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Columns::April 15, 2002
The Golden Arch
Two-day statewide symposium highlights undergraduate research
Four candidates for deanship to visit campus
Annual childrens literature conference opens April 18
Charleston mayor to discuss downtown preservation
Team-building eggs-cellence
Testing the waters
Making media a method
Teaching students is elementary for mathematics education prof
Rick Watson, MIS professor, named Internet Strategy chairholder
Newsmakers
In the swim
Campus News
Magazine ranks business, law, education among nations best
By Chuck Toney
ctoney@uga.edu
The Terry College of Business at UGA posted the most dramatic move in its category in the annual ranking of Americas best
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graduate schools by U.S. News and World Report. The Terry College rose 16 spots, from 50th to 34th (where it was tied with four other schools). Its M.B.A. program was ranked 13th among public business schools.
Were ecstatic, says Dean P. George Benson of the Terry College. Our M.B.A. program had the largest year-to-year improvement of any school in the ranking. And were closing in on being one of the top 10 public business schools in the country, which is where we want to be.
Its a credit to the quality of our students and the success our Career Services Office has
had in working with corporate recruiters.
Two of the 10 factors used to rank the schools propelled the Terry College up the rankings: a substantial improvement in the M.B.A. programs rating by corporate recruiters and higher average admission test scores for incoming students.
UGAs College of Education and School of Law also ranked among the nations top graduate schools. The College of Education ranked 23rd overall, and several of its programs are ranked in the top 10: vocational/technical education (fourth), secondary education (fifth), elementary education (fifth), curriculum/instruction (eighth) and counseling/personnel services (ninth).
It is always gratifying to be recognized by your peers as one of the leading research colleges of education in the country, says Louis Castenell, dean of the College of Education. These rankings reflect the commitment to excellence made by our faculty and students as we continue to earn credibility for our work not only in Georgia, but across the nation and around the world.
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| Graduate students and Dean George Benson of the Terry College of Business celebrate the U.S. News & World Reports national ranking of the graduate program. The law school and the education college also were ranked. (Photo by Paul Efland) |
The School of Law moved from 27th to 32nd in the 2003 rankings, but remains in the top 20 percent of all accredited law schools in the nation and is ranked 12th among public law schools and third in the southeast United States.
We are a first-tier school that recruits quality students with superb credentials, maintains a strong faculty and enjoys a steadily improving reputation among lawyers and judges around the nation, says Dean David Shipley. We offer students a tremendous legal education, as is evidenced by our successful alumni. Our alumni currently lead all three branches of Georgias government, 11 are listed on Georgia Trends 2002 list of Most Influential Georgians, and they are leaders in the judiciary, the legal profession, the business community, and civic and public affairs.
U.S. News also ranks a different set of specific programs each year. UGAs programs in biological sciences (54th) and psychology (73rd) are ranked in the top 100 such programs.
We are very pleased that two of our programs are included in these rankings, says Wyatt Anderson, dean of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences. This is a tribute to the faculty, students and staff who have worked hard to make education a top priority at the University of Georgia.
The rankings appear in the 2003 edition of Americas Best Graduate Schools. The magazine uses a combination of factors such as academic reputation, student selectivity, placement success, faculty resources and research activity to rank graduate schools.
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