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What do the letters "TSA" represent?
Technology Student Association
TSA Creed
I believe that Technology Education holds an important place in my life in the technical world. I believe there is a need for the development of good attitudes concerning work, tools, materials, experimentation, and processes of industry.
Guided by my teachers, artisans from industry, and my own initiative, I will strive to do my best in making my school, community, state, and nation better places in which to live.
I will accept the responsibilities that are mine. I will accept the theories that are supported by proper evidence. I will explore on my own for safer, more effective methods of working and living.
I will strive to develop a cooperative attitude and will exercise tact and respect for other individuals. Through the work of my hands and mind, I will express my ideas to the best of my ability.
I will make it my goal to do better each day the task before me, and to be steadfast in my belief in my God, and my fellow Americans.
TSA Motto
Learning To Lead In A Technical World
Scarlet (red)
Represents the strength and determination of the technology education students and teachers to obtain their goal
White
Represents high standards, morals, and religious beliefs
Blue (navy)
Represents the sincerity of the technology education students and teachers in obtaining a greater knowledge of our technological world.
Description of TSA Logo
The TSA Emblem is a rectangular shape with three parts. The middle section and largest part of the emblem contains the letters TSA in very large, bold print. The letters are white on a blue background. Below these letters and about 1/3 the size, is the name of the association - Technology Student Association - in white letters on a red background. The top portion of the emblem is a blank red rectangular shape, the same size as the bottom area. This portion is intentionally left blank so that each state can put their own name on the emblem if desired. The logo is a modern, futuristic symbol that represents the association's commitment to technology and its impact on the future.
TSA Official Dress: Blazer
Navy blue with official TSA patch
TSA Official Dress: Ties
Scarlet red imprinted with official TSA logo; Tie is not required for female official dress
TSA Official Dress: Shirt or Blouse
Official royal blue TSA shirt with embroidered logo
TSA Official Dress: Pants or Skirt
Light gray; skirts must be knee lengt
TSA Official Dress: Socks
Black or dark blue
TSA Official Dress: Shoes
Black dress shoes (Athletic shoes, combat or work boots are unacceptable)
TSA Service Project:
The American Red Cross
National TSA Headquarters:
Reston, Virginia
Georgia TSA's Mailing Address
Georgia TSA
P.O. Box 467
Jessup, GA 31598
Red Chapter Affiliation Program (Red CAP)
A chapter affiliates up to ten members by paying a flat fee (additional members may be added during the year for a fee). The membership fee for Red CAP is $120 at the national level plus state dues.
White Chapter Affiliation Program (White CAP)
A chapter affiliates eleven or more members by paying a per member White CAP fee for state and national dues. The membership fee for White CAP is $12 per member at the national level plus state dues.
Blue Chapter Affiliation Program (Blue CAP)
A chapter affiliates an unlimited number of members in a school for a flat fee (typically effective when there are more than 41 members). This option is popular in chapters where students rotate through a STEM class for a portion of the year to enable all students to be members. The membership fee for Blue CAP is $400 at the national level plus state dues.
Georgia Dues: Red Chapter Affiliation Program (Red CAP)
$120 National + $50 Georgia Dues
Georgia Dues: White Chapter Affiliation Program (White CAP)
$12 per member National Dues (11 or more members) + $5 per member Georgia Dues
Georgia Dues: Blue Chapter Affiliation Program (Blue CAP)
$400 National Dues + $300 Georgia Dues
Advisor Fee (all affiliation levels) = $10
Georgia Dues: Unified Dues
“TSA operates under a unified dues policy, whereby members must affiliate and pay applicable dues at the local, state and national level.” ~National TSA website
Georgia TSA Website
www.gatsa.org
National TSA Website
www.tsaweb.org
Executive Director
Steve Price
Associate Director
Angie Quarles
Personnel Development Coordinator
Melody Blomberg
Alumni Coordinator
Blaire Meldrum Rodenroth
Computer Network and System Administrator
Kameron Pence
Bookkeeper
David Phillips
Program Specialist for Engineering and Technology Education at the Dept. of Education; also represents Georgia as the Corporate Board Member for Georgia TSA
Dr. Paul Camick
C. National TSA Executive Director:
Dr. Rosanne T. White
President of the Georgia TSA Board of Directors
Dr. Matt North
National President
Sen Yakandawala
National Vice President
Lizzie Grounds
National Secretary
Veronica Gao
National Treasurer
Avni Patel
National Reporter
Rebecca Mogga
National Sergeant at Arms
Daniel Blackburn
GA President
Nate Hancock
GA 1st Vice President
Emma Maisonneuve
GA 2nd Vice President
Kaden Jawwaad
GA Secretary
Nikita Bohra
GA Treasurer
Addison White
GA Reporter
Tiffany Kim
GA Sergeant at Arms
Liam Bell
The Annual Conference Theme
"Unity Through Community"
CORE - September 2025 in Clayton, GA
1. What letters do the letters in the acronym "CORE" represent?
Chapter Officer Retreat for Excellence
Purpose of CORE
“The Chapter Officer Retreat for Excellence (CORE) program is designed to provide Georgia TSA local chapter officers with an opportunity to develop interpersonal and leadership skills, gain necessary knowledge and abilities to carry out the duties of their individual offices, prepare a Chapter Program of Work for the upcoming year and bond with their fellow officers, in preparation to lead their respective chapters the remainder of the year.”
. Tech Day - October 6, 2025 in Perry, GA Registration deadline is September 64 2023
September 4 2025
Tech Day Pre-judged /Pre-submitted competitions are:
Architectural Design
Bio-engineering Design
Program Promotion High School
Program Promotion Middle School
Tech Day On-site Competitions are:
Alternative Energy Design
Conceptual Design
Manufacturing Prototype
Mousetrap Car Challenge
Robotic Challenge High School
Robotic Challenge Middle School
Structural Design
Six Flags TSA/ CTSO Rally - October 15, 2025. Registration deadline is
September 19, 2025
Six Flags TSA/ CTSO Rally All competitions are pre-submitted. Competitions are:
GATSA Infographic
GATSA Pin Design
Lab Safety Poster Design
Roller Coaster Design
TSA Chapter T-shirt Design
Fall Leadership Conference - November 14-16, 2025 in Jekyll Island, GA
When is the FLC Conference registration deadline?
October 17
Purpose of FLC
“Our annual Fall Leadership Conference is designed to provide Georgia TSA members and advisors the opportunity to develop their leadership skills, communication, and team building skills by attending hands-on workshops, seminars and general sessions. This conference also provides for chapter members and advisors to gain knowledge and skills in relation to our Competitive events Program by attending hands-on workshops, seminars, and sessions during our Technical Sessions.”
FLC Signature Events
Armada Boat Race
Georgia TSA Electric Vehicle Rally
Georgia TSA Statesman Award (testing window prior to the conference)
Flight Challenges
Vex Robotics
Georgia TSA State Leadership Conference - March 18-21, 2026 in Athens, GA. Purpose of Georgia TSA State Leadership Conference
“Georgia TSA's annual culminating state conference of leadership development and competitive events provides our student members opportunities beyond the traditional classroom/laboratory setting which add to their increased knowledge and understanding of an ever- changing technical world. During our Competitive Events Program, GA TSA provides our members with an outlet to exhibit their knowledge and skills through our competitive events and earn awards.”
What is due by the registration deadline of February 15 th?
Conference registration submission
Outstanding Student Applications
Georgia TSA Chapter of Excellence Applications
Tommy Pitchford Scholarship Application
Posted Pre-Conference Competitive Events
National TSA Conference
June 22-July 26, 2026 in National Harbor, MD
1962
Formation as GAIAC Founded as the Georgia Association of Industrial Arts Clubs with 10 charter chapters and 286 members.
Charter chapters:
Briarcliff High School (Atlanta)
Coffee County High School (Douglas)
Commerce High School (Commerce)
Cross Keys High School (Atlanta)
Dalton High School (Dalton)
Glennville High School (Glennville)
Jeff Davis High School (Hazelhurst)
Savannah High School (Savannah)
Warner Robins High School (Warner Robins)
Winder-Barrow High School (Winder)
First advisory council chaired by
Berkley Ruiz (Winder-Barrow HS), with Robert Odom, Ed McLesky, Donald Parr, and Raymond S. Ginn Jr.
(1960s) Initial competitions:
Essay Contest; Industrial Arts Club Exhibits; Scrapbook Contest; GAIAC Sweetheart Contest.
Motto (1960s)
Pride in Progress
Creed (1960s)
"I believe in the dignity of work and that through an understanding and promotion of the industrial arts, I can develop leadership, scholarship and craftsmanship and so be of greater service to my country and to mankind."
Emblem adopted Nov 17-18, 1962:
a gear (33 cogs, five spokes) over Georgia's outline
Spokes symbolize
woodworking, metalworking, drafting, electricity, power mechanics
33 cogs
represent founding members present at incorporation
Colors:
forest green background; black gear/spokes; gold state outline, symbols, lettering
1965
Merger & National Link
Merged with the Georgia Youth Industrial Education Association (GYIEA), retaining the GAIAC name.
American Industrial Arts Student Association (AIASA) formed nationally alongside the AIAA teacher conference.
1968
- Expanded Events
Added Prepared Speech; Drafting; Industrial Technical Reports; College Bowl; Industrial Exhibits.
1976
Breaking Barriers
Dorinda Hookings of Manchester High elected GAIAC's first female president, signaling growing inclusivity.
1978
AIASA Inc. Established
National AIASA, Inc. formed in Atlanta to oversee the student body separately from the teachers' AIAA.
1979
From GAIAC to AIASA
Renamed Georgia Association of AIASA; adopted the national creed, motto, emblem, and colors.
Who were the new executive secretary and state advisor? (1979)
Raymond S. Ginn Jr. became Executive Secretary; Clifford Holmes appointed first GA AIASA State Advisor.
New emblem symbolism (1979) : Gear
for American industry
New emblem symbolism (1979) : Lightning bolt
for rapid technological change
New emblem symbolism (1979) : Framing square
for precision
New emblem symbolism (1979) : Triangle
for structure, cooperation, and "pointing to the stars"
New emblem symbolism (1979) : Mallet
for the dignity of work
New emblem colors (1979) : scarlet red
strength
New emblem colors (1979) : white
high standards/morals
New emblem colors (1979) : navy blue
sincerity
1982
Inclusive Leadership
Created Second Vice President to ensure junior high representation alongside six other state officers.
1984
- Conference Grows
Moved state conference from Macon to Atlanta's Radisson/Castlegate Hotel due to membership surge.
1986-1987
Curriculum & Competition Evolution
Ron Barker became State Advisor, boosting Georgia's national prominence.
Pilot event: Computer Aided Drafting unveiled at Baton Rouge nationals.
1988-1989 - TSA Emerges
National AIASA renamed Technology Student Association (TSA).
Georgia TSA logo designed by advisor Steve Price adopted nationwide.
Consolidated three leadership conferences into one fall planning conference on Jekyll Island.
Introduced new state events: Metric500 (formerly LSRAV), Dream House, Outstanding Service, Safety Poster, Outstanding Chapter.
North and South "Leadership Conferences" held at Berry College and Georgia Southern University.
Planning Conference launched for spring event preparation.
Georgia undefeated in national "Outstanding State" competition for Jr. and Sr. High.
1991
Awards Redefined
National TSA dropped Outstanding Chapter/State awards; Georgia continued its own top-chapter recognitions.
1995
State Leadership Conference relocation
Conference moved to Georgia National Fairgrounds in Perry.
1996
Separate Event Guides
Competitive events split into distinct middle and high school tracks, expanding to 60+ events—including video production, radio control flight, computer troubleshooting, and problem solving.
Late 1990s
Leadership Transitions
Nancy Beggs served two-year term as State Director; Ron Barker reinstated as State Advisor.
Gayle Silvey appointed Georgia's first State Association Director.
2000
National Conference Returns to Atlanta
Hosted the National TSA Conference for the first time since 1978.
Launched "Tech Day" at the GA National Fair: 10 showcase events with cash prizes and ribbons.
2003
CORE Launched - Chapter Officer Retreat for Excellence debuted at the FFA Camp in Covington, training local leaders.
2006
Advisor Steve Price became the first classroom teacher elected National TSA Board of Directors President.
2008-2009
Athens & Beyond
State Conference relocated to Classic Center in Athens (ongoing).
CORE moved to Tumbling Waters Resort; Fall Leadership Conference shifted to St. Simons Island.
Introduced F1 in Schools pilot and other curriculum-aligned events.
2012
50th Anniversary (EVO REVO '12)
Celebrated "Evolution of a Revolution" in Athens; original leaders Berkley Ruiz and Ray Ginn shared memories.
2016
First Georgia National President
Jack Crawford (Lowndes HS) elected National TSA President.
2018
Nationals Returning to Atlanta
Hosted 40th National Conference in Atlanta; Alexander King elected National President.
Steve Price honored as National TSA State Advisor of the Year; Athens proclaimed "Steve Price Day" and awarded him the Key to the City.