<p>I don’t know how accurate this is, but I found it here. Apparently this guy researches grade inflation. I would imagine UGA had it somewhere available on their website.<br>
[Georgia[/url</a>]
The last reported piece of data was in 2007, so it could have gone slightly up or down, but I’d imagine it is still close.
<a href=“http://www.googlesyndicatedsearch.com/u/universityofgeorgia?hl=en&domains=uga.edu&sitesearch=uga.edu&ie=UTF-8&&sa=X&ei=TkIzTcvBKIWKlwf4kaiuCg&ved=0CAMQBSgA&q=average+gpa&spell=1[/url]”>http://www.googlesyndicatedsearch.com/u/universityofgeorgia?hl=en&domains=uga.edu&sitesearch=uga.edu&ie=UTF-8&&sa=X&ei=TkIzTcvBKIWKlwf4kaiuCg&ved=0CAMQBSgA&q=average+gpa&spell=1](<a href=“http://gradeinflation.com/Georgia.html]Georgia[/url”>Georgia)</a>
this page gives a pdf report that supports the guy’s date up to 2004 (apparently that’s where UGA peaked).</p>
<p>This small little snippet supports that it has gone down slightly. <a href=“http://www.uga.edu/greeklife/academics/index.html[/url]”>http://www.uga.edu/greeklife/academics/index.html</a></p>
<p>I suppose one could say UGA is kind of like Emory without the grade inflation, but I imagine some would argue that before 2004, there was an unwarranted upward trend (as in SATs did not increase enough to justify 3.25). I’m pretty sure our unwarranted upward trend will continue, but it often depends how hard introductory science/orgo./biochem/NBB 301 courses are in some years. It’s always difficult and generally the same profs. teach, but some years they choose to make the courses a tad easier than other years for no random reason.</p>