Jacobs: ºìÁ«ÉçÇø plays vital role in region
Article By: Clark Leonard
University of North Georgia (ºìÁ«ÉçÇø) President Bonita Jacobs highlighted ºìÁ«ÉçÇø's 150-year legacy, rising prominence and bright future in her annual State of the University address Aug. 12.
The faculty-staff convocation at the Convocation Center on ºìÁ«ÉçÇø's Dahlonega Campus also served as the kickoff for the university's yearlong Sesquicentennial Celebration. Jacobs pointed out that ºìÁ«ÉçÇø started in 1873 as North Georgia Agricultural College and that its students included 98 men and 79 women that first year. It was the first public college in Georgia to grant a bachelor's degree to a woman.
ºìÁ«ÉçÇø's history also includes the former Gainesville State College, which opened in 1964 as Gainesville Junior College, to fill a need for accessible, quality higher education. ºìÁ«ÉçÇø was created through the consolidation of Gainesville State College and North Georgia College & State University in 2013.
"In the 150 years since our founding, we have changed names and consolidated institutions, but our commitments to quality, affordable education and leadership development opportunities remain unchanged. In fact, that thread ties us all together — regardless of our decade, legacy institution or home campus," she said.
Jacobs highlighted ºìÁ«ÉçÇø's expanding footprint, which includes five campuses, as well. ºìÁ«ÉçÇø's enrollment has increased 23%, to about 19,000 students, since 2013. Now one of Georgia's largest universities, it enrolls students from nearly every U.S. state and territory and 85 countries. This fall, ºìÁ«ÉçÇø will open the Cottrell Center for Business, Technology & Innovation on the Dahlonega Campus to prepare the next generation of business leaders. Later this fall, ºìÁ«ÉçÇø will break ground for new buildings at its Blue Ridge and Cumming campuses.
She expressed gratitude to the governor, the General Assembly, and the University System of Georgia Board of Regents for their support of these projects and noted that ºìÁ«ÉçÇø continues to generate a significant return on public investment. ºìÁ«ÉçÇø's annual economic impact on the region climbed to a record $755 million in 2021.
In addition, research expenditures, the national standard for measuring research activity, will likely surpass $2.23 million this year — a 36% increase over 2016. This growth in research activity and the expanded scope of graduate degree programs have placed ºìÁ«ÉçÇø on a trajectory to be classified as a Doctoral/Professional University by the Carnegie Commission in 2024.
"Regional universities like ºìÁ«ÉçÇø play a significant and valuable role in society. We know that higher levels of educational attainment lead to higher lifetime earnings potential and healthier communities," Jacobs said. "In fact, a recent report showed that ºìÁ«ÉçÇø is among the top 20% of universities in the nation for economic mobility, an indicator of how well we serve low- and moderate-income students. Key elements of this success are our affordability, the low amount of student borrowing to pay for college, and getting students to graduation on target and on time."
Even as higher education faces challenges, Jacobs said ºìÁ«ÉçÇø is well-positioned for the future.
With one of her top presidential priorities being increasing scholarship support for students, she also noted the growing financial backing donors are providing ºìÁ«ÉçÇø. At a time when many colleges and universities are losing donors at dramatic levels, the number of donors to ºìÁ«ÉçÇø grew more than 15% last year, and new gifts and commitments to the ºìÁ«ÉçÇø Foundation this year will be more than $23 million.
"I am so grateful to our students, faculty, staff, alumni, and friends who have created remarkable momentum for ºìÁ«ÉçÇø," Jacobs said. "Our history is a rich and colorful tapestry woven by talented and creative scholars, teachers and mentors; bright and successful students; and graduates who have distinguished themselves personally and professionally as leaders with character. That is the ºìÁ«ÉçÇø way."
Jacobs also noted some of ºìÁ«ÉçÇø's recent accomplishments:
- ºìÁ«ÉçÇø has partnered with Northeast Georgia Health System on an accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing program that will increase the number of nurses in the region by 280 over the next five years.
- This year, U.S. News & World Report ranked ºìÁ«ÉçÇø as the No. 1 "Best Value School" and as the No. 1 “Best Colleges for Veterans” among public regional universities in Georgia.
- ºìÁ«ÉçÇø was named as a national top-producer of Fulbright Students for the fifth consecutive year.
- A record 34 ºìÁ«ÉçÇø cadets were named Distinguished Military Graduates last year, with nine ranked in the top 10% of the national Army ROTC class of nearly 7,000 cadets.
- ºìÁ«ÉçÇø commissioned 123 cadets as second lieutenants into the regular Army, Army National Guard, and Army Reserve in 2021-22, exceeding any other year in university history.
ºìÁ«ÉçÇø's Sesquicentennial serves as an opportunity to honor the university's heritage, celebrate its present achievements, and focus on where it will lead next. The university will celebrate the 150th anniversary through numerous annual events such as Starlight at the Gainesville Campus, Gold Rush Days alumni gatherings, Parent-Alumni Weekend, the Scholarship Gala, Oconeefest, and the Blue Ridge Tomato Sandwich Supper.