Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College (ABAC) is a residential institution that has long been the higher education destination for students who want to study agriculture and natural resources. Today, ABAC has grown to become a destination for students seeking a wide variety of baccalaureate programs from a broad range of academic disciplines. ABAC is a unique, intimate learning environment where students are given the tools to embrace their full potential and pursue their career and personal aspirations through a hands-on educational experience. In addition to delivering relevant experiences that prepare the graduate for life, ABAC is a strategic partner within the University System of Georgia to help create a more educated Georgia.
ABAC’s mission is to provide excellent education by engaging, teaching, coaching, mentoring, and providing relevant experiences that prepare the graduate for life.
Fall 2022 Student Demographics |
Total |
Fall Enrollment |
3,648 |
Full-Time |
65% |
Bachelor’s Degree-Seeking |
66% |
Females |
60% |
Underserved Minority Population |
21% |
Pell Eligible |
34% |
First Generation |
24% |
Adult Learner (age 25+) |
10% |
On-Campus Resident |
37% |
Intercollegiate Student Athlete |
4% |
Dual Enrolled |
13% |
Freshmen (< 30 hours) |
35% |
First-Year Retention Rate |
69% |
Six-Year Graduation Rate |
30% |
A central tenet of ABAC’s mission is to “provide excellent education by engaging, teaching, coaching, mentoring, and providing relevant experiences that prepare the graduate for life.” To that end, ABAC’s Complete College Georgia (CCG) plan provides the framework to allow the College to commit to student success through proactive and adaptive academic, career, and student support services that enhance student achievement and prepare the student for life beyond graduation. ABAC’s involvement with CCG has allowed the College to expand successful initiatives beyond a student’s first year to increase graduation rates and prepare ABAC graduates for a career.
ABAC’s CCG team is a collaboration and partnership between Academic Affairs, Student Success, Financial Aid, Student Affairs, Housing & Residence Life, faculty, and students. The core objectives of CCG are to support and implement strategies and policies so more students can reach their goal of attaining a college degree while preparing to join the workforce or continue their educational journey. Our most successful CCG strategies, which have positively impacted ABAC’s retention and graduation rates, include fully implementing the Momentum Year (15-to-Finish, Pathway Maps, and Learning Support Transformation) and, more recently, applying techniques of the Momentum Approach to career development. These successes are highlighted in the data below, as well as the Student Success Inventory plans, as discussed in section two.
ABAC’s evaluation of its CCG plan focuses primarily on retention and graduation rates. One means of assessment that ABAC utilizes when determining the level of success with student achievement is by comparing its retention and graduation rates to other state colleges within the USG. The list of peer institutions consists of the following:
- Atlanta Metropolitan State College
- College of Coastal Georgia
- Dalton State College
- Georgia Gwinnett College
- Gordon State College
- East Georgia State College
- Georgia Highlands College
- South Georgia State College
ABAC monitors the range of retention and graduation rates from the peer cohorts as well as the average for the cohort for both measures. The College determines an acceptable threshold for achieving student success for retention and graduation rates from these ranges and averages.
ABAC’s minimum threshold of acceptability or goal for its first-year retention rate is to exceed the average retention rate of ABAC’s comparison peer institutions. ABAC aspires to have a first-year retention rate that is at least comparable to or better than the average of its peer institutions. And because ABAC is heavily committed to improving its first-year retention, it has been implementing various supportive Momentum Year initiatives, as described in this document, to do so.
Pertinent outcomes data on the first-year retention rates at ABAC and its peer institutions are shown in Table 1. For Fall 2022, ABAC’s first-year retention rate was 69%, the highest rate within USG’s State College Sector, and exceeded the peer group average of 64%. ABAC’s Fall 2021 and Fall 2018 retention rates were typically close to the peer group average. For Fall 2020 and Fall 2019, ABAC’s student achievement outcomes in terms of first-year retention were higher than the average retention rate for its peers, indicating successful goal attainment.
Table 1. Institutional First-Year Retentions for ABAC and Peer Institutions
Cohort Semester |
Retention Semester |
Cohort Size |
ABAC’s Retention Rate |
Peer Group Average Retention Rate |
Fall 2022 |
Fall 2023 |
559 |
69% |
64% |
Fall 2021 |
Fall 2022 |
532 |
62% |
64% |
Fall 2020 |
Fall 2021 |
548 |
65% |
61% |
Fall 2019 |
Fall 2020 |
531 |
73% |
64% |
Fall 2018 |
Fall 2019 |
517 |
63% |
64% |
Note. Data are from USG by the Numbers and include First-Year, Full-Time bachelor’s degree-seeking students.
ABAC’s goal or threshold for acceptable performance for its four- and six-year graduation rates is to exceed the average graduation rate of ABAC’s comparison peer institutions. For many years, improving the institution’s four- and six-year graduation rates has been part of ABAC and USG’s Retention, Progression, and Graduation (RPG) and CCG initiatives. The data in Table 2 (four-year graduation rates) and Table 3 (six-year graduation rates) show that ABAC has continually achieved its threshold of acceptability goals with respect to the peer group average. ABAC continues to be on the upper end of the graduation rate range for USG State Colleges and exceeds the peer group average for the fall cohorts presented below. A few of ABAC’s CCG strategies that have contributed to its rise in graduation rates include 15-to-Finish, Early Alerts, Academic Intervention Management (AIM), and 90-hour checks.
Table 2. Four-Year (on-time) Graduation Rates for ABAC and Peer Group
Cohort Semester |
Graduation Year |
Cohort Size |
ABAC’s Graduation Rate |
Peer Group Average Graduation Rate (and Range) |
Fall 2019 |
2022-23 |
533 |
28% |
13% (9% - 28%) |
Fall 2018 |
2021-22 |
520 |
28% |
13% (3% - 28%) |
Fall 2017 |
2020-21 |
477 |
23% |
13% (0% - 23%) |
Fall 2016 |
2019-20 |
478 |
28% |
11% (0% - 28%) |
Fall 2015 |
2018-19 |
346 |
23% |
11% (0% - 23%) |
Note. Data are from USG by the Numbers and include First-Year, Full-Time bachelor’s degree-seeking students.
Table 3. Six-Year Graduation Rates for ABAC and Peer Group
Cohort Semester |
Graduation Year |
Cohort Size |
ABAC’s Graduation Rate |
Peer Group Average Graduation Rate (and Range) |
Fall 2017 |
2022-23 |
477 |
40% |
33% (31% - 40%) |
Fall 2016 |
2021-22 |
478 |
51% |
33% (14% - 51%) |
Fall 2015 |
2020-21 |
346 |
45% |
34% (21% - 50%) |
Fall 2014 |
2019-20 |
242 |
42% |
33% (23% - 42%) |
Fall 2013 |
2018-19 |
222 |
39% |
35% (35% - 39%) |
Note. Data are from USG Qlik and include First-Year, Full-Time bachelor’s degree-seeking students.
The above data show ABAC’s commitment to helping students attain a college degree on a global level. In 2022, given ABAC’s continued success with its CCG initiatives, the College’s CCG team began to develop plans to start incorporating career-focus elements within ABAC’s CCG plan. As discussed below in the Student Success Inventory, incorporating career initiatives with the current Momentum Approach has begun to move ABAC toward a more holistic approach to serving students and aid the state in creating a more educated workforce in Georgia (a tenet of CCG).