALL SEMESTER 2005 Room Use Number Classrooms 322 Teaching Laboratories 454 Laboratories 1,550 Offices 7,549 UTILIZATION OF INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITIES FALL SEMESTER 2005 % Student Stations Occupied When Average Class Facilities Hours Used/Week Room Is In Use Size Per Room Classrooms Teaching Laboratories Source: Office of Institutional Research 92

100 SPACE ASSIGNMENT BY ROOM USE AND BUILDING LOCATION (SQUARE FEET) FALL 2005 Coastal Plain Station Building Location Agricul Branch Stations Coop Extension Service Other Total Room Use Athens Campus College Station Georgia Station Classroom 327,001 2,907 26, ,859 Laboratory 1,354, , , ,689 40,983 18, ,188 2,118,115 Office 1,714,540 4,319 54,872 43,380 8,886 31, ,394 2,070,256 Study 433,675 2,655 7,603 3, ,832 Special Use 667, , ,437 59, ,809 55, ,669 1,768,386 General Use 807,409 6,567 24,262 13,185 13, ,678 45,263 1,118,859 Supporting 2,576,278 16,812 93,327 48,739 38,729 43,698 61,586 2,879,169 Health Care 82,395 2,664 1,091 2,267 88,417 Residential 1,557,015 19,248 11,395 2,832 44, ,050 78,519 1,851,861 Nonassignable 4,661,569 63, ,728 89,361 35, , ,902 5,267,710 Total 14,181, , , , , ,743 1,008,638 17,967,464 SPACE ASSIGNMENT BY PROGRAM CLASSIFICATION AND BUILDING LOCATION (SQUARE FEET) FALL 2005 Coastal Plain Station Building Location Agricul Branch Stations Coop Extension Service Other Total Program Class Athens Campus College Station Georgia Station Instruction 1,723, ,125 6, ,509 1,994,595 Organized Research 1,196, , , , ,693 14, ,618 3,265,241 Public Service 448, ,927 4,975 4, ,751 80,463 1,013,536 Academic Support 832,162 7,852 5,466 17,189 5,709 61, ,681 Student Services 2,723,510 2, ,512 2,744,472 Institutional Support 2,603,756 9,781 38,082 12,952 48,439 4,528 26,331 2,743,869 Indep Operations 3, ,451 19,231 Nonassignable 4,650,181 63, ,051 89,270 35, , ,902 5,256,839 Total 14,181, , , , , ,743 1,008,638 17,967,464 Source: Office of Institutional Research 93

101 BUILDING SUMMARY BY YEAR OF COMPLETION ATHENS CAMPUS FALL 2005 Percent of Number of Total Gross Total Square Year Buildings Square Feet* Footage Pre , % ,063, ,369, , ,449, ,678, ,523, TOTAL ,965, % * Does not include leased space and space in some buildings acquired by the University after construction. Figure 23 DISTRIBUTION OF SPACE BY BUILDING AGE ATHENS CAMPUS FALL YRS 4.2% 100+ YRS 4.1% 0-10 YRS 30.1% YRS 14.4% YRS 12.2% YRS 35.0% Source: Office of Institutional Research 94

102 ACADEMIC AND ADMINISTRATIVE BUILDINGS DATE OF INITIAL OCCUPANCY ATHENS CAMPUS, FALL 2005 Initial Initial Building Name Occupancy Building Name Occupancy Aderhold Hall: Education 1971 Conner Hall Renovation 1975 Administration Building* 1907 Consumer Research Center* 1940 Agricultural and Environmental Services Cooperative Extension Service* 1937 Laboratories 1997 Coverdell Center for the Biomedical & Animal and Dairy Science Building 1998 Health Sciences 2005 Animal and Dairy Science Instruction and Dawson Hall* 1932 Research Complex 1998 Dawson Hall Addition 1971 Animal and Dairy Science Meat Science Dean Rusk Hall 1996 Technology Center 1998 Demosthenian Hall* 1824 Automotive Center 1971 Denmark Hall* 1901 Auxiliary Services Warehouse 2002 Driftmier Engineering Center 1966 Baldwin Hall* 1938 Ecology 1974 Barrow Hall* 1911 Environmental Health Science* 1939 Barrow Hall Lab* 1936 Family Housing Office 1970 Barrow Hall Addition* 1952 Family Science Center I* 1940 Benson Building (1938)* 1979 Family Science Center II* 1940 Biological Sciences 1960 Fine Arts* 1941 Biological Sciences Addition 1972 Fine Arts Scenery Workshop 1988 Bishop House (1837)* 1942 Foley Field Baseball Stadium 1990 Bolton Hall 1963 Food Science 1959 Botanical Garden Visitor Center/Conservatory 1985 Forest Resources* 1938 Boyd Graduate Studies Research Center 1968 Forest Resources Additions 1968 Broad Street Studio 1 (1955) 2001 Forest Resources Additions 1992 Broad Street Studio 2 (1949)* 2001 Forestry Utilization Lab and Greenhouse 1991 Broad Street Studio 3 (1949)* 2001 Garden Club of Georgia* 1857 Brooks Hall* 1924 Garden Club of Georgia Headquarters 1998 Brooks Hall Addition 1972 Geography/Geology 1960 Business Services (1939)* 1967 Geology Hydrothermal Lab 1962 Business Services Annex (1948)* 1969 Georgia Center for Continuing Education 1956 Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall 1987 Georgia Center Addition 1966 Caldwell Hall 1981 New Georgia Center Addition 1989 Campus Mail 1992 Georgia Center Auditorium 1991 Candler Hall* 1901 Georgia Museum of Art 1995 Cedar Street Art* 1948 Gilbert Hall (1939)* 1942 Center for Applied Genetic Technologies 2002 Gilbert Hall Addition 1973 Center for Applied Isotope Study 1981 Greenhouse Complex: Research Park 1969 Central Research Stores 1969 Hardman Hall: Air Force ROTC* 1918 Chapel* 1832 Hoke Smith Annex* 1940 Chemistry 1960 Holmes/Hunter Academic* 1831 Chemistry Addition 1971 Housing Research Center* 1940 Chemistry Annex 1997 Human Resources (1951)* 1971 Chicopee Complex (1847)* 1980 Instructional Plaza 1989 Child Development Lab* 1940 J. W. Fanning Building 2002 Child Development Lab Addition 1970 Joe Brown Hall* 1932 Clark Howell Hall* 1937 Journalism 1968 Cobb House (1938)* 1990 Law School* 1932 Complex Carbohydrate Research Center 2003 Law School Addition 1967 Conner Hall* 1908 Law Library Addition

103 CONT'D: ACADEMIC AND ADMINISTRATIVE BUILDINGS, FALL 2005 Initial Initial Building Name Occupancy Building Name Occupancy LeConte Hall* 1938 Sanford Stadium* 1929 Library, Main: Ilah Dunlap Little* 1952 Sanford Stadium Expansion 1967 Library, Main Addition 1974 Sanford Stadium East End Addition 1981 Library, Science: Boyd Graduate Studies 1968 Sanford Stadium West End Addition 1991 Life Sciences 1991 School of Music 1995 Life Sciences Fermentation Plant 1992 Snelling Hall* 1940 Lucy Cobb (1858)* 1954 Snelling Hall Renovation 1969 Lucy Cobb-Carriage House (1808)* 1954 Snelling Hall Addition 1979 Lucy Cobb-Margaret Hall (1898)* 1954 Soil Testing Lab 1970 Lucy Cobb Publications Building 1991 Soil Testing Lab Addition 1989 Lucy Cobb-Seney-Stovall Chapel (1882)* 1954 Statistics/Computing Services/Museum 1958 Lumpkin House* 1850 Statistics/ Computing Services Addition 1970 Lustrat House* 1847 Museum of Natural History Addition 1990 Marine Programs/Dance* 1928 Museum of Natural History Annex A 1968 Addition 1969 Museum of Natural History Annex B 1969 Meigs Hall* 1905 Stegeman Coliseum 1964 Memorial Hall* 1923 Student Learning Center 2003 Military: Army ROTC* 1931 Tanner Building (1912)* 1997 Milledge Hall* 1921 Tate Student Center 1983 Miller Plant Sciences 1972 Tennis Hall of Fame 1984 Moore College* 1874 Terrell Hall* 1904 New College* 1823 Thomas Street Building (1890) * 1967 Old College* 1806 Thomas Street Studio 1976 Park Hall* 1938 Thomas Street Sculpture 1992 Park Hall Addition 1970 Training and Development Center 1984 Parking Services 1983 Training and Development Ctr Addition 1999 Peabody Hall* 1913 Treanor House (1850)* 1990 Performing Arts Center 1995 Tucker Hall 1961 Phi Kappa Hall* 1834 University Bookstore 1968 Physics 1959 University Bookstore Addition 1987 Physics Addition 1969 University Foundation Building (1964) 1990 Poultry Diagnostic and Research Center* 1953 University Health Center 1997 Poultry Diagnostic and Rsch Ctr Addition 1998 Veterinary BioResources Facility 2004 Poultry Science 1960 Veterinary Medicine* 1949 President's House (1856)* 1949 Veterinary Medicine Addition: ICM 1973 President's House Renovation 1956 Veterinary Medicine Addition 1979 Printing 1977 Veterinary Medicine Animal Resources 1991 Psychology 1968 Veterinary Medicine Diagnostic Lab - Athens 2001 Public Safety 1966 Visitors Center/4 - Towers* 1937 Public Safety Addition 1976 Visual Arts 1961 Ramsey Student Physical Activities Center 1995 Waddel Hall* 1821 Rankin M. Smith, Sr. Student Athlete Wildlife Health 1971 Academic Center 2002 Wilson Pharmacy Building 1964 Riverbend Research A 1974 Wray-Nicholson House (1860)* 2000 Riverbend Research B S. Hull Street (1910)* 2002 River's Crossing (1972) S. Hull Street (1910)* 2002 Sanford Hall 1997 (Date Constructed) * 50 years old and older Source: Office of Institutional Research 96

104 MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS BY DATE OF COMPLETION Project Date Completed Federal Funds University & State Funds Other Funds Total Project Costs Dan Magill Tennis Center 2/2004 7,650,000 a 7,650,000 Soccer-Softball Clubhouse 2/2004 1,750,000 a 1,750,000 Complex Carbohydrate Research Center 4/ ,000,000 re 41,000,000 Softball Stadium 4/2004 4,200,000 a 4,200,000 Tybee Island 4-H Dining Hall Addition 6/ ,000 m 250,000 25,000 s Vet Med BioSafety Lab Level 3 - Tifton 6/ ,000 ig 560,000 Marine Science Renovation Phases IV and V 7/2004 1,350,000 m 1,350,000 Additional Work - Student Learning Center 7/ ,000 ig 500,000 Veterinary BioResources Facility 7/2004 4,250,000 b 5,650, ,000 sa 1,200,000 g South Campus Parking Deck Expansion 7/2004 5,500,000 ae 5,500,000 East Village Dining Commons 9/ ,456,480 re 14,456,480 East Village Housing 9/ ,000,000 re 65,000,000 Hull Street Parking Deck 9/2004 9,600,000 re 9,600,000 Sanford Stadium - North Skysuites 9/2004 7,750,000 a 7,750,000 Sanford Stadium - Press Box Expansion 9/2004 1,000,000 a 1,000,000 Sanford Stadium - 100/200 Level Improvements 9/2004 1,025,000 a 1,025,000 Micro-Gin, Tifton 10/ ,000 f 250,000 sa 1,375,000 b 2,000,000 Family Housing Building "A" Renovation 11/ ,000 ae 930,000 Central Food Storage Expansion 11/2004 1,785,000 ae 1,785,000 TOTAL 2004 $375,000 $11,275,000 $160,306,480 $171,956,480 Gymnastics Locker Room Renovation 2/ ,000 a 375,000 Hospitality Room - Stegeman Coliseum 2/ ,000 a 160,000 Phi Kappa Hall Renovation 4/ ,000 m 875,000 Rural Development Center Auditorium - Tifton 7/2005 4,900,000 b 4,900,000 l 10,770, ,000 m 60,000 ig Shellfish Lab Renovation - Skidaway Island 8/2005 1,135,000 m 1,135,000 TOTAL 2005 $7,880,000 $5,435,000 $13,315,000 a Athletic Association ae Auxiliary Enterprises b Bond f Federal Funds g Georgia Research Alliance ig Internal UGA Gen Funds l Local SPLOST Funds m MRR Funds p Private Gifts re Real Estate Foundation s Other State Agency sa State Appropriated u UGA Foundation Source: Office of University Architects 97

105 Project MAJOR BUILDING PROJECTS CURRENTLY UNDER CONSTRUCTION, FALL 2005 Estimated Completion Date Federal Funds University & State Funds Other Funds Total Project Costs Animal Health Research Center 3/ ,000,000 sa 42,000,000 Fine Arts Theatre Renovation 10/2006 3,000,000 m 3,000,000 Flynt Building Renovation - Griffin 11/ ,000 m 495, ,000 ig Horticulture Bldg Renovation - Tifton 12/2005 1,550,000 sa 1,550,000 Memorial Hall Renovation 12/ ,000 m 850,000 Natural History Museum 11/ ,000 m 970,000 35,000 ig Old College Renovation 8/2006 2,550,000 m 2,945, ,000 ig Paul D. Coverdell Building 1/ ,000,000 hhs 10,000,000 sa 20,000,000 u 40,000,000 Physical Ed/Marine Science Renovation - Final Phase 5/2006 2,450,000 m 2,450,000 Univ Village Bldg C Renovation 1/2006 1,100,000 ae 1,100,000 Vet Med Building #9 Renovation 5/2006 1,900,000 ig 2,130, ,000 m TOTAL $10,000,000 $67,490,000 $20,000,000 $97,490,000 AUTHORIZED PROJECTS IN DESIGN PHASE, FALL 2005 Project Federal Funds University & State Funds Other Funds Total Project Costs Alumni Center Complex 30,000,000 u 30,000,000 Botanical Garden Welcome Center 350,000 p 350,000 College of Pharmacy Facility 38,214,000 b 38,214,000 DW Brooks Drive - Phase IV 900,000 m 900,000 Equestrian Facility 4,800,000 a 4,800,000 Georgia Museum of Art Expansion 20,000,000 p 20,000,000 Gymnastics/Basketball Practice Facility 30,000,000 a 30,000,000 Lamar Dodd School of Art 39,272,000 b 39,272,000 Marine Genomics Lab 750,000 m 750,000 Olympic Gymnasium Relocation 980,000 ae 980,000 Rock Eagle Dining Hall 7,515,000 b 7,515,000 Sapelo Island Barrier Island Research Lab 1,500,000 f 400,000 sa 400,000 p 2,300,000 Special Collections Library 24,000,000 b 12,000,000 u 36,000,000 Tate Center Expansion/Renovation/Pkg Deck 2,800,000 ig 41,000,000 38,200,000 u University Village, Building B Renovation 1,000,000 ae 1,000,000 TOTAL $1,500,000 $183,281,000 $68,300,000 $253,081,000 a Athletic Association ae Auxiliary Enterprises b Bond f Federal Funds Source: Office of University Architects hhs Dept of Health & Human Srvcs ig Internal UGA Gen Funds m MRR Funds p Private Gifts s Other State Agency sa State Appropriated u UGA Foundation 98

106 Land Holdings County Acreage Land Holdings (cont.) County Acreage The University of Georgia Campus Coastal Plain Station (cont.) Main Campus Clarke 615 Hampton Farm Irwin 255 Related Areas Clarke 773 Vidalia Onion & Vegetable Research Farm Toombs 88 Total Acres 1,388 Total Acres 5,961 Botanical Garden Clarke 293 Cooperative Extension Service Oconee 19 Bamboo Farm and Coastal Gardens Total Acres 312 Research and Education Center Chatham 50 College Station Rock Eagle 4-H Center Putnam 1,392 Main Areas Clarke 1,243 4-H CAMP Newton 145 Dairy Cattle Research Farm (Sams) Clarke 378 Wahsega 4-H Camp Lumpkin 16 Dairy Cattle Research Farm (Sams) Oglethorpe 192 Truitt-Fulton 4-H Center Fulton 41 Beef Cattle Research Farm (Wilkins) Oglethorpe 814 Total Acres 1,644 Beef Cattle Research Farm (Wilkins) Wilkes 148 School of Forest Resources Plant Sciences Farm-Horticultural (Durham) Oconee 90 Oconee Forest Park Clarke 120 Plant Sciences Farm-Agronomic (DeKalb) Oconee 482 Whitehall Forest Clarke 750 Smith Seed and Gin Oconee 3 Nathaniel D. Arnold Memorial Clarke/Oconee 46 Total Acres 3,350 Bishop F. Grant Memorial Forest Morgan/Putnam 11,694 Georgia Research and Education Centers Hardman Memorial Forest Park Jackson 462 Georgia Mountain Union 414 Thompson Mill Forest Jackson 318 Northwest Georgia Floyd 904 Satilla River Forest Camden 1,517 Northwest Georgia Gordon 687 Watson Springs Forest Greene 590 Central Georgia Putnam 1,605 Cohutta Fisheries Center Whitfield 64 Central Georgia Morgan 95 Warnell Research, Education, and Central Georgia - Loyd Farm Jasper 215 Demonstration Forest Effingham 3,252 Attapulgus Research Farm Decatur 419 Wheatley Forest Lee/Sumter 2,494 Southeast Georgia Burke 724 Total Acres 21,307 Southwest Georgia Sumter 514 Institute of Ecology Total Acres 5,577 Odom Watershed Madison 151 Georgia Station McGarity Wetlands Newton 137 Main Areas Spalding 950 Total Acres 288 Cowan Farm Spalding 56 Marine Resource Facilities Pike County Farm Pike 81 Fisheries Extension (Brunswick) Glynn 3 Bledsoe Farm Pike 151 Institute of Oceanography (Skidaway) Chatham 691 Nix Property Pike 53 Total Acres 694 Total Acres 1,291 College of Veterinary Medicine Coastal Plain Station Animal Resources Clarke 14 Main Areas Tift 1,871 Barnett Shoals Farm Clarke 97 Bowen Farm Tift 75 Poultry Diagnostic and Research Center Clarke 31 Gibbs Farm Tift 311 Riverbend Farm Clarke 53 Lang Farm Tift 156 Animal Diagnostic Lab Tift 31 Ponder Farm Tift 201 Wiley Farm Oconee 209 Rigdon Farm Tift 96 Total Acres 435 Ponder Farm Worth 104 Range Grazing Station (Alapaha) Berrien 2,804 Total UGA Land Holdings 42,247 Source: Office of Institutional Research UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA LAND HOLDINGS FALL

107 100

108

109 UGA Fact Book 2005 Building Map Bldg.# Aderhold Hall 3-F 1060 Administration Building 3-A 0631 Alumni Association (Wray-Nicholson House) 2-B 0751 Animal Health Research Center 3-F 1077 Arch 3-A Auxiliary Services 2-E 2119 Baldwin Hall 3-B 0050 Baptist Student Union 2-B 2603 Barrow Hall 3-E 1021 Beef Cattle Barn 2-I 2907 Biological Sciences Building 3-D 1000 Bishop House 3-B 0032 Boggs Hall 2-D 2216 Bolton Dining Commons 2-C 2210 Bookstore 3-C 0671 Boyd Grad Studies Research Center 3-E 1023 Brooks Hall 3-B 0055 Brumby Hall 1-D 2213 Business Services 3-A 0110 Business Services Annex 3-A 0121 Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall 1-F 1671 CAES Activity Center 4-H 2835 CAES Ag Services Lab 7-I 2842 Caldwell Hall 3-B 0046 Campus Mail 5-J 2118 Candler Hall 2-B 0031 Catholic Student Center 1-F 2613 Cedar Street Art Building 3-E 1630 Center for Applied Genetic Technologies 6-J 2438 Center for Applied Isotope Study 5-J 2127 Ctr. for Computational Quantum Chemistry 3-D 1004 Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies 2-B 0753 Central Food Storage 5-J 2122 Chapel 3-A 0022 Chemistry 3-D 1001 Chicopee Complex 5-A 0101 Church Hall 2-D 2215 Clark Howell Hal 2-D 0290 Complex Carbohydrate Research Center 5-K 2419 Conner Hall 3-D 1011 Cooperative Extension Service 2-E 1043 Coverdell Building 2-F Creswell Hall 1-D 2211 Dance 3-E 1030 Dawson Hall 3-E 1010 Dean Rusk Hall 3-B 0045 Demosthenian Hall 3-A 0021 Denmark Hall 3-B 0044 Driftmier Engineering Center 3-G 1090 East Campus Village 5-G East Village Commons 4-G 1511 Ecology 3-E 1033 Environmental Design Studios 2-A 0766 Environmental Health Science 3-F 1050 Environmental Safety Services 5-J 2118 Episcopal Student Center 2-D 2609 Family Housing-University Village 3-H, I Feild Tennis Stadium 2-G 2622 Fine Arts 2-C 0060 Foley Baseball Field 1-F 1685 Food Science 3-E 1020 Forest Resources Complex 3-E 1040 Founders Memorial Garden 2-B 0650 UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA MAP: LEGEND Building Map Bldg.# Four Towers Building 4-H 2835 Franklin House 3-A Fred C. Davison Life Sciences Complex 3-F 1057 Geography-Geology 3-D 1002 Geology Hydrothermal Lab 2-D 0090 Georgia Center for Continuing Education 2-E 1640 Georgia Museum of Art 4-F 1693 Gilbert Hall 2-B 0640 Golf Course 2650 Greenhouses 2-F, 5,6-J Hardman Hall (Air Force ROTC) 3-E 1031 Hill Hall 2-D 2214 Hodgson Oil Building 4-A 0019 Hoke Smith Annex 2-F 1042 Holmes/Hunter Academic 3-A 0120 Horseshoe Bend Experimental Area 1-G 2347 Hugh Hodgson School of Music 4-F 1691 Human Resources 3-A 0620 Instructional Plaza 3-C 0066 Interior Design Studios 2-A 0767 Joe Brown Hall 2-B 0250 Journalism 3-C 0062 J.W. Fanning Building 1-E 1675 Lake Herrick Pavilion 5-J 2440 Lamar Dodd School of Art 3-B 0040 Law School (Hirsch Hall) 3-B 0043 LeConte Hall 3-B 0053 Legion Field 2-D 2638 Legion Pool 2-D 2604 Library, Law 3-B 0043 Library, Main 3-B 0054 Library Repository/Records Center 2-K 2496 Library, Science 3-E 1621 Lipscomb Hall 2-C 2208 Livestock Instructional Arena 2-J 1504 Lumpkin House 3-D 1012 Lustrat House 3-B 0632 Lutheran Student Center 2-D 2610 Magill Tennis Complex 2-G 2622 Marine Programs 2-E 1030 Mary Lyndon Hall 2-E 1221 McPhaul Child Development Center 2-F 1652 McWhorter Hall 2-G 1280 Meigs Hall 2-A 0024 Mell Hall 2-C 2209 Memorial Hall 3-C 0670 Methodist Center (Wesley Foundation) 2-E 2611 Military (Army ROTC) 3-C 0061 Milledge Hall 3-C 0271 Miller Plant Sciences 3-F 1061 Moore College 2-A 0025 Morris Hall 2-B 2204 Myers Hall 2-E 1222 Myers Quadrangle 2-E 1223 Natural History Museum 3-E 1130 New College 3-B 0030 North PJ Auditorium 3-C 0066 Oglethorpe Dining Commons 2-D 2257 Oglethorpe House 2-D 2217 Old College 3-B 0130 Painting Studios 2-A 0768 Park Hall 3-B 0056 Parking Deck, Carlton Street 2-F 1139 Campus Map Building Map Bldg.# Parking Deck, East Campus 4-G 1698 Parking Deck, East Village 5-G 1510 Parking Deck, Hull Street 2-C 0082 Parking Deck, North Campus 3-B 0122 Parking Deck, South Campus 2-E 1139 Parking Deck, West Campus 1-D 2136 Parking Services (inside East Village Commons) 4-G 1511 Payne Hall 3-C 0270 Peabody Hall 3-B 0042 Performing Arts Center 4-F 1692 Pharmacy (Wilson Building) 3-E 1041 Phi Kappa Hall 3-A 0020 Physics 2-D 1003 Poultry Diagnostic Research Center 5-H 2300 Poultry Research/Feed Mill 1-I 2850 Poultry Science 3-E 1013 Presbyterian Student Center 1-E 2612 Printing Department 4-F 2130 Psychology 3-C 0064 Public Safety 3-C 0180 Ramsey Student Ctr. for Physical Activities 4-H 1690 Recreational Sports Complex 3-I 2607 Reed Hall 3-C 0280 Rhodes Animal Science Center 4-H 1501 Riverbend Research North 5-J 2125 Riverbend Research South 5-J 2418 Rivers Crossing 5-H 2639 Rooker Hall 4-H 1513 Russell Hall 1-D 2212 Rutherford Hall 2-E 1210 Sanford Hall 3-B 0058 Sanford Stadium 3-C 0686 Smith Student-Athlete Academic Center 2-F 1673 Snelling Dining Commons 2-E 1643 Soccer/Softball Complex 1-H 1801 Soule Hall 2-E 1220 Southern Regional Poultry Genetics Lab 6-I 4051 South PJ Auditorium 3-C 0066 Staff Training & Development Center 4-B 2685 State Botanical Garden of Georgia 0-I 2328 Statistics-Computing Services 3-E 1130 Stegeman Coliseum 2-F 1654 Student Learning Center 3-C 0081 Swine Nursery 1-I 2927 Tanner Building (Visual Arts Annex) 3-A 0123 Tate Student Center 3-C 0672 Tennis Court (Indoor-Hopkins) 2-G 2623 Tennis Stadium 2-G 2622 Tennis Hall of Fame (NCAA) 2-G 1670 Terrell Hall 3-A 0023 Thomas Street Art Complex 3-A 2006 Towns Track 1-F 1667 Treanor House 1-E 1657 Tucker Hall 4-F 1250 University Architects (382 E Broad St) 3-A University Health Center 3-H 1701 U.S. Forest Service 3-F 1550 Vehicle Transportation and Maintenance 5-J 1634 Veterinary Medicine Complex 3-F 1070 Visitors & Information Center (Four Towers) 4-H 2835 Waddel Hall 3-B 0041 Women s Studies 2-E 1646 Woodruff Field 2-F 2615 Wray Nicholson House 2-B

110 UGA Fact Book 2005 Campus Map 103

Introduction Research Teaching Cooperation Faculties. University of Oulu

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