Middle Georgia State University
Details
Description
Middle Georgia State University (MGA) offers aviation maintenance education through its School of Aviation, which includes Aviation Maintenance and Structural Technology programs with both degree and certificate options. Unlike many technical colleges that focus only on a certificate or associate pathway, MGA is a public university with a broader aviation ecosystem that also includes flight and air traffic management programs. For a student who wants to train in an environment where multiple aviation disciplines operate side by side, that campus context can be a real advantage. MGA highlights that its aviation programs include FAA-certified training and that students can pursue options that align with hands-on technical careers as well as longer-term management or leadership goals.
MGA’s aviation maintenance area is presented as the home for Aviation Maintenance Technology (AMT) and Aircraft Structural Technology (AST). Students who enter this pathway should expect to learn the fundamentals required to maintain aircraft safely and legally: regulations and maintenance documentation, inspection methods, aircraft structures and systems, basic electricity and instruments, powerplant fundamentals, and troubleshooting practices that are essential in both general aviation and airline maintenance settings. University-based programs often integrate general education requirements with technical training, which can appeal to students who want more academic breadth or who may later pursue supervisory roles.
A distinctive opportunity MGA mentions is the ability to earn college credit for prior aviation maintenance experience and to pursue a Bachelor of Applied Science in Technical Management designed to complement technical skills with management education. For experienced maintainers, veterans, or students who expect to keep advancing after earning FAA ratings, that kind of ladder can be valuable. It helps connect hands-on maintenance capability with the leadership, communication, and organizational skills that matter in larger maintenance organizations.
When evaluating MGA, you should confirm the exact credential you plan to pursue (associate-level option versus certificate), the pathway to FAA mechanic testing eligibility, and your expected program length in months. You should also ask about the facilities used for maintenance training and how much of the learning is lab-based versus classroom-based. MGA provides a clear point of contact within the School of Aviation, which is helpful if you want to ask about admissions steps, transfer credit, the structure of the AMT curriculum, and how the aviation campus environment supports training. If you are deciding between multiple schools, MGA is a strong candidate for students who want a university setting with aviation depth and the possibility of continuing into a management-focused bachelor pathway after completing technical training.

