Established | 1915 |
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Dean | Charles Davis ( July 1, 2013) |
Students | 1,300+ |
Location | Athens, Georgia, USA |
Website | Grady College - The University of Georgia |
The Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication is a college within the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia, United States. Established in 1915, the Grady College is accredited by the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications.
The Grady College consists of three departments: Advertising and Public Relations, Journalism, and Entertainment and Media Studies. The college provides instruction at the undergraduate and graduate levels in public relations, advertising, broadcast news, magazines, newspapers, new services, photojournalism, publication management, telecommunications, and new media. Since 1935 the students at Grady College have produced the student written, student edited magazine the UGAzine, which is printed in the UGA printshop. The student magazine is solely self-sufficient and sustains itself by advertising revenue. Due to the increase in advertising revenue in the past years and the subsequent evolution into a 4 color publication, the UGAzine has become a prominent and respected fixture on the UGA campus. Students also have other participation opportunities such as working for award winning The Red and Black, an independent weekly student newspaper serving the University of Georgia community, and working for student-operated radio station WUOG, a radio station broadcasting to Athens and the surrounding area.
Degrees offered by the college include:
Certificates offered by the college include:
The college houses the following centers, institutes and affiliates for research and education:
The school also has research foci in Health and Risk Communication, Political and Policy Communication, Narrative Storytelling and Critical Studies, Advertising, Public Relations, Telecommunications, Sports Communication, as well as Journalism.
The college was named after alumnus Henry Woodfin Grady. After graduating from the University of Georgia with a bachelor's degree in 1868, he left Athens and worked for several different newspapers. The combination of Henry W. Grady's alumni status, his editorial position and his Athens birth, motivated the renaming of the journalism school at the University of Georgia.
Steadman V. Sanford taught the first journalism course at UGA in 1913, established the University's journalism school in 1921, and served as the journalism school’s director until becoming the president of Franklin College and later dean of the University in 1926. John E. Drewry, the second graduate of the journalism program in 1922, succeeded founder S. V. Sanford as director of the journalism school and accepted the position of dean when it was created in 1940. That same year Sanford helped create the Peabody Awards.