Chattanooga Times Free Press

Enrollment rebounds at Georgia’s public universiti­es and colleges after 2-year dip

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — The number of students rose at Georgia’s public universiti­es and colleges this fall after a two-year dip, with all but three of the system’s 26 schools adding students.

Enrollment rose 2.9% statewide from fall 2022. That increase of nearly 10,000 students set a new record of more than 344,000 students statewide, surpassing the previous high of 341,000 in fall 2020.

After a steeper decline in enrollment than the nation as a whole last year, University System of Georgia schools outstrippe­d the nationwide rise of 2.1% this fall recorded by the National

Student Clearingho­use.

The turnaround is especially welcome at many of the system’s smaller institutio­ns, which bled students fast during the pandemic. The system distribute­s much of its funding based on enrollment. That means those schools — which typically don’t have big private donors or research contracts to cushion them — have been facing budget cuts.

“This is happening as we focus on aligning degrees to the state’s workforce needs, from nursing and teaching to logistics and cybersecur­ity,” University System of Georgia Chancellor Sonny Perdue said in a statement, adding that schools “make a transforma­tional difference in students’ lives.”

The institutio­n which saw the largest percentage increase was Georgia Southweste­rn State University in Americus, where student enrollment rose 11%.

Dalton State College, Atlanta Metropolit­an State College and Georgia Gwinnett College saw increases of more than 8%. They and six other state colleges saw student enrollment rise 4.2% as a group. Many students at those schools seek twoyear degrees.

Georgia Tech added the largest number of students. Its growth by 2,600 students brings its enrollment to nearly 48,000. Master’s degrees, typically offered online, continue to fuel the growth of the Atlanta research powerhouse.

The only schools seeing dips were Georgia State University in Atlanta, Valdosta State University and East Georgia State College in Swainsboro. Georgia State remained the system’s largest, with more than 50,000 students, despite a 6% decrease.

Overall, 18 of 26 schools haven’t made up all the ground they lost since fall 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic began. Without Georgia Tech’s 11,000-student increase since 2019, the system’s overall enrollment would be lower than pre-pandemic levels. Enrollment has fallen 35% at East Georgia State since 2019.

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