Technical College System of Georgia

The Technical College System of Georgia (TCSG), formerly known as the Department of Technical and Adult Education (DTAE), is the State of Georgia Government Agency which supervises the U.S. state of Georgia's 22 technical colleges, while also surveying the adult literacy program and economic and workforce development programs. The system operates the Georgia Virtual Technical Connection, a clearinghouse for online technical courses. The TCSG serves the people and the state by creating a system of technical education whose purpose is to use the latest technology and easy access for all adult Georgians and corporate citizens.

Technical College System of Georgia
AbbreviationTCSG
Formation2007
Purposeeducational oversight
HeadquartersAtlanta, Georgia, United States
Region served
Georgia
Membership
22 colleges, which includes a total of 85 campuses
Commissioner
Greg Dozier
Websitewww.tcsg.edu
TCSG headquarters in Atlanta

The Technical College System and the University System of Georgia (USG) are completely separate agencies and work entirely independently of each other, except for certain cooperative efforts. Some core courses are transferable between the two, though this was made more difficult when the USG moved to the semester system in 1997, while the TCSG remained on the quarter system. The TCSG changed to the semester system in Fall 2011. The TCSG worked with the state budget office to minimize the economic impact of the conversion, believing a move is in the best interests of TCSG students.

In 2008, the question of merging some schools arose. The first such merger was that of Georgia Aviation Technical College in Eastman into the USG's Middle Georgia College (now known as Middle Georgia State University) in 2007, effective July 1. In September 2008, the State Board of Technical and Adult Education voted to merge thirteen colleges into six. The board stated that the mergers only affect the administrative functions of the colleges.[1]

When the University System of Georgia mandated semesters in 1998, enrollment fell by several thousand students, and those that remained took fewer courses, causing budget shortfalls which the state legislature had to make up for.[2]

List of technical colleges[3]

edit


InstitutionLocation
Albany Technical CollegeAlbany
Athens Technical CollegeAthens
Atlanta Technical CollegeAtlanta
Augusta Technical CollegeAugusta
Central Georgia Technical CollegeMacon
Chattahoochee Technical CollegeMarietta
Coastal Pines Technical CollegeWaycross
Columbus Technical CollegeColumbus
Georgia Northwestern Technical CollegeRome
Georgia Piedmont Technical CollegeClarkston
Gwinnett Technical CollegeLawrenceville
Lanier Technical CollegeGainesville
North Georgia Technical CollegeClarkesville
Oconee Fall Line Technical CollegeSandersville
Ogeechee Technical CollegeStatesboro
Savannah Technical CollegeSavannah
South Georgia Technical CollegeAmericus
Southeastern Technical CollegeVidalia
Southern Crescent Technical CollegeGriffin
Southern Regional Technical CollegeThomasville
West Georgia Technical CollegeWaco
Wiregrass Georgia Technical CollegeValdosta

Former units of the TCSG

edit

These institutions were independent units of the TCSG; however, they were merged with other institutions, with most of the mergers occurring during the Technical College System consolidation of 2009.[4]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Consolidation/Merger of Technical Colleges in TCSG - Facts". Archived from the original on 2009-04-24. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
  2. ^ Tech schools moving to semesters. Gainesvilletimes.com (2010-07-13). Retrieved on 2013-09-27.
  3. ^ "Find a College – TCSG | Technical College System of Georgia". tcsg.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-04.
  4. ^ (2009) "Technical College System of Georgia Announces Mergers,"Georgia Library Quarterly: Vol. 46 : Iss. 4 , Article 7. Available at: https://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/glq/vol46/iss4/7
edit

Former and Inactive Campaigns

edit
  • [TCSGSemester411(.com) - Information regarding the TCSG's quarter to semester conversion (no longer active)]

33°50′55″N 84°18′50″W / 33.84858°N 84.31400°W / 33.84858; -84.31400