Georgia College & State University
Degrees Offered
Bachelor's
- Bachelor of Music Education
- Bachelor of Science with a Major in Athletic Training
- Bachelor of Science with a Major in Early Childhood Education
- Bachelor of Science with a Major in Health Education
- Bachelor of Science with a Major in Middle Grades Education
- Bachelor of Science with a Major in Outdoor Education
- Bachelor of Science with a Major in Special Education
Master's
- Master of Arts in Teaching (initial certification) with a Major in Middle Grades Education Science and Mathematics
- Master of Arts in Teaching (initial certification) with a Major in Secondary Education
- Master of Arts in Teaching (initial certification) with a Major in Special Education
- Master of Education with a Major in Educational Technology with a Concentration in Instructional Technology
- Master of Education with a Major in Educational Technology with a concentration in Library Media
- Master of Education with a Major in Early Childhood Education
- Master of Education with a Major in Educational Leadership
- Master of Education with a Major in Kinesiology
- Master of Education with a Major in Middle Grades Education
- Master of Education with a Major in Special Education
- Master of Education with a Major in Secondary Teacher Education
- Master of Music Education
Add-On Certifications to Existing Master’s Degrees
Education Specialist
- Specialist in Education with a Major in Educational Leadership
- Specialist in Education with a Major in Curriculum and Instruction: Early Childhood
- Specialist in Education with a Major in Curriculum and Instruction: Middle Grades
- Specialist in Education with a Major in Curriculum and Instruction: Secondary Education
- Specialist in Education with a Major in Special Education
Endorsements
Description
Georgia College & State University in Milledgeville provides intensive, field-based programs for educator preparation. The “Architects of Change” at GCSU model was awarded the 2008 Wisniewski Award for "singularly significant contributions to the theory and practice of teacher education. Currently the program is one of five finalists for the 2009 Christa McAuliffe Award given for "innovative” teacher education programs.
Many of their undergraduate and graduate programs are designed to provide a group of 18 to 20 students an in-depth cohort experience under the direction of a mentor leader. Teacher candidates are selected who demonstrate high academic ability, leadership, values, and commitment to the profession. This approach to educator preparation has proven very effective. GCSU graduates are successful in obtaining teaching and leadership positions or gaining entrance to competitive graduate programs.
Founded in 1889, Georgia College & State University is located in the center of Milledgeville, Georgia's antebellum capital. Designated by the University System as Georgia's public liberal arts university, this residential institution offers students a challenging array of 58 undergraduate degree programs and 32 graduate-level programs in the colleges of arts and sciences, business administration, education and health sciences.
At the heart of the university's core curriculum are required interdisciplinary studies courses which integrate aspects of the liberal arts core into the study of an array of topics and problems too broad to be fully addressed in any one discipline.
The campus occupies 43 acres within the city limits, and an additional 600 acres in the county are used for athletics, recreation and outdoor education. The Old Governor's Mansion, located on campus and a national historic landmark, is a multi-purpose building that serves as an educational center and museum. With its blend of majestic red brick buildings and white Corinthian columns, the campus appeals to those seeking a classic academic environment in which to pursue a comprehensive academic program.
The university enrolls more than 5,000 students, ninety percent of whom come from Georgia. A number of students attend from surrounding southeastern states, and 43 foreign nations. Students live on campus and are mostly of traditional age. Learning Community Living Options give students who live in residence halls an opportunity to bond academically through clustered classes, field trips, and service-learning projects. They may attend classes at the main campus in Milledgeville and at Macon Center for Graduate and Professional Learning and the Robins Center on the Warner Robins Air Force Base.
A myriad of extra-curricular pursuits engage students outside of class, including concerts, plays, fine arts exhibitions, honor societies, debates, student media, social fraternities and sororities and other clubs and organizations. The university competes in NCAA Division II Peach Belt Conference basketball, baseball, softball, tennis, golf and cross-country.
The university is nationally known to many for its most famous alumna, Flannery O'Connor and is the repository for her collection. The university also holds the Peace Corps and other papers of the late U.S. Sen. Paul Coverdell.
The college was founded by the Georgia House of Representatives in 1889 as a women's college. In 1967, it became a regional, co-educational college, and by the 1970s it had extended its reach by opening commuter classes in the middle Georgia region. In 1996, the college assumed its current name and was designated Georgia's public liberal arts university.
