About UGA
Edelman Digital Bootcamp
Building the New Learning Environment (Learn)
With 70 percent of adults and 93 percent of teenagers using the Internet, it is not surprising that social media usage is steadily increasing.
Buckle up for safety
Building the New Learning Environment (Learn)
Safe Kids Buckle Up Virtual Video Showdown, an online safety video competition, created by the public relations students of UGA’s Public Relations Student Society of America Bateman team, accumulated more than 2,000 hits in five days.
UGA to offer wide array of summer camps
Building the New Learning Environment (Learn)
From playing with earthworms to playing the tuba, summer camps at the University of Georgia have something for everyone from toddlers to teens.
RSVP: Relationship and Sexual Violence Prevention
Building the New Learning Environment (Learn)
Every two minutes, somewhere in America, someone is sexually assaulted. Approximately 80 percent of rape victims are under the age of 30
Students go green
Building the New Learning Environment (Learn)
Thousands of students pass the Lumpkin Street Rain Gardens every day, yet few understand the extent of their effects on the environment.
Raising the bar
Building the New Learning Environment (Learn)
Seven UGA law students drove to Gainesville in December to meet with NFC, an environmental activist group.
Treading New Water
Building the New Learning Environment (Learn)
Camus, associate professor of pathology in UGA’s College of Veterinary Medicine, goes virtually unnoticed to the average Georgia Aquarium visitor, but that’s the nature of his job.
Writers of the storm
Building the New Learning Environment (Learn)
This is New Orleans, ravaged more than two years ago by Hurricane Katrina. Broken levees, flooding and poor evacuation plans left 1,300 residents dead and thousands more homeless, many now scattered across the country.
UGA program boosts environmental, community volunteers
Building the New Learning Environment (Learn)
When Mary Evans heard about an adult wildlife education program called Georgia Master Naturalist, she knew it was right up her alley.



