Page 4 - MGATODAY-Spring2018_lr
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By Lee Greenway

Taking Flight

 After Brittni Giddens earned her bachelor’s                        MGA’S GROWING SCHOOL
               degree in behavioral sciences, she had a         MacOonF AVIATION PREPARES
                realization. “That wasn’t what I wanted
       to do.” An aunt who was working at Robins Air                STUDENTS FOR CAREERS
       Force Base encouraged Giddens to look at a career            IN ALL AREAS OF GEORGIA’S
       in aviation. “I fell in love with it,” she says. “Since      FASTEST-GROWING INDUSTRY
       then, it’s been airplanes, airplanes, airplanes.”
       	 Now pursuing her associate’s degree in                 For details about MGA’s School of Aviation, including degree
       aircraft structural technology (AST), Giddens is         and certificate program offerings, visit www.mga.edu/aviation.
       one of a growing class of central Georgians look-        Residents of Alabama, Florida, South Carolina, & Tennessee may be
       ing for a career in the state’s second-largest and       eligible to pay in-state tuition for MGA’s aviation degree programs.
       fastest-growing industry: aerospace.                     https://www.mga.edu/admissions/out-of-state-waiver.php
       	 PwC’s 2017 Aerospace Manufacturing At-
       tractiveness Index, an annual report ranking             As part of a statewide expansion plan, MGA’s School of Aviation is
       nations and U.S. states on how inviting they are         now the fixed base operator (FBO) of the Macon Downtown Airport.
       to aerospace manufacturing companies, places
       Georgia at the top of the list of U.S. states, and the
       U.S. at the top of the list of nations. The industry
       has an economic impact of more than $64 billion
       annually in Georgia, according to the Georgia
       Department of Economic Development, and
       aerospace products are the state’s largest interna-
       tional export market, with annual sales reaching
       more than $8 billion.
       	 Of course, large sales numbers mean a large
       workforce – aerospace companies currently
       employ more than 99,000 Georgians – and a large
       workforce needs a lot of educational resources.
       	 Middle Georgia State University’s (MGA)
       School of Aviation – the only public, four-year
       aviation school in Georgia – has programs de-
       signed to help students fill roles in every corner
       of the aerospace industry – from manufacturing
       to maintenance, from logistics to logbook. And
       as Georgia continues to cement its role as the top
       destination for aerospace industry in the world,
       MGA continues to expand its offerings to help
       prepare students for a career in making things fly.

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