Augusta University, city of Augusta commemorate 9/11
The annual event was held Sept. 7 on the Summerville Campus.
FOCUS
Augusta University serves our veterans, active-duty military, and their families with education for life.
Serving those who serve, our commitment as a military friendly university allows you to maximize your military education benefits. We believe our military service members and veterans deserve the opportunity to earn an education that builds on their experience and prepares them for the next step in their careers and their lives.
Augusta University not only offers military and veteran students a broad range of quality academic degrees, programs and certificates, but also the opportunity to build the life they've always dreamed of while focusing on the unique needs and challenges of today's military community.
DISCOVER
DISCOVER
The Georgia Cyber Innovation & Training Center is a unique public/private collaboration among academia, state, federal and local government, law enforcement, the U.S. Army and the private sector.
There are opportunities to engage with the Georgia Cyber Center and its resident partners whether you are an Augusta University student, veteran, active duty military, or military spouse.
Simply getting a cup of coffee in the Hull McKnight Building opens the doors to collide with international defense contractors at Fort Eisenhower, a swat team of nerds from the Pentagon, entrepreneurs working in a collaborative workspace, small business owners, and students from Augusta University and Augusta Technical College. That is the advantage of being at the Georgia Cyber Center – the opportunities for collisions.
INSPIRATION
Knowledge based on experience — Augusta University's approach to learning sets you up for success with expert faculty, personalized advising and comprehensive curriculum.
The annual event was held Sept. 7 on the Summerville Campus.
“After I graduated, when we started having more African American cadets in and playing football, I realized that wow, maybe there was some significance to it," said retired Col. Gary Steele.
This week: Miss and Mr. Augusta University will be crowned, researchers look at how income levels impact the health of cancer survivors and the new ROTC leader looks to build on the current program.
“We’re taking that foundation and going to the next level in terms of cadet involvement in the community, retention, and growing the program in terms of the number of cadets we commission.”