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UGA takes team approach to proposal and award administration QUESTIONS&ANSWERS
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Hodgson Faculty Series opens 2016 with Bach, Brahms, Mendelssohn Vol. 43, No. 20
January 11, 2016
www.columns.uga.edu
dbill@uga.edu
A new economic impact study conducted by UGA economist Jeffrey Dorfman has found that UGA generates nearly $39 for each dollar of state instructional funding. The study quantified variables such as the increase in earnings that graduates of the university’s schools and colleges receive, revenues from the licensing of university inventions and the creation of business and jobs resulting from the university’s public service and outreach units.
Far-reaching impact Study: UGA has an annual $4.4 billion economic impact on Georgia
sfahmy@uga.edu
Georgia’s flagship university has a $4.4 billion annual economic impact on the state, according to a new study that analyzed how the three-part teaching, research and service mission of UGA contributes to the economy. The study, conducted by UGA economist Jeffrey Dorfman, quantified variables such as the increase in earnings that graduates of the university’s schools and colleges receive, revenues from the licensing of university inventions and the creation of business and jobs resulting from the university’s public service and outreach units. “Nowhere is the bond between the state of Georgia and the University of Georgia more evident than in our far-reaching economic impact,” said President Jere W. Morehead. “The contributions of UGA faculty, staff, students and alumni are helping to ensure a strong economic future for our state.”
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UGA remains on Kiplinger best value in public colleges list By David Bill
By Sam Fahmy
UGA GUIDE
Educating students
E a c h y e a r, m o r e t h a n 9,000 UGA students earn undergraduate, graduate and professional degrees in fields ranging from business to engineering, the sciences, arts and humanities. To measure the economic impact of these degrees,
Dorfman and his colleagues took data on earnings by major and multiplied the estimated value of each degree and major offered by UGA by the number of graduates in the 2013-2014 academic year. To ensure they were capturing the economic impact in Georgia alone, they multiplied the economic impact of the degrees awarded by the percentage of each college’s alumni who remain in the state after graduation. Overall, 62 percent of UGA graduates remain in the state after earning their degrees. To put the value of UGA’s academic programs into perspective, the researchers took the economic impact created by the degrees that UGA awarded in the 2013-14 academic year and divided it by state funding. They found that UGA generates nearly $39 for each dollar of state instructional funding. “The University of Georgia has more than 181,000 alumni in each of Georgia’s 159 counties,” said Senior Vice President for Academic See IMPACT on page 4
UGA continues to rank as one of the nation’s top values in higher education, according to Kiplinger, which placed UGA 12th on its Personal Finance list of 100 best values among public colleges and universities for 2016. Kiplinger assesses value by measurable standards of academic quality and affordability. Quality measures include the first-year retention rate, the student-faculty ratio and four-year graduation rate. Cost criteria include sticker price, financial aid and average debt at graduation. UGA was only one of two universities from the SEC (the other being the University of Florida) that made the top 20 and the only
school from the state of Georgia. “The University of Georgia takes pride in its commitment to offering a world-class education at an affordable cost,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “We are pleased that our commitment is once again being recognized on a national level.” Washington Monthly ranked UGA as the third “Best Bang for the Buck” school in the Southeast in 2015, and The New York Times ranked UGA at No. 10 among public universities doing the most for low-income students in its 2015 College Access Index. The Kiplinger rankings are available online at kiplinger.com/fronts/ special-report/college-rankings/. The rankings also will appear in the February 2016 issue of Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, now on newsstands.
OFFICE OF THE VICE PRESIDENT FOR RESEARCH
Two faculty named National Academy of Inventors Fellows By Terry Marie Hastings thasting@uga.edu
The National Academy of Inventors has named two UGA faculty members to the 2015 class of NAI Fellows. Chung K. “David” Chu, a Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus in the College of Pharmacy, and Wayne Hanna, a professor of crop and soil sciences in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, join an elite group of 582 innovators representing more than 190 prestigious research universities and governmental and nonprofit research institutions. Election to NAI Fellow status is a professional distinction accorded to academic inventors who have
David Chu
Wayne Hanna
demonstrated a prolific spirit of innovation in creating or facilitating outstanding inventions that have made a tangible impact on quality of life, economic development and the welfare of society. Five UGA faculty members have been named NAI Fellows since the honor was established in 2013. “The election of David Chu and Wayne Hanna as NAI Fellows highlights the innovative research
See FELLOWS on page 8
CENTER FOR MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Construction begins on new CMM facility By Stephanie Schupska schupska@uga.edu
UGA officials broke ground Dec. 1 on the Center for Molecular Medicine, a 43,000-square-foot facility that will continue to advance UGA’s efforts in human health research. When finished, the building on Riverbend Road will house up to 10 research groups whose primary goal will be to conduct translational research that positively impacts human health. The facility will include laboratories, faculty offices, shared cell culture facilities and
other shared spaces that support research. “The Center for Molecular Medicine is an expansion of the university’s capacity to translate research into products and other innovations that support economic development and enhance the quality of life in our state, our nation and the world,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “Here, the very best researchers will investigate the molecular and cellular basis of human disease and develop new ways to diagnose, treat and prevent diseases that affect millions of people worldwide.”
State and local officials joined university administrators on the work site adjacent to the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center to celebrate the official start of construction. Funding for the facility came from two primary sources: Gov. Nathan Deal and the General Assembly approved $17 million in state funds for the new building, and these funds were matched by $8 million in nonstate funds. “I’m excited about what this project will do for the state of Georgia,” said University System of Georgia Chancellor
See FACILITY on page 8
Andrew Davis Tucker
University officials broke ground Dec. 1 on a facility that will house up to 10 research groups whose primary goal will be to conduct translational research that positively impacts human health. The 43,000-square-foot Center for Molecular Medicine will include laboratories, faculty offices, shared cell culture facilities and other shared spaces that support research.