SCAD vs. GSU for film? Looking for my creative people!

Antuan

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Feb 28, 2026
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So I'm finally a junior and the college search is getting REAL. I'm super into filmmaking – not just watching movies, but the whole process, the lighting, the editing, the whole vibe. My dream is to direct music videos or maybe work in indie film. 🌟

I keep going back and forth between two schools that feel like TOTAL opposites. On one hand, there's SCAD in Savannah. It's literally an art school! It sounds like a dream come true, being surrounded by other creative weirdos like me all day. The facilities look INSANE, like professional-level stuff. But it's also super expensive and I've heard it can be really competitive and stressful. Is it a supportive environment or does it feel like everyone is out for themselves?

And then there's Georgia State in Atlanta. It's a huge school, which is a little scary, but being in the middle of a city sounds SO COOL for making connections. Atlanta's film scene is blowing up right now! Maybe it's smarter to be in the middle of the action and get internships easily? I'm just worried that at such a big school, I'll just be a number and it'll be hard to find my film crew.

I'm looking for a place where people want to collaborate, not just compete. Where you can stay up all night working on a project and it's fun, not just stressful. Has anyone visited both or gone to either? What's the creative community like? Where did you find your people? I'm so excited but also so scared of picking the wrong one!
 
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Antuan, I think you're asking the RIGHT questions—especially about collaboration vs. competition. That's huge.

I visited SCAD and honestly? It felt a little... much? Like everyone had their film student aesthetic down and I felt like I didn't belong. BUT—I also saw how much they help each other. There's a whole production office with mentors who help you find crews . One student said he'd made 35 short films and a FEATURE since 2022 . That's INSANE output.

GSU felt more like "real life" to me. You're in the city, you're figuring it out, you're interning while taking classes. One GSU student made "To the Bone" about overworking in college and it got shown on GPB . That's real.

I think it comes down to: do you want film SCHOOL (SCAD) or do you want to be in the film INDUSTRY while also being in school (GSU)? Both valid, just different. Maybe visit both on a random Tuesday and see which one makes you feel more like YOU.
 
The "competitive and stressful" thing is real but also kinda overblown. Yes, there are intense people, but I found my crew sophomore year and we've been collaborating ever since. The facilities are absolutely professional-level—I've worked on sets that looked better than some indie films. The film festivals they bring in are insane too (met some of my heroes). If you want to be surrounded by creative weirdos who stay up all night making stuff, SCAD is heaven. Just budget carefully—it's expensive af.
 
Antuan, let's talk numbers and logistics because this matters:

SCAD Costs (2025 data):
  • Tuition: ~$35,325 per year
  • Fees: ~$500
  • Room: ~$9,096
  • Board: ~$4,581
  • Total: ~$49,500/year
SCAD Demographics:
  • Total grad enrollment: 2,799 (61.9% female, 38.1% male)
  • Diverse student body with 35% non-resident alien students
  • 504 faculty members, all on annual contracts (no tenure track—interesting)
GSU Film Program Structure:
The BA in Film and Media requires:
  • Field of Study courses (FLME 1010 and 2700) with 2.5 GPA minimum
  • Film & Media Field of Study electives (9 hours) including options like GFA 1000 (Intro to Film & TV Production) and FLME 2900 (Language of Film Through Production)
  • CTW requirement (3 hours)
  • Film & Media major electives (18 hours) with options including:
    • FLME 4135 - Digital Cinematography (4 credits)
    • FLME 4375 - Music Video Production (4 credits)
    • FLME 4150 - Documentary Production (4 credits)
    • FLME 4120 - Production I (3 credits)
    • FLME 4980 - Internship (1 credit)
The Internship Factor:
GSU's catalog explicitly lists internships as available "in the Atlanta metro area and beyond" . That's huge for building your career while still in school.

The Verdict: SCAD gives you professional-grade training in a creative bubble. GSU gives you real-world access in a booming film city. Both can work—it's about which environment will make YOU thrive.
 
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