Franklin College of Arts and Sciences
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Franklin College of Arts and Sciences is the founding college of the University of Georgia (UGA) in Athens, Georgia, United States. The college was named in honor of Benjamin Franklin. [1]
Contents |
Opened in 1801 as Franklin College, it remained the sole college until 1859 when the University Board of Trustees reorganized the school and created three additional colleges specifically focused on Law, Agriculture, and Civil Engineering and Applied Mathematics. From that point on the school was known as the Franklin College of Liberal Arts.[citation needed]
- Anthropology
- Lamar Dodd School of Art
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- Biological Sciences
- Cellular Biology
- Chemistry
- Classics
- Comparative Literature
- Computer Science
- Dance
- Theatre & Film Studies[1]
- English
- Entomology
- Genetics
- Geography
- Geology
- Germanic & Slavic Languages
- History
- Marine Sciences
- Mathematics
- Microbiology
- Hugh Hodgson School of Music
- Philosophy
- Physics and Astronomy
- Plant Biology
- Psychology
- Religion
- Romance Languages
- Sociology
- Speech Communication
- Statistics
- Bachelor of Arts (A.B.)
- Bachelor of Science (B.S.)
- Bachelor of Science in Chemistry (B.S.Chem.)
- Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA)
- Bachelor of Music (B.Mus.)
From 1977-1988 W. J. Payne. From 2004-present Garnett S. Stokes.
- History of the University of Georgia by Thomas Walter Reed, Thomas Walter Reed, Imprint: Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia, ca. 1949, pp.656,3020
- UNDERGRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL DEGREES OFFERED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, UGA Bulletin
Franklin College of Arts & Sciences home page