Georgia Southern University
This article contains promotional content. (June 2019) |
Former name | First District Agricultural & Mechanical School (1908–1924) Georgia Normal School (1924–1929) South Georgia Teachers College (1929–1939) Georgia Teachers College (1939–1959) Georgia Southern College (1959–1990) |
---|---|
Type | Public research university |
Established | December 1, 1906 |
Parent institution | University System of Georgia |
Accreditation | SACS |
Academic affiliations | Space-grant |
Endowment | $277.1 million (2020)[1] |
Budget | $345 Million (2021)[2] |
President | Kyle Marrero[3] |
Provost | Carl L. Reiber |
Students | 26,949 (Fall 2020)[4] |
Undergraduates | 23,469 (Fall 2020)[4] |
Postgraduates | 3,480 (Fall 2020)[4] |
Location | , , United States 32°25′10″N 81°46′36″W / 32.419448°N 81.776698°W |
Campus | Distant Town, 900 acres (3.6 km2)[5] |
Other campuses | |
Newspaper | The George-Anne |
Colors | Blue and White |
Nickname | Eagles |
Sporting affiliations | |
Mascot |
|
Website | www |
Georgia Southern University (GSU, Southern, or Georgia Southern) is a public research university in the U.S. state of Georgia.[6] The flagship campus is in Statesboro, with additional campuses in Savannah (Armstrong Campus) and Hinesville (Liberty Campus). Founded in 1906, Georgia Southern is the fifth-largest institution in the University System of Georgia. GSU offers over 140 different academic majors in the bachelor's, master's, and doctoral levels.[7][8] The university has a combined enrollment of approximately 27,000 students from all 50 states and over 80 countries.[9] Georgia Southern is classified among "R2: Doctoral Universities – High research activity"[10] and a comprehensive university by the University System of Georgia.[11]
Georgia Southern University's intercollegiate sports teams, known as the "Eagles", compete in the Sun Belt Conference.
History
J. Walter Hendricks | 1908–1909 |
E.C.J. Dickens | 1909–1914 |
F.M. Rowan | 1915–1920 |
Ernest V. Hollis | 1920–1926 |
Guy H. Wells | 1926–1934 |
Marvin S. Pittman | 1934–1941 |
Albert M. Gates | 1941–1943 |
Marvin S. Pittman | 1943–1947 |
Judson (Jake) C. Ward Jr. | 1947–1948 |
Zach S. Henderson | 1948–1968 |
John O. Edison | 1968–1971 |
Pope A. Duncan | 1971–1976 |
Nicholas W. Quick (Acting) | 1977–1978 |
Dale W. Lick | 1978–1986 |
Harrison (Harry) S. Carter (Acting) | 1986–1987 |
Nicholas L. Henry | 1987–1998 |
Bruce F. Grube | 1999–2009 |
Brooks A. Keel | 2010–2015 |
Jean E. Bartels (Acting) | 2015–2016 |
Jaimie L. Hebert | 2016–2018 |
Shelley C. Nickel (Acting) | 2018–2019 |
Kyle Marrero | 2019– |
Note: During the time that the university was known as First District A&M, the President held the title of "Principal". |
Georgia Southern University began as First District Agricultural & Mechanical School, a land grant college under federal legislation and support.[13] It opened in 1908 with four faculty members and 15 students.
Founded as a school for teaching modern agricultural production techniques and homemaking skills to rural school children, First District A&M within two decades shifted its emphasis to meet the growing need for teachers within the state. Its name and mission were changed in 1924 to Georgia Normal School, as a training ground for teachers. Five years later in 1929, after development of a four-year curriculum, it was granted full-fledged senior college status by the state, and the school was renamed as South Georgia Teachers College.
Ensuing decades found more name and mission changes: to Georgia Teachers College in 1939 and Georgia Southern College in 1959.
The university finally integrated its student body in 1965,[14] eleven years after the United States Supreme Court's ruling in Brown v. Board of Education (1954). College President Marvin Pittman had been fired in 1941 by Georgia governor Eugene Talmadge for supporting racial integration; he was eventually rehired.
Georgia Southern has continued its program and physical expansion. With the development of graduate programs in numerous fields and associated research, the institution was granted university status in 1990 as Georgia Southern University.[15]
Since then, the university has embarked on a massive upgrade of facilities, adding more than $300 million in new construction. Georgia Southern was named a Doctoral/Research University by Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching in 2006. The university is recognized in publications including U.S. News & World Report's "America's Best Colleges" and "Best Graduate Schools", Forbes' "America's Best Colleges" and, most recently, by Kiplinger for being one of the "Top 100 Best Values among Public Colleges and Universities." Additionally, Georgia Southern's MBA program was named one of the "Best 301" in the country by The Princeton Review.
Since 1999, two new colleges have been established: the College of Information Technology in 2001, and the Jiann-Ping Hsu College of Public Health in 2004. Additional undergraduate and graduate programs were formed, including doctorate degrees in psychology, public health and nursing. In 2011, the university established the Allen E. Paulson College of Engineering and Computing, formerly known as College of Engineering and Information Technology, which combines the previous College of IT with its engineering programs. In addition, at the same time it created the College of Science and Mathematics, previously known as the Allen E. Paulson College of Science and Technology.
Online bachelor's degrees are available in nursing, general studies, and information technology. Master's programs are offered in kinesiology, instructional technology, accomplished teaching, instructional improvement, higher education administration, reading education, middle grades education, secondary education, special education, and educational leadership. Additionally, the university offers master's degrees in business administration, applied economics, accounting, computer science and sport management. Georgia Southern also offers online endorsements in online teaching and learning, K-5 math, and reading.
Since 1999, the university has had its most significant growth in its more than 100-year history. It has grown in enrollment and physical facilities. Under a Campus Master Plan, the university added the new 1,001-bed residence hall Centennial Place. It has completely renovated and significantly expanded the Zach S. Henderson Library.[16] Completed in 2009, the Eugene M. Bishop Alumni Center is a gathering place for alumni and friends of the university.[17][18] The Center for Wildlife Education and the Botanical Garden have also been expanded. Currently, the university is concluding construction on a new Engineering and Research Building. The building's primary focus is aimed at manufacturing engineering.
On January 11, 2017, the Regents of the University System of Georgia announced that the university would merge with Armstrong State University in Savannah as part of the ongoing campus consolidations recommended by the University System of Georgia (USG). Since 2011, in an attempt to improve efficiency and lower costs, the USG has consolidated several colleges and universities within its system, merging some and closing others while altering or transforming curriculums. In January 2018, both Armstrong State and its smaller Liberty Campus, located in Hinesville, formally merged with Georgia Southern.
Campuses
Statesboro Campus
Georgia Southern's flagship campus is located in the city of Statesboro, Georgia and is accessible by Interstate 16 from the cities of Macon and Savannah. By car, Statesboro is approximately one hour from Savannah, two hours from Macon, and three hours from Atlanta. Georgia Southern has smaller campuses in Savannah and Hinesville.
Center for Wildlife Education and Lamar Q Ball Jr. Raptor Center
The Center for Wildlife Education and the Lamar Q Ball Jr. Raptor Center is an educational and research facility located on 18 acres (73,000 m2). In addition to undergraduate and graduate research, the center hosts over 165,500 annual visitors through general admission and off-site outreach programs. The center is home to "Freedom", Georgia Southern's American bald eagle mascot, as well as 85 other birds, 67 reptiles, 70 amphibians, and eight mammals. Species of birds of prey include hawks, owls, falcons, kestrels, vultures. The center also contains an amphitheater and an indoor classroom.[19] Inside the center, exhibitions of reptiles and amphibians such as alligators, painted turtles, box turtles, and gopher tortoises, rattlesnakes, corn snakes, king snakes, boa constrictors, pythons, are held. The staff perform demonstrations of raptors in flight. In 2009, the center added a 12-acre (49,000 m2) expansion known as the Wetland Preserve, featuring various species of water fowl in their native habitats. The center is the only one of its kind to be located within the campus of a major university campus.[20]
Recreation Activity Center (RAC)
The Recreation Activity Center[21] (the RAC) is a 220,000-square-foot (20,000 m2) complex that includes areas for weight lifting, cardio, and basketball. It includes an indoor track, two dance studios, a studio for yoga and pilates, five racquetball courts, and a 45-foot (14 m) indoor climbing wall.[22]
In 2006, the RAC was expanded, adding additional basketball and multi-purpose courts, weight and fitness rooms, an Olympic-size swimming pool, a rehabilitation pool, and more space for CRI (Campus Recreation and Intramural) personnel.[23] The expansion also brought a bandshell area that has hosted several national touring artists.
Botanical Garden
The Georgia Southern Botanical Garden is centered on an early 20th-century farmstead and offers visitors a view of the cultural and natural heritage of the southeastern coastal plain, an area rich in endangered plants. The garden's nearly 11-acre (45,000 m2) site includes woodland trails, the Bland Cottage Visitor Center and Gift Shop, Heritage Garden, Rose Arbor, Children's Vegetable Garden, Camellia Garden, Native Plant Landscape Garden, Native Azalea Collection and Bog Garden.[24]
Student housing
Georgia Southern currently has seven housing facilities, Centennial Place, Kennedy Hall, Watson Hall, Eagle Village, Freedom's Landing, Southern Courtyard, and Southern Pines offering mostly suite and apartment configurations.[25] In the fall of 2008, Centennial Place, a residential complex with four buildings, was constructed. It contains 1,001 beds and retail space.[26] Eagle Village is a housing facility reserved for freshmen only and houses roughly 775 freshman residents each year.[27] First-year Georgia Southern students, with some exceptions, are required to live on campus.[28]
Georgia Southern University purchased Campus Club during May 2012 and began offering campus housing under the name of Freedom's Landing for the fall 2012 semester. Located near the stadium, Freedom's Landing contains 978 beds and is dedicated housing for upperclassmen.[29]
Eagle Dining Services
Eagle Dining Services (part of Auxiliary Services[30] at Georgia Southern University) manages all dining locations on campus. Eagle Dining completed two new dining commons (named Landrum and Lakeside, after the former facilities) that opened in the fall of 2013.
Retail dining locations by Eagle Dining Services include an on-campus Starbucks and Chick-fil-A, that are managed by EDS staff. They also have their own concepts of Zach's Brews (located in the Zach Henderson Library), Market Street Deli (located in the IT Building), Sushi with Gusto (located in the Nursing/Chemistry Building), and Oasis Smoothie & Juice Bar (located in the Recreation and Activities Center). Eagle Dining Services also manages concessions for many Georgia Southern Athletics events, vending all across campus, Catering Services and two convenience stores known as Gus Marts (located in the Russell Union and IT Building).
Georgia Southern University is one of the first to implement a biometric iris recognition system to gain entry to the dining halls in lieu of a swipe card. This system was added to the RAC in the fall of 2015.[31][32][33]
Georgia Southern Museum
For more than two decades, the University Museum has showcased artifacts of the natural and cultural history of the region, as well as offered visiting exhibits from U.S. and international museums. It holds both permanent and traveling educational programs which include interactive and hands-on programs. Permanent collections and exhibits focus on preserving the natural and cultural history of the Coastal Plain.[34]
Center for Art & Theatre
The Center for Art & Theatre opened on February 29, 2008. One of its three galleries is the permanent home of the Georgia Artists Collection, a continuously expanding gift of pieces established and curated by Betty Foy Sanders, Bulloch County native and wife of former Georgia Governor Carl Sanders. Other galleries feature scheduled exhibitions of private, student, and faculty works. The center also hosts a 150-seat Black Box Theatre for student performances.
Performing Arts Center
The Performing Arts Center is home to touring shows, lecturers, and programs for cultural outreach. The 825-seat theatre features an orchestra pit and shell, a full-sized stage, and technology for lighting, sound, and production.[35]
Southern Express
Southern Express is Georgia Southern's bus transportation system. In the fall of 2010, adjustments were made and two new routes with a total of eight buses were introduced. The Gold Route runs from the University Store and makes two stops on Forest Drive before proceeding to the RAC and the park-ride lot at Paulson Stadium. The Gold Route Buses then return to the store making the same stops as before. The Blue Route makes one large circle. The Blue route starts at the University Store and makes two stops on Forest Drive and two stops on Lanier Drive before returning to the University Store. The buses change their routes on days of football games to accommodate fans. During the 2009–2010 school year the buses carried almost 1.6 million passengers.[36]
Armstrong Campus
Georgia Southern's Armstrong Campus is located in Savannah, accessible by Interstate 16 and Interstate 95. Prior to consolidation with Georgia Southern, the Armstrong Campus was founded as Armstrong Junior College in 1935 by Mayor Thomas Gamble to help Savannah's youth and the community at large in stimulating the local economy during the height of the Great Depression.[37] Originally housed in the historic Armstrong House downtown, Armstrong moved to its current location in January 1966.[38]
The Armstrong campus is located in a suburban setting near the Savannah Mall, with direct access to downtown Savannah via Abercorn Expressway. The landscaped campus includes subtropical ferns and flowers, southern magnolias, oak trees draped with Spanish moss, and a wide variety of native plants scattered throughout the 268-acre (1,084,557.5 m2) arboretum-style grounds.[39]
The campus is home to the Georgia Southern's Colleges of Education, Health Professions, and Public Health.
Lane Library is the main academic and research library on the Armstrong campus. Its collection comprises more than 200,000 books and printed materials as well as 18,000 audiovisual works.[39] The university recently[when?] invested $5 million in a renovation and expansion of the facility.[39]
The Science Center complex is a two-building complex connected by an enclosed glass walkway. It is home to the Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Physics, and Psychology departments.[39] It includes classroom and lecture space, faculty offices, and labs. The 126,056-square-foot (11,711.0 m2) facility opened in 2001 as the largest single increase in instructional space on campus since the campus opened.[40]
A 61,000-square-foot (5,700 m2), $24 million student union opened in 2010.[41] It was the Armstrong State University's first green building, built with rapidly renewable and recycled materials and featuring a high-efficiency chilled water cooling system.[42] The union houses a 300-seat food court, 200-seat movie theatre, ballroom, bookstore, coffeehouse, convenience store, and expansive porches and lounges.[41] Next to the Student Union is the Memorial College Center. Commonly known as the MCC, it houses the Student Affairs and Student Activities offices for the campus.[39]
Armstrong's athletic facilities are located in the southeast area of campus. The Student Recreation and Aquatic Center is a 38,000-square-foot (3,500 m2) athletic facility that includes a 5,200-square-foot (480 m2) fitness center, and two basketball courts.[39] The Alumni Arena is located adjacent to the Rec Center and includes an indoor running track, weight room, coaches offices, classroom space, and a 4,000-seat arena home to the men's and women's basketball teams.[39]
Since consolidation with Georgia Southern, the Armstrong Campus has not maintained a separate athletics program, with the future of these athletic facilities uncertain.[43] Near the end of the 2017–2018 academic year, there were talks of renovating the campus' current athletic facilities to allow for the university's tennis and soccer teams to practice and play at the Armstrong Campus, in addition to creating new recreational and general purpose fields.[44] Such a proposal, if approved, could take up to a decade to complete, with the entire project having a low-end cost of forty million dollars to upgrade the campus's current athletic facilities, including infrastructure needs as mandated by division standards.[44]
More than 1,400 students live on campus in the four residential communities located in the southwest portion of the campus.[39] Windward Commons, which opened in 2010, is Armstrong's suite-style freshmen residential community and is home to nearly 600 students.[45] It features private and semi-private suites, music practice rooms, multipurpose classrooms, lounge/social areas, laundry facilities, courtyards with outdoor sitting space and barbecue areas, and two classrooms.[39] Compass Point, University Terrace, and University Crossings are apartment-style residence halls for upperclassmen and graduate students.[39]
On April 24, 2013, Armstrong completed renovations to the Memorial College Center, opening the Learning Commons. The 14,000-square-foot (1,300 m2) space was developed as an extension to the campus's Lane Library. Features include Mac and PC labs, three multi-touch tables, and group study rooms.[46]
Liberty Campus
The Liberty Campus in Hinesville first began operations as a satellite campus of Armstrong State University in 1997, moving to its current facilities in January 2016.[47][38] It offers select programs to residents of Liberty County and surrounding areas. The Liberty Campus provides special services to Fort Stewart military personnel and their families. A variety of programs are offered or supported, including associate’s degrees in arts and applied sciences, and bachelor's degrees in criminal justice, nursing, early childhood education, middle grades education, and liberal studies, with plans to develop consortium programs with Savannah State University in the years post-consolidation.
Academics
Academic rankings | |
---|---|
National | |
Forbes[48] | 562 |
U.S. News & World Report[49] | 299–391 |
Washington Monthly[50] | 292 |
Georgia Southern is classified as a comprehensive university by the University System of Georgia.[51] Georgia Southern University is accredited by Southern Association of Colleges and Schools and is overseen by the Georgia Board of Regents.
Georgia Southern University consists of eight primary colleges: the College of Business Administration,[52] the College of Education, the College of Health Professions, the College of Engineering and Computing, the College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, the College of Science and Mathematics, the College of Public Health,[53] and the College of Arts and Humanities.
Georgia Southern offers a selective honors college for high-achieving undergraduate students. The honors college provides special learning opportunities and privileges to admitted students.[54]
Degree programs
The university offers more than 140 bachelor's degree, master's degree, and doctorate programs in eight colleges.
In 2010, Georgia Southern received approval to offer three new engineering degrees: Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering, Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering, and the Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering. Classes for the engineering school began in the fall of 2011.
The Parker College of Business[52] houses the only School of Economic Development in the southeastern United States.[55] The School of Accountancy in the Parker College of Business is the only AACSB certified school in the United States to offer forensic accounting courses to both undergraduate and graduate students.[56]
Georgia Southern has significantly expanded its online degree offerings after launching the program on January 9, 2008.[example needed][quantify]
Georgia Southern's Department of Writing and Linguistics is the only freestanding writing department in the State of Georgia.[57]
The Ph.D. in Logistics/Supply Chain Management is the first of its kind to be offered in the state of Georgia through the university's Parker College of Business. Classes began in the fall of 2010.[19]
Enrollment statistics
In the fall of 2014 the university enrolled 18,004 students in undergraduate programs and 2,513 students in graduate programs. The student population was 52% female and 48% male. With the consolidation with Armstrong State University, the university's overall student population was 27,459 for the 2017–2018 school year.
For incoming freshmen in fall 2018 the average SAT score was 1139, average ACT score was 23, and the average high school GPA was 3.36.[58]
Research
Facilities and Classification
Georgia Southern is involved in energy-related issues in a move toward energy independence and self-sufficiency, with a focus on renewable energy and environmental science research. The State of Georgia established and funded an Endowed Chair of Renewable Energy at Georgia Southern, and biofuel facilities in the state are converting Georgia-grown agricultural products into marketable fuel. The research team is identifying renewable sources of energy in south Georgia and design and evaluate products to capture the energy in a usable form for commercial or residential use in the region. The research team is also assisting regional industries in energy consumption analysis, appropriate strategies for conservation of energy, and preservation of our environments. In addition to creating a regional repository of technology that showcases renewable energy application, these activities will help advance the State of Georgia and the region through the benefits of higher education.[59]
Georgia Southern is home to the Institute of Arthropodology and Parasitology. In honor of the founder of the institute, the name was changed in 2013 to the James H. Oliver Jr., Institute for Coastal Plain Science.[60] An integral part of this program is the U.S. National Tick Collection, the largest collection of ticks in the world, with more than one million specimens representing most of the world's 850 species.[61]
Georgia Southern is classified as a "R2" research university by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.[62]
Herty Advanced Material Development Center
Georgia Southern University welcomed Georgia Governor Nathan Deal to campus in April 2012 to sign Georgia Senate Bill 396 into law transferring management of the Herty Advanced Materials Development Center to the university.[63] The new legislation, which aligned the university and Herty to create the Georgia Southern University Herty Advanced Materials Development Center, is designed to enhance economic and business development in the state of Georgia. The alignment became effective July 1, 2012. Herty's clients are currently focused in the transportation, forest and paper related products, building materials, energy and the environment and bio-products industries.
The Herty Advanced Material Development Center, which is located near the Port of Savannah, is named for the chemist, businessman and academic Charles Herty (1837-1938), who revolutionized the nation's naval stores industry through innovations in turpentine and paper making in the early 1900s.[64] Herty devised the first system for manufacturing newsprint from southern pines, giving the South a tremendously successful cash crop. His first experiments on southern pines were conducted in a forest located on the university's campus. The university erected a plaque in 1935 noting the site.
Student organizations
Race and ethnicity[65] | Total | ||
---|---|---|---|
White | 58% | ||
Black | 27% | ||
Hispanic | 7% | ||
Other[a] | 5% | ||
Asian | 2% | ||
Foreign national | 1% | ||
Economic diversity | |||
Low-income[b] | 38% | ||
Affluent[c] | 62% |
There are many types of organizations on campus, including professional, Greek letter, cultural, service and religious. The Armed Forces ROTC would be considered as a professional student organization while the Hispanic Student Association would be considered a cultural student organization. Other professional organizations include AITP.
Political organizations include the Young Democrats and Young Americans for Liberty. The Young Democrats of Georgia Southern has established significant efforts in getting students to vote. These efforts include working with city and county officials to get a voting precinct on campus, and the Voter Action Program, which has a voter hotline and an email system to coordinate with students.[66]
Eagle Battalion ROTC
Although Georgia Southern is not a military college, it has an Eagle Battalion ROTC. It also produces a large number of military nurses. In 2010 and 2011, it was presented with the prestigious MacArthur Award, recognizing the unit as one of the eight best in the country.
Student Media
The Department of Student Media houses six divisions: the George-Anne, Business, Marketing, Magazines, and two Production divisions, one digital, one print. Each of these divisions is led by one student Executive Officer who reports to the director and the Student Media Advisory Board. The board is composed of students and staff. The organization has around 70 student members.
- The George-Anne, Student Media's flagship publication for the Statesboro campus, is published on the Statesboro Campus every Tuesday and Thursday during the fall and spring semesters. During the summer terms, it is published biweekly on Thursdays. It also publishes online daily at thegeorgeanne.com. It does not print during the week of finals.
- The George-Anne, Inkwell Edition publishes weekly on Thursdays for the Armstrong Campus. It publishes its articles online at theinkwellonline.com.
- The Magazines Division produces The Reflector, The Miscellany, Our House, Lantern Walk and Our Neighborhood. The Reflector is the student interest news magazine of Georgia Southern. The Miscellany is a literary arts magazine made up of submissions from the student body and university community. Our House is a publication geared toward helping upperclassmen find housing once they leave the on-campus options. Our Neighborhood contains information about the surrounding community, like restaurants and places to shop in town. The Lantern Walk is a publication distributed at Georgia Southern's graduation ceremony that includes information about graduation as well as the names of every graduate.
- The Business Division earns 40 percent of Student Media's operating budget through advertising sales.
- The Marketing Division organizes all of the publication's events, including release parties, fundraisers and Student Media's award-winning First Amendment Free Food Festival. The division is also in charge of distributing all of Student Media's publications.
- The Digital Division is home to Student Media's videographers and web designers. They maintain thegeorgeanne.com, produce video coverage and monitor multiple social media accounts for Student Media.
- The Creative Division oversees the production of all of Student Media's print publications and assists with thegeorgeanne.com. Designers and photographers produce visual content for Student Media's publications.
Student Government Association
The Georgia Southern University Student Government Association (SGA) is a devolved system in which the individual campuses are self-governing. The Liberty Campus operates under the jurisdiction of the Armstrong Campus. While led by a single President, each campus maintains their own separate legislative and executive branches led by a Speaker and Executive Vice President respectively. They preside over meetings of their respective campus-level branch. The SGA President chairs the Presidential Advisory Committee, which acts in a similar capacity as the individual campus executive boards. Executive and legislative elections are held concurrently across all three campuses in April.
Each campus has sole jurisdiction over issues that only affect their campus and represent the academic colleges housed within their respective campus; each Senate has two additional "colleges" in addition to their respective academic colleges: one for students whose major is not located on their primary campus, and another to represent the interests of graduate-level students. To discuss and advocate for issues at the university level, the two Senates meet during a joint session as a convention, which can pass legislation by a two-thirds vote.
Fraternities and sororities
The first fraternities and sororities were chartered on the campus in 1953 and 1968, many have followed. Approximately 12% of undergraduate students are active in social fraternities and sororities on campus.
Speaker controversies
In October 2019, some students of Georgia Southern University publicly burned books of Cuban-American novelist Jennine Capó Crucet after she gave a talk on campus. The university declared that "book burning does not align with Georgia Southern's values" but declined to discipline the students.[67][68][69][70] Campus events were scheduled October 15 and 16 to discuss censorship and free speech in response to the book burning.[71][72]
Journalist Abby Martin was scheduled to be the keynote speaker at Georgia Southern University's eighth annual International Critical Media Literacy Conference at Georgia Coastal Center in Savannah on February 28, 2020. When she received the contract for this engagement from GSU, she noted a paragraph included pursuant to Georgia's law prohibiting participation in boycotts of Israel on the part of parties doing business with the State of Georgia passed in 2016. She refused to agree to its stipulations and after she communicated her refusal to GSU, GSU cancelled the engagement.[73] Thereupon, Martin filed suit against GSU and a number of its officials in the Federal District Court for Northern Georgia seeking the voiding of the Georgia statute on grounds of unconstitutional violation of her rights. The event was cancelled.[74]
Athletics
Georgia Southern's athletic teams are known as the Eagles. The Eagles compete in baseball, basketball, rifle, football, golf, tennis, volleyball, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, cross country and track and field.[75] The university's baseball team has participated in the College World Series twice (1973 and 1990).[19] The university has two cheerleading squads, an all-female squad of 22 members and a co-ed squad of seven.[76] Georgia Southern's Athletic Director is Jared Benko. The university offers, intramural teams for all varsity level sports, equestrian events, fencing, and judo.[citation needed]
Football
Georgia Southern's football team currently competes in NCAA Division I FBS as a member of the Sun Belt Conference. The football team won six NCAA Division I-AA national championships (1985, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1999 and 2000) prior to moving to Division I FBS. Georgia Southern announced on March 27, 2013, that it would move to the Sun Belt Conference in 2014, becoming bowl eligible in 2015. During Georgia Southern's last year in Division I FCS (2013), the football schedule remained the same, but they were ineligible for the FCS playoffs.
Traditions
School colors
The official school colors for Georgia Southern are blue and white.
School mascot
The official school mascot for Georgia Southern are the Eagles.
Notable alumni
References
Notes
- ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
- ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
- ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.
- ^ As of June 30, 2020. U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2020 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY19 to FY20 (Report). National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA. February 19, 2021. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
- ^ "University Budget Office | Georgia Southern University". finserv.georgiasouthern.edu.
- ^ "Kyle Marrero Named President of Georgia Southern University". Georgia Southern University. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
- ^ a b c "Fall 2019 Fast Facts - Student Enrollment, Demographics and Classification" (PDF). Georgia Southern University. September 2019. Retrieved October 16, 2021.
- ^ "USNWR: Georgia Southern College Rankings". U.S. News World Report. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
- ^ "USG Institutions | University System of Georgia". www.usg.edu.
- ^ "Georgia Southern University - Best College - Education - US News". Archived from the original on January 5, 2011. Retrieved September 8, 2010.
- ^ Georgia Southern University from the New Georgia Encyclopedia Online
- ^ "About Us | Georgia Southern University". georgiasouthern.edu. May 30, 2014. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
- ^ "Carnegie Classifications Institution Lookup". carnegieclassifications.iu.edu. Center for Postsecondary Education. Retrieved September 12, 2020.
- ^ "USG Institutions by Group". University System of Georgia. Retrieved May 28, 2013.
- ^ "March 07 Edition" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-12-12.
- ^ "A Brief History of Bulloch County". Bulloch County Historical Society. Bulloch County Historical Society. Archived from the original on 2012-04-02.
- ^ "Georgia Southern's Road Toward Integration".
- ^ "History of Georgia Southern University". Georgia Southern University Office of the Registrar 2011-2012 Undergraduate & Graduate Catalogs. Archived from the original on 2011-07-12. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
- ^ "Zach S. Henderson Library's Building Expansion". Zach S. Henderson Library. Archived from the original on 29 November 2011. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
- ^ "Georgia Southern University Celebrates Opening of Eugene M. Bishop Alumni Center". Georgia Southern University Advantage. Archived from the original on 21 April 2012. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
- ^ "Building List – Statesboro Campus | Facilities Planning, Design & Construction | Georgia Southern University". finops.georgiasouthern.edu. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
- ^ a b c "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2011-07-11.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Statesboro, Georgia Convention and Visitors Bureau". Archived from the original on 2008-08-28.
- ^ "Campus Recreation & Intramurals | Georgia Southern University". recreation.georgiasouthern.edu.
- ^ "Recreation Activity Center". Georgia Southern University: Campus Recreation and Intramurals. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
- ^ "Recreation Activity Center". Georgia Southern University Physical Plant. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
- ^ Georgia Southern Botanical Garden
- ^ "Our Halls". Georgia Southern University Housing. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
- ^ "Living: Centennial Place". Centennial Place at Georgia Southern. Archived from the original on 30 August 2011. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
- ^ "Our Halls: Eagle Village". Georgia Southern University Housing. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
- ^ "First Year Live-On Requirement". Georgia Southern University Housing.
- ^ "About Freedom's Landing". Georgia Southern University Housing. Archived from the original on 14 August 2012. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
- ^ "Auxiliary Services". Archived from the original on 2013-02-25.
- ^ "Iris Cameras | Eagle Card Services | Georgia Southern University". auxiliary.georgiasouthern.edu.
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Further reading
- "TSC Blues Review Interview with Erk Russell" Southern-Connection.com August 2002
- Presley, Delma Eugene (2006). The Southern Century: Georgia Southern University 1906-2006. Georgia Southern University. ISBN 978-0-9788650-0-9.
External links
Media related to Georgia Southern University at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
- The Fabulous Fifty of 1906/The Delegates historical marker
- Georgia Southern University
- Education in Bulloch County, Georgia
- Universities and colleges established in 1906
- Universities and colleges accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools
- Tourist attractions in Bulloch County, Georgia
- Buildings and structures in Bulloch County, Georgia
- 1906 establishments in Georgia (U.S. state)
- Public universities and colleges in Georgia (U.S. state)