Technical College System of Georgia
Fast Facts and 2014 College Directory
Table of Contents
The Great Recession & Record Enrollment............................................................. 3 Credit Hours Taught................................................................................................... 4 TCSG High School Enrollment (Includes Dual and Joint....................................... 4 TCSG Graduates......................................................................................................... 5 TCSG Awards Conferred by Level............................................................................ 5 A TCSG Education is for Everyone........................................................................... 6 ...and HOPE and Pell Launch Careers...................................................................... 6 Education so Good, it's Guaranteed........................................................................ 7 Largest Colleges: 2013 Credit Enrollment.............................................................. 8 TCSG Graduates are In-Demand............................................................................... 8 The Nation's Best Workforce Training: Quick Start............................................... 9 A Vision for a Fully Literate Georgia...................................................................... 10 Enrollment in TCSG Adult Education Programs................................................... 11 Number of GED Graduates...................................................................................... 11 TCSG Revenue Sources Have Shifted................................................................... 12 Fiscal Year 2013 Budget.......................................................................................... 13 State Board............................................................................................................... 14 Administration.......................................................................................................... 15 College Service Delivery Area Map......................................................................... 16 2014 Technical College Directory........................................................................... 17
Fast Facts
The Great Recession & Record Enrollment
Georgians looked to the TCSG colleges for training in state-of-the-art skills and new careers after their jobs were impacted by the Great Recession: it was a major factor that led to a 30% surge in TCSG enrollment between 2008 and the all-time record of 197,059 students in 2010. Enrollment in 2013 has returned the pre-recession level, though the number of full-time equivalent students was 7% higher in 2013 than in 2008.
TCSG Credit Enrollment and FTE (Full Time Equivalent)
Years 2011 and prior are on the quarter system; years 2012 and after are on the semester system. Academic Year 2012 does not include the summer 2011 transition quarter.
Despite state agency budget cutbacks during the Great Recession, the TCSG answered the call for more instruction for Georgians seeking to improve their job potential: in 2011, TCSG students received more than 4.8 million (quarter system) credit hours of instruction (the equal of 3.2 million semester hours; the TCSG moved to semesters in fall 2011), the highest number of instruction hours delivered in the history of the system. Credit goes to the faculty and staff of the TCSG colleges who delivered record hours of instruction at a time when state budget cutbacks forced government agencies to do more with less funding. With the economy showing improvement, the colleges delivered almost 2.4 million semester hours of instruction in 2013. Georgia's high school students are jump-starting their college education (and saving on college tuition at the same time): in 2013, more than 7,100 Georgia high school students took classes through the TCSG colleges' dual and joint enrollment programs, earning both high school and technical college credits. The programs are mostly state-funded, so gaining college credits before completing high school means ambitious students can graduate from college sooner and spend less on college tuition.
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Fast Facts
Credit Hours Taught at TCSG Colleges
Years 2011 and prior are quarter credit hours; years 2012 and after are semester credit hours Academic Year 2012 does not include the summer 2011 transition quarter. (1 semester credit hour = 1 quarter credit hour x .6667)
TCSG High School Enrollment (Includes Dual and Joint)
Years 2011 and prior are on the quarter system; years 2012 and after are on the semester system. Academic Year 2012 does not include the summer 2011 transition quarter.
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Fast Facts
TCSG Graduates
Years 2011 and prior are on the quarter system; years 2012 and after are on the semester system. Academic Year 2012 does not include the summer 2011 transition quarter.
The TCSG is dedicated to being part of a more seamless system of higher education in Georgia: working closely with the University System of Georgia and the state's private colleges and universities, the TCSG is opening better pathways for student success by expanding new articulation agreements that allow for the easier transfer of college credits.
TCSG Awards Conferred by Level
Years 2011 and prior are on the quarter system; years 2012 and later are on the semester system. 2012 includes data from the summer 2011 transition quarter. (Note: some students receive more than one award
during the year, so the total awards conferred may sum to more than the unduplicated graduates).
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Fast Facts
A TCSG Education is for Everyone . . .
No one is ever too young or too old to attend a TCSG college: 28% of TCSG students are considered traditional college students who are 21 years of age or younger; 39% are between 21 and 30 years old; 18% are 31 to 40; and 15% are 41 or older. The range of ages reflects the diversity of the student population at the TCSG colleges and the fact that no one should let age stand in the way of learning new skills and discovering new careers.
Full-time or part-time? No problem: the TCSG colleges offer class schedules that are adaptable to students' needs. About one-third of TCSG students are enrolled full-time; two-thirds are part-time students who are taking advantage of convenient class times to balance class schedules with their job hours and personal responsibilities.
There's online learning, too: 71,978 students enrolled in courses through the TCSG's Georgia Virtual Technical Connection in 2013. They received more than a half million credit hours of online instruction in a wide variety of programs.
The TCSG is also building an international outreach: the TCSG International Center works with countries and colleges world-wide to improve their workforce through education partnerships and the sharing of people, programs and best practices.
. . . and HOPE and Pell Launch Careers
The cost to attend a TCSG college is among the lowest in the state: in 2013, the cost for a standard credit hour of instruction at the 24 TCSG colleges was $85; the average tuition (excluding books and fees) for a full, 15-hour semester course load at a TCSG college was $1,275.
HOPE, Pell Grants can make a TCSG education even more affordable: 81,990 TCSG students used Georgia's HOPE tuition assistance (HOPE Grant, HOPE Scholarship, and Strategic Industries Workforce Development Grant) to attend a TCSG college in 2013. In addition, almost 91,000 TCSG students used the federal Pell Grant for their education.
2009
2013
% change
Pell recipients*
58,278
90,761
56%
HOPE recipients*
116,556
81,990
-30%
*numbers may be duplicated by students who receive both HOPE and Pell
The HOPE Grant is for certificate and diploma programs: almost 95% of TCSG students who qualified for HOPE tuition assistance in 2013 used the HOPE Grant to help pay for their tuition in certificate or diploma programs; the remaining 5% of HOPE-eligible students used the HOPE Scholarship to help pay the tuition for their associate degree programs at TCSG colleges in 2013.
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Fast Facts
TCSG students used $74.1 million in HOPE funding in 2013: TCSG students represented 45% of all of the HOPE recipients (TCSG colleges, University System of Georgia, and in-state private colleges and universities) in Georgia in 2013. TCSG students accounted for 15% of the HOPE dollars spent in Georgia during the year.
2013 HOPE Students
2013 HOPE Dollars
Private 7%
TCSG
USG 48%
45%
Private 8%
TCSG 15%
USG 77%
Total GA students receiving HOPE: 193,788
Total HOPE funds awarded: $503,749,582
Source: Georgia Student Finance Commission
Education so Good, it's Guaranteed
A TCSG education means small classes, hands-on experience and more instructor attention: TCSG colleges offer more than 600 programs and most feature low student-to-teacher ratios and hands-on learning using state-of-the-art equipment in real-world settings.
TCSG programs supply the workforce for Georgia's strategic industries: TCSG colleges offer world-class programs related to the six industries that have been identified as essential to keeping Georgia competitive in the global economy: aerospace, healthcare, life sciences including biotechnology, agribusiness, energy and the environment, and logistics and transportation.
Two in five TCSG students enrolled in strategic industry programs in 2013: almost 40% of all TCSG students are in programs related to careers in Georgia's strategic industries, including healthcare technologies, which is the number one field of study for TCSG students.
TCSG graduates are headed directly into the workforce: TCSG graduates are bridging the national skills gap by answering employers' needs for talented professionals who can understand and master the latest technologies. More than 28,000 TCSG students graduated with either a technical certificate of credit, diploma or associate degree in 2013.
It's guaranteed education: if an employer finds a graduate to be deficient in a TCSG-taught competency within two years of graduation, then the TCSG will fulfill its guarantee to the employer and student to retrain him or her at no cost. Of the 35,579 students that graduated from a TCSG college in 2011, only 33 required retraining under the two-year guarantee. It's believed that no other technical college system in the country offers the same education warranty.
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Fast Facts
Largest Colleges: 2013 Credit Enrollment
Chattahoochee Technical College Gwinnett Technical College West Georgia Technical College Georgia Northwestern Technical College Southern Crescent Technical College Atlanta Technical College Savannah Technical College Central Georgia Technical College* Athens Technical College Georgia Piedmont Technical College
*On July 1, 2013 Central Georgia Tech merged with Middle Georgia Tech. Middle Georgia Tech enrollment is not included in this 2013 data.
17,238 10,013
9,748 8,565 7,871 7,546 7,380 7,010 6,756 6,663
TCSG Graduates are In-Demand
TCSG students enjoy high job placement rates: U.S. Department of Labor data confirms the job placement rate for TCSG graduates is consistently at or above 80%; additional college data indicates that the placement rate is above 90% when self-employed entrepreneurs and students who continue their college education at a two-year or four-year college are included.
Job Placement Rate for TCSG Graduates
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Fast Facts
The Nation's Best Workforce Training
Quick Start is the TCSG's internationally-acclaimed program dedicated to providing customized workforce training free-of-charge to qualified new, expanding and existing businesses. Since 1967, the Quick Start program has developed training systems for a wide range of state, national and international companies that have either relocated or expanded their operations in Georgia. Since its inception, Quick Start has trained almost 1.1 million Georgians through 6,527 projects. Quick Start is consistently rated as the nation's No. 1 workforce training program. Quick Start projects support Georgia's manufacturing industries: 90% of Quick Start's projects in 2013 involved training for operations involving advanced manufacturing. Quick Start serves all of Georgia: 70% of Quick Start's projects in 2013 were located outside of metro Atlanta, representing 68% of Quick Start trainees during the year. Jobs created in Georgia in 2013 with Quick Start's assistance: 9,431 jobs. Jobs saved in Georgia in 2013 with Quick Start's assistance: 2,997 jobs.
Quick Start attracts international business and investment to Georgia. In 2013, Quick Start delivered
38% of its projects to companies of international origin. There were 50 Quick Start projects involving
companies from 15 different countries.
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Fast Facts
A Vision for a Fully Literate Georgia
Adult Education
The TCSG Office of Adult Education provides adult education programs that enable adult learners to study for and earn a GED diploma. GED graduates are encouraged to transition to college and improve their lives and standing in Georgia's workforce and the local community. TCSG Adult Education is serving tens of thousands of Georgians: in 2013, almost 71,000 Georgia adult learners took part in Adult Basic and Secondary Education, GED instruction and testing, and English as a Second Language programs. GED diplomas awarded: 15,450 adults earned their GED diplomas in 2013. According to the US Census Bureau: a person with a high school or GED diploma earns approximately $10,000 more annually than a non-high school graduate; that translates to Georgia's 2011 class of GED graduates seeing their combined earnings potential increase by almost $170 million. The goal is for a fully literate Georgia, but there is more work to be done: it's estimated that 1.2 million adults over the age of 18 in Georgia have less than a high school education. There are 36 Georgia counties where 30% or more of adults do not have a high school or GED diploma:
Adults Without a High School Diploma or GED
2005-09 American Community Survey (Educational Attainment 18 and Over)
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Fast Facts
Enrollment in TCSG Adult Education Programs
All ABE, ASE, and ESL students with an assessment, regardless of the number of hours attended; and all work-based project learners with attendance.
Georgia launched the new GED program in January 2014: developed by the national GED Testing Service in Washington, D.C., it aligns the GED program with college and career readiness standards and provides the academic rigor necessary for the increased demands of the job market. The GED test is now computer-based and can be taken at any one of the 57 stateapproved GED testing centers. The test has four content areas: Reasoning through Language Arts, Mathematical Reasoning, Science, and Social Studies.
Number of GED Graduates
This data includes all GEDs awarded in Georgia; it is not limited to only students enrolled in an Adult Education program.
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Fast Facts
TCSG Revenue Sources Have Shifted
System Budget
The Great Recession forced austerity moves in all of state government: like all other state agencies, the TCSG received its share of austerity cuts during the Great Recession and its aftermath. State funds are no longer the largest part of the TCSG budget.
Percentage of TCSG funding from state appropriations in FY 2003: 59%
Percentage of TCSG funding from state appropriations in FY 2013: 44%
The system is relying more on other funding sources, primarily tuition and fees: as a result, the tuition for a credit hour of instruction at a TCSG college, which was $54 in 2008, has been raised four times: $60 (2010), $68 (2011), $75 (2012) and $85 (2013).
FY03 TCSG Revenue
Federal Funds 16%
Tuition & Other Funds 25%
State Funds 59%
FY13 TCSG Revenue
Federal Funds
9%
State Funds 44%
Tuition & Other Funds 47%
Mergers: Efficiencies Made, Millions Saved
Nine TCSG college mergers between 2009 and 2014 have created larger, more efficient colleges: the mergers save $9.5 million annually in administrative costs while increasing student access to a wider range of learning opportunities. No colleges were closed and all of the pre-merger campuses remain open and vitally important to the students, businesses and communities that they serve (merged colleges in parenthesis):
Chattahoochee Technical College (Chattahoochee Tech, N. Metro Tech, Appalachian Tech) 2009 Georgia Northwestern Technical College (Coosa Valley Tech, Northwestern Tech) 2009 Southeastern Technical College (Southeastern Tech, Swainsboro Tech) 2009 West Georgia Technical College (West Georgia Tech, West Central Tech) 2009 Southern Crescent Technical College (Griffin Tech, Flint River Tech) 2010 Wiregrass Georgia Technical College (Valdosta Tech, East Central Tech) 2010 Oconee Fall Line Technical College (Sandersville Tech, Heart of Georgia Tech) 2011 Central Georgia Technical College (Central Georgia Tech, Middle Georgia Tech) 2013 Coastal Pines Technical College (Altamaha Tech, Okefenokee Tech) 2014 Pending in 2015: Moultrie Tech, Southwest Georgia Tech
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Fast Facts
Fiscal Year 2013 Budget
Fund Source State funds Federal funds Other funds Total dollars
FY 2012 314,867,975
76,424,278 334,170,362 725,462,615
FY 2013 317,616,387
77,458,627 335,191,694 730,266,708
FY 2013 Capital Outlay Budget Construction projects Equipment for new facilities Major repairs and renovations Replacement of obsolete equipment Truck driving equipment Career academies Total capital outlay dollars
FY 2012 8,665,000 6,295,000 10,000,000 5,000,000 1,000,000 10,000,000 40,960,000
FY 2013 56,400,000
2,260,000 34,290,000
5,000,000 0
10,000,000 107,950,000
FY 2013 Expenditure by Program Adult Education Departmental Administration Economic Development Technical Education Total expenditure dollars
FY 2012 36,708,642
9,379,027 20,224,376 601,487,650 667,799,695
FY 2013 37,652,609
8,539,632 19,250,830 596,181,422 661,624,493
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Administration
State Board
Mary P. Flanders
1st Congressional District
Tim Williams
13th Congressional District
Richard Porter
2nd Congressional District
Joe W. Yarbrough
Chair, 14th Congressional District
Frank S. "Chunk" Newman
3rd Congressional District
Z. Shaw Blackmon, III
Vice Chair, Member at Large
Vacant
4th Congressional District
Ben Bryant
Member at Large
James F. Gingrey
5th Congressional District
Doug Carter
Member at Large
Carl E. Swearingen
6th Congressional District
J.C. "Chris" Clark, Jr.
Member at Large
Michael L. Sullivan
7th Congressional District
Lynn M. Cornett
Member at Large
Ben I. Copeland, Sr.
8th Congressional District
Robert "Buzz" Law
Member at Large
Dinah C. Wayne
9th Congressional District
Sylvia E. Russell
Member at Large
Trey Sheppard
10th Congressional District
Shirley A. Smith
Member at Large
Jay Cunningham
11th Congressional District
W. Jackson Winter, Jr.
Member at Large
Tommy David
12th Congressional District
Board memberships are as of 2-1-2014
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Administration
Administration
Ronald W. Jackson
Commissioner
Dr. Josephine Reed-Taylor
Deputy Commissioner
Lisa Eason
Assistant Commissioner Administration
Dr. Kathryn Hornsby
Assistant Commissioner Technical Education
Beverly Smith
Assistant Commissioner Adult Education
Jackie Rohosky
Assistant Commissioner Economic Development
Andy Parsons
Assistant Commissioner Data, Planning & Research
Laura Gammage
Assistant Commissioner External Affairs
Dr. Sanford Chandler
Assistant Commissioner Global Initiatives
Dr. Craig McDaniel
Assistant Commissioner International Center
Dr. Freida Hill
Assistant Commissioner Resource Development
Mike Light
Executive Director Communications
Commissioner Ron Jackson
Board Chairman Joe Yarbrough
1800 Century Place N.E. Suite 400 Atlanta, GA 30345-4304 404-679-1600 | tcsg.edu
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College SDA
College Service Delivery Area Map
July 2014
16
Directory
2014 Technical College Directory
Albany TC.............................................18 Altamaha TC........................................18 Athens TC.............................................19 Atlanta TC.............................................19 Augusta TC..........................................20 Central Georgia TC..............................20 Chattahoochee TC...............................21 Columbus TC.......................................21 Georgia Northwestern TC...................22 Georgia Piedmont TC..........................22 Gwinnett TC.........................................23 Lanier TC..............................................23 Moultrie TC...........................................24
North Georgia TC.................................24 Oconee Fall Line TC............................25 Ogeechee TC.......................................25 Okefenokee TC....................................26 Savannah TC........................................26 South Georgia TC................................27 Southeastern TC..................................27 Southern Crescent TC.........................28 Southwest Georgia TC........................28 West Georgia TC..................................29 Wiregrass Georgia TC.........................29 Bainbridge College (technical division)..............................30
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Directory
Albany Technical College
1704 South Slappey Boulevard Albany, Georgia 31701
Phone (229) 430-3500 Fax (229) 430-3594 www.albanytech.edu
Dr. Anthony O. Parker President (229) 430-0656 aparker@albanytech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 5,931
AY 2013 Graduates
1,726
Students Receiving Aid 5,263
Serving Baker, Calhoun, Clay, Dougherty, Lee, Randolph and Terrell counties
Altamaha Technical College
1777 West Cherry Street Jesup, Georgia 31545
Phone (912) 427-5800 Fax (912) 427-5823 www.altamahatech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 2,180
AY 2013 Graduates
633
Students Receiving Aid 1,813
Lonnie V. Roberts Provost (912) 427-5803 lroberts@coastalpines.edu
Serving Appling, Camden, Glynn, Jeff Davis, Long, McIntosh and Wayne counties
Altamaha Tech merged with Okefenokee Tech in July 2014; the combined college is now Coastal Pines Technical College.
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Directory
Athens Technical College
800 U.S. Highway 29 North Athens, Georgia 30601
Phone (706) 355-5000 Fax (706) 369-5753 www.athenstech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 6,756
AY 2013 Graduates
1,267
Students Receiving Aid 5,116
Dr. Flora W. Tydings President (706) 355-5110 ftydings@athenstech.edu
Serving Clarke, Elbert, Greene, Hart, Madison, Oconee, Oglethorpe, Taliaferro, Walton and Wilkes counties
Atlanta Technical College
1560 Metropolitan Parkway SW Atlanta, Georgia 30310
Phone (404) 225-4400 Fax (404) 225-4605 www.atlantatech.edu
Dr. Alvetta Thomas President (404) 225-4601 athomas@atlantatech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 7,546
AY 2013 Graduates
1,089
Students Receiving Aid 6,784
Serving Fulton and Clayton counties
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Directory
Terry D. Elam President (706) 771-4005 telam@augustatech.edu
Augusta Technical College
3200 Augusta Tech Drive Augusta, Georgia 30906 Phone (706) 771-4000 Fax (706) 771-5715
www.augustatech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 6,312
AY 2013 Graduates
1,176
Students Receiving Aid 5,185
Serving Burke, Columbia, Lincoln, McDuffie and Richmond counties
Central Georgia Technical College
80 Cohen Walker Drive Warner Robins, Georgia 31088 Phone (478) 988-6800 Fax (478) 988-6947
www.centralgatech.edu
Central Georgia Tech*
AY 2013 Enrollment 7,010
AY 2013 Graduates
1,436
Students Receiving Aid 6,138
Dr. Ivan H. Allen President (478) 757-3501 iallen@centralgatech.edu
Serving Baldwin, Bibb, Crawford, Dooly, Houston, Jones, Monroe, Peach, Pulaski,
Putnam and Twiggs counties
Middle Georgia Tech*
AY 2013 Enrollment 6,063
AY 2013 Graduates
1,688
Students Receiving Aid 4,260
*On July 1, 2013 Central Georgia Tech merged with Middle Georgia Tech. The combined colleges are now Central Georgia Technical College.
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Directory
Chattahoochee Technical College
980 South Cobb Drive Marietta, Georgia 30060 Phone (770) 528-4545 Fax (770) 528-4455 www.chattahoocheetech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 17,238
AY 2013 Graduates
1,495
Students Receiving Aid 12,397
Dr. Ronald C. Newcomb President (770) 975-4125 ronald.newcomb@
chattahoocheetech.edu
Serving Bartow, Cherokee, Cobb, Gilmer, Paulding and Pickens counties
Columbus Technical College
928 Manchester Expressway Columbus, Georgia 31904
Phone (706) 649-1800 Fax (706) 649-1885 www.columbustech.edu
Lorette M. Hoover President (706) 649-1837 lhoover@columbustech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 6,295
AY 2013 Graduates
1,047
Students Receiving Aid 5,407
Serving Chattahoochee, Harris, Muscogee,Quitman, Stewart, and
Talbot counties
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Directory
Georgia Northwestern Technical College
One Maurice Culberson Drive Rome, Georgia 30161
Phone (706) 295-6963 Fax (706) 295-6944 www.gntc.edu
Pete McDonald President (706) 295-6928 pmcdonald@gntc.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 8,565
AY 2013 Graduates
1,453
Students Receiving Aid 7,727
Serving Catoosa, Chattooga, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Murray, Polk, Walker and Whitfield counties
Georgia Piedmont Technical College
495 North Indian Creek Drive Clarkston, Georgia 30021
Phone (404) 297-9522 Fax (404) 294-6290 www.gptc.edu
Dr. Jabari Simama President (404) 297-9522 ext. 1281 simamaj@gptc.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 6,663
AY 2013 Graduates
1,202
Students Receiving Aid 5,674
Serving DeKalb, Morgan, Newton and Rockdale counties
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Directory
Gwinnett Technical College
5150 Sugarloaf Parkway Lawrenceville, Georgia 30043 Phone (770) 962-7580 Fax (770) 338-9218
www.gwinnetttech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 10,013
AY 2013 Graduates
1,402
Students Receiving Aid 7,015
Sharon J. Bartels President (678) 226-6603 sbartels@gwinnetttech.edu
Serving Gwinnett and North Fulton counties
TECHNICAL COLLEGE
Lanier Technical College
2990 Landrum Education Drive Oakwood, Georgia 30566
Phone (770) 531-6300 Fax (770) 531-6328 www.laniertech.edu
Dr. Ray Perren President (770) 531-6347 rperren@laniertech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 4,909
AY 2013 Graduates
1,131
Students Receiving Aid 3,926
Serving Banks, Barrow, Dawson, Forsyth, Hall, Jackson and Lumpkin counties
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Directory
Moultrie Technical College
800 Veterans Parkway North Moultrie, Georgia 31788
Phone (229) 891-7000 Fax (229) 891-7010 www.moultrietech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 2,783
AY 2013 Graduates
748
Students Receiving Aid 2,681
Jim Glass Acting President (229) 217-4137 jglass@moultrietech.edu
Serving Colquitt, Tift, Turner and Worth counties
Moultrie Tech is merging with Southwest Georgia Tech in July 2015.
North Georgia Technical College
1500 Highway 197 North Clarkesville, Georgia 30523 Phone (706) 754-7700 Fax (706) 754-7777
www.northgatech.edu
Dr. Gail Thaxton President (706) 754-7702 gthaxton@northgatech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 3,397
AY 2013 Graduates
648
Students Receiving Aid 2,931
Serving Fannin, Franklin, Habersham, Rabun, Stephens, Towns, Union and
White counties
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Directory
Oconee Fall Line Technical College
1189 Deepstep Road Sandersville, Georgia 31082 Phone (478) 553-2050 Fax (478) 553-2117
www.oftc.edu
Dr. Lloyd Horadan President (478) 553-2111 lhoradan@oftc.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 2,766
AY 2013 Graduates
664
Students Receiving Aid 2,232
Serving Bleckley, Dodge, Glascock, Hancock, Jefferson, Laurens, Telfair, Warren, Washington, Wheeler and
Wilkinson counties
Ogeechee Technical College
One Joe Kennedy Boulevard Statesboro, Georgia 30458
Phone (912) 681-5500 Fax (912) 486-7704 www.ogeecheetech.edu
Dr. Dawn H. Cartee President (912) 871-1638 dcartee@ogeecheetech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 3,223
AY 2013 Graduates
894
Students Receiving Aid 2,802
Serving Bulloch, Evans and Screven counties
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Directory
Okefenokee Technical College
1701 Carswell Avenue Waycross, Georgia 31503 Phone (912) 287-6584 Fax (912) 287-4865 www.okefenokeetech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 1,990
AY 2013 Graduates
542
Students Receiving Aid 1,893
Dr. Glenn Deibert President (912) 287-5827 gdeibert@coastalpines.edu
Serving Bacon, Brantley, Charlton, Clinch, Pierce and Ware counties
Okefenokee Tech merged with Altamaha Tech in July 2014; the combined college is now Coastal Pines Technical College.
Savannah Technical College
5717 White Bluff Road Savannah, Georgia 31405 Phone (912) 443-5700 Fax (912) 303-1710
www.savannahtech.edu
Dr. Kathy S. Love President (912) 443-3023 klove@savannahtech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 7,380
AY 2013 Graduates
1,611
Students Receiving Aid 6,224
Serving Bryan, Chatham, Effingham and Liberty counties
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Directory
South Georgia Technical College
900 South Georgia Tech Parkway Americus, Georgia 31709
Phone (229) 931-2394 Fax (229) 931-2924 www.southgatech.edu
Sparky Reeves President (229) 931-2150 sreeves@southgatech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 2,721
AY 2013 Graduates
960
Students Receiving Aid 2,600
Serving Crisp, Macon, Marion, Schley, Sumter and Webster counties
Southeastern Technical College
3001 East First Street Vidalia, Georgia 30474 Phone (912) 538-3100 Fax (912) 538-3156 www.southeasterntech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 2,458
AY 2013 Graduates
710
Students Receiving Aid 2,336
Dr. Cathy Mitchell President (912) 538-3101 cmitchell@southeasterntech.edu
Serving Candler, Emanuel, Jenkins, Johnson, Montgomery, Tattnall, Toombs
and Treutlen counties
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Southern Crescent Technical College
501 Varsity Road Griffin, Georgia 30223 Phone (770) 228-7348 Fax (770) 229-3227
www.sctech.edu
Directory
Dr. Randall Peters President (770) 228-7365 rpeters@sctech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 7,871
AY 2013 Graduates
1,160
Students Receiving Aid 6,892
Serving Butts, Fayette, Henry, Jasper, Lamar, Pike, Spalding, Taylor and Upson counties
Southwest Georgia Technical College
15689 U.S. Highway 19 North Thomasville, Georgia 31792
Phone (229) 225-4096 Fax (229) 225-4330 www.southwestgatech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 2,338
AY 2013 Graduates
509
Students Receiving Aid 1,965
Dr. Craig R. Wentworth President (229) 225-5068 cwentworth@southwestgatech.edu
Serving Grady, Mitchell and Thomas counties
Southwest Georgia Tech is merging with Moultrie Tech in July 2015.
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Directory
West Georgia Technical College
176 Murphy Campus Boulevard Waco, GA 30182
Phone (770) 537-6000 Fax (770) 537-7993 www.westgatech.edu
Pat Hannon Acting President (678) 664-0530 pat.hannon@westgatech.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 9,748
AY 2013 Graduates
1,736
Students Receiving Aid 8,089
Serving Carroll, Coweta, Douglas, Haralson, Heard, Meriwether and
Troup counties
Wiregrass Georgia Technical College
4089 Val Tech Road Valdosta, Georgia 31602 Phone (229) 333-2100 Fax (229) 333-2129
www.wiregrass.edu
AY 2013 Enrollment 6,148
AY 2013 Graduates
1,026
Students Receiving Aid 5,637
Dr. Tina K. Anderson President (229) 333-2126 tina.anderson@wiregrass.edu
Serving Atkinson, Ben Hill, Berrien, Brooks, Coffee, Cook, Echols, Irwin, Lanier, Lowndes and Wilcox counties
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Directory
Bainbridge College
2500 East Shotwell Street Bainbridge, GA 39818 Phone (229) 248-2500 www.bainbridge.edu
Technical Division Enrollment Only
AY 2013 Enrollment AY 2013 Graduates Students Receiving Aid
2,846 325
2,579
Dr. Richard Carvajal President (229) 248-2510 richard.carvajal@bainbridge.edu
Technical division serves Decatur, Early, Miller and Seminole counties
University System of Georgia College with a Technical Division
Non-Discrimination Statement: The Technical College System of Georgia and its constituent Technical Colleges do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, creed, national or ethnic origin, gender, religion, disability, age, political affiliation or belief, genetic information, disabled veteran, veteran of the Vietnam Era, spouse of military member or citizenship status (except in those special circumstances permitted or mandated by law). This nondiscrimination policy encompasses the operation of all technical college-administered programs, programs financed by the federal government including any Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (WIA) Title I financed programs, educational programs and activities, including admissions, scholarships and loans, student life, and athletics. It also encompasses the recruitment and employment of personnel and contracting for goods and services.
The Technical College System and Technical Colleges shall promote the realization of equal opportunity through a positive continuing program of specific practices designed to ensure the full realization of equal opportunity.
GED and GED Testing Service are registered trademarks of the American Council on Education (ACE) and may not be used or reproduced without expressed written permission.
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1800 Century Place N.E. Suite 400 Atlanta, Georgia 30345 404.679.1600 | tcsg.edu