What are the best colleges and universities in Georgia if you reward schools for making the best use of their limited resources? Academic Stewardship asks how effectively schools manage their financial and human resources to gain the influence that makes them academically excellent. Schools that are exemplary in Academic Stewardship are doing everything in their power to help students and faculty achieve their full potential.
Colleges and universities in Georgia deserve to be recognized when they do more with less. It’s impressive when a large wealthy school can spend money lavishly on expensive buildings and programs. But it’s even more impressive when a small school with limited means is able to train and inspire students that the larger wealthier schools tend to ignore.
The American Association of Colleges and Universities reported in late 2021 that almost 75 percent of higher-education professionals at US colleges and universities felt financial constraints prevented their schools from effectively attracting students. Distracted by the size and amenities of larger schools, prospective students tended especially to be overawed by the big research universities.
Georgia’s smaller colleges, especially its liberal arts colleges, need effective ways of communicating their value to a world that celebrates “bigger is better” and “you need the best.” Unfortunately, most college ranking companies, such as U.S. News & World Report, define “best” in a way that devalues schools with smaller budgets and fewer students even when these schools do remarkable work in advancing their students’ education. By and large, college rankings penalize schools that serve underserved populations.
Inspired by Malcolm Gladwell, who for years now has criticized conventional college rankings for misrepresenting what’s good and valuable in education, we decided to construct a new ranking metric that highlights those schools that do more with less. That metric—called the Academic Stewardship metric—takes away both the size and the wealth advantage of schools, and focuses instead on how well schools use the resources available to them to advance the education of their students.
As a metric, Academic Stewardship is defined by a precise mathematical formula, which can be found in our Academic Stewardship white paper. Measuring the Academic Stewardship of Georgia’s colleges requires measuring two forms of stewardship: 1) Stewardship of financial resources (using the money they have responsibility without waste) and 2) Stewardship of human resources (doing their best to help students, faculty, and administration to flourish). Together, these two types of stewardship form what we call Academic Stewardship. If you want to learn more about the factors involved in Academic Stewardship, click the more button below.
Academic Stewardship as so defined is connected to keeping tuition and other costs down, but it should not be confused with affordability or frugality. The schools that this metric ranks as exemplary academic stewards tend to be all over the map when it comes to tuition and other costs. At issue is the influence of schools given the financial and human resources they have on hand. If a school is going to charge more for tuition, then that needs to be reflected in the school having proportionately greater influence.
The benefits of attending a school with strong academic stewardship include:
Tuition + fees
$44K
Acceptance
70%
Graduation
75%
Student body
1K
Agnes Scott College’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$43K
Acceptance
81%
Graduation
58%
Student body
2K
Median SAT/ACT
1190/25
Oglethorpe University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$29K
Acceptance
65%
Graduation
47%
Student body
1K
Morehouse College’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$28K
Acceptance
51%
Graduation
76%
Student body
2K
Median SAT/ACT
1125/22
Spelman College’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$6K
Acceptance
72%
Graduation
45%
Student body
3K
Fort Valley State University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$6K
Acceptance
46%
Graduation
24%
Student body
3K
Median SAT/ACT
912/17
Savannah State University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$24K
Acceptance
58%
Graduation
42%
Student body
4K
Median SAT/ACT
960/18
Clark Atlanta University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$39K
Acceptance
70%
Graduation
72%
Student body
2K
Berry College’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$6K
Acceptance
73%
Graduation
24%
Student body
5K
Median SAT/ACT
820/16
Albany State University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$39K
Acceptance
75%
Graduation
74%
Student body
7K
Median SAT/ACT
1260/28
Mercer University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$7K
Acceptance
76%
Graduation
41%
Student body
10K
Median SAT/ACT
1065/21
Valdosta State University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$13K
Acceptance
16%
Graduation
92%
Student body
34K
Median SAT/ACT
1450/33
Georgia Tech’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$7K
Acceptance
70%
Graduation
42%
Student body
11K
Median SAT/ACT
995/19
University of West Georgia’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$55K
Acceptance
13%
Graduation
90%
Student body
13K
Median SAT/ACT
1455/32
Emory University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$9K
Acceptance
100%
Graduation
56%
Student body
34K
Median SAT/ACT
1145/23
Georgia State University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$12K
Acceptance
40%
Graduation
88%
Student body
39K
Median SAT/ACT
1355/31
University of Georgia’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$6K
Acceptance
91%
Graduation
54%
Student body
24K
Median SAT/ACT
1081/21
Georgia Southern University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$23K
Acceptance
69%
Graduation
35%
Student body
2K
Median SAT/ACT
1030/21
Truett McConnell University’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$26K
Acceptance
62%
Graduation
56%
Student body
<1K
Median SAT/ACT
1029/22
Wesleyan College’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
Tuition + fees
$4K
Acceptance
97%
Graduation
24%
Student body
3K
Median SAT/ACT
1000/19
College of Coastal Georgia’s faculty and alumni have been influential in:
The state of Georgia is home to 70 colleges and universities. 38 of these schools are public institutions, each offering a wide variety of traditional and online courses as well as a full range of graduate programs for both on-campus and online students.
The University of Georgia, located in the city of Athens, is the largest college in Georgia, with over 35,000 students. Those attending Georgia State University and Georgia Southern University will enter into a friendly athletics rivalry. Tuition at Georgia State costs $9,000, and at Georgia Southern, $6,000.
Both the University of Georgia and Georgia State University are among the 36 colleges in Georgia offering online degree programs.
In addition, there are numerous fully online colleges in Georgia with accreditation from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges.
Of the 20 religiously affiliated colleges and schools in Georgia, Emory University has both the highest tuition at just over $50,000 per year, and the largest private school student population, with over 13,000 in attendance.
Georgia is also home to the prestigious Savannah College of Art and Design, which offers a wide range of undergraduate and graduate programs in architecture, advertising, art history, and more.
Prospective students looking to earn an associate, bachelor’s, master’s, or doctoral degree can choose from an extremely broad range of in-class and online programs.
Find college admissions consultants in your state.
Both traditional and online students in Georgia can earn degrees in religious studies, business, social work, law, and computer science. Those looking to attend technical colleges can also choose from a handful of brick-and-mortar and online colleges that offer two-year degrees in medicine, nursing, and education.
Part of the University System of Georgia, Atlanta Metropolitan State college is the state’s most affordable college at $3,000. Students at Atlanta Metropolitan can major in fields like mathematics, criminal justice, and philosophy. Most degree programs are available through in-person or online programs.
Georgia is home to the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Atlantic Coastal Plain, and the Okefenokee Swamp, which is the largest such water-mass in North America. This diverse landscape in The Peach State provides Georgia’s college and graduate students with a beautiful backdrop for an education. It’s also worth noting that Georgia residents who enroll in fully online programs at public universities or community colleges in Georgia will still receive in-state tuition discounts.
Georgia also offers a loan repayment-based financial aid program for qualifying graduates in the medical field through the Georgia Board of Health Care Workforce. Check out the best traditional and online degree programs and top career paths this southern state has to offer.