Lake County Record-Bee

CALIFORNIA COLLEGES PREPARE FOR CHANGES

- By Michael Burke EdSource

The University of California’s historic move to abandon standardiz­ed exams may not be the last of changes coming to the admissions process for the public university system.

That’s the expectatio­n of college access advocates and admissions experts who say ditching the SAT and ACT should be only the first step in making admissions more equitable across UC, which has nine undergradu­ate campuses. UC has stopped using those exams at all in admissions and made clear last month that it has no intention of replacing them with a different standardiz­ed test. UC made those decisions in response to criticism that the tests are biased against lowincome students, disabled students and Black and Latino students.

“I hope we didn’t give so much weight to the impact of removing the tests, such that everybody’s expecting the demographi­cs of who’s coming will now look dramatical­ly different,” said Michal Kurlaender, a professor of education policy at UC Davis whose research includes college preparatio­n and access. “There are definitely huge equity concerns with the SAT. But I am also worried that in removing it, there’s going to be this assumption that now our system is equitable and outcomes will look better. That isn’t going to happen naturally.”

Other ways the UC can make admissions more equitable include working more closely with K-12 schools to better understand their applicants and possibly even guaranteei­ng admission to more students who meet certain criteria, Kurlaender and other admission experts say. UC campus officials also say they could use more funding to expand student capacity and hire more staff to help with reviewing the growing number of applicatio­ns that have been submitted since the tests were dropped.

Admissions decisions are made by UC’s campuses, but system leaders also have acknowledg­ed the need to make UC more accessible. Board of regents Chair Cecilia Estolano said at last month’s regents meeting that when UC reviews student applicatio­ns, they are dealing with “generation­s of educationa­l inequity and baked-in discrimina­tion,” adding that the university system must “continuous­ly evaluate the effectiven­ess” of how admissions decisions are made.

At the state’s other public university system, California State University, the use of the SAT and ACT in admissions is currently suspended for fall 2022 decisions. That system plans to decide soon whether to use the test scores for decisions in fall 2023 and beyond.

Investing in K-12

Eliminatin­g the SAT and ACT puts even more emphasis on a student’s high school grades. To be eligible for UC admission, students must take a set of classes known as A-G courses, which include math, science, history, English, art, foreign language and electives.

Taking advanced versions of those classes, such as honors or Advanced Placement courses, can give students a leg up when applying. But the students who would be at a disadvanta­ge with a testing requiremen­t also often have unequal chances to take those classes. Black, Latino and low-income students are less likely to have access to and enroll in advanced courses in high school than their white, Asian and highincome peers.

Kurlaender said there needs to be an investment in K-12 schools to ensure that there is equity across the state in the types of courses available to students.

“It’s more than just making sure that the A-G courses are available,” Kurlaender said. “It’s the richness of those courses, the weighted courses, the kind of courses it takes to be competitiv­e at UC.”

Robert Penman, executive director of undergradu­ate admissions at UC Davis,

started in his role in August and is now entering his first admissions cycle. He said his office has made it a top priority to meet with high school counselors across the state and understand the specific circumstan­ces at different schools.

For example, this year, some schools have had substitute teachers for two consecutiv­e semesters in certain classes, Penman said. That’s something he said is worth considerin­g in admissions because it “can make a big difference in a student’s learning experience,” as students generally have better educationa­l outcomes when they have stable and qualified teachers.

It can be especially difficult for admission officials to fully understand the local context of schools that are located far away from their given campus. At UC Irvine in Orange County, admissions staff often have little informatio­n about schools in areas like the Central Valley and the northernmo­st parts of the state near the Oregon border, said Dale Leaman, executive director of undergradu­ate admissions at the campus.

Leaman said he “would love to have more resources” so his staff can visit those schools.

“I think we have a responsibi­lity to the entire state. We have a responsibi­lity to the students in Eureka and the students in Redding and the students in Chico,” Leaman said.

Reading applicatio­ns

This year, UC saw a major spike in the number of applicatio­ns it received for freshman admission. Across the nine campuses, about 32,000 more students applied for freshman admission in fall 2021 compared to fall 2020, an 18% jump.

The big increase has overwhelme­d some campuses because they haven’t been able to hire more applicatio­n readers to review and score applicatio­ns. That can be a detriment to students because it means, on average, their applicatio­ns are getting less attention than they did when the campuses received fewer applicatio­ns.

“The increase in applicatio­ns requires a lot more time. Our staff, they are stretched so thin,” said Michelle Whittingha­m, the associate vice chancellor of enrollment management at UC Santa Cruz. That campus received 61,708 applicatio­ns for freshman admission in fall 2021, up from 55,003 the previous year.

Whittingha­m said the campus typically employs about 50 readers. Increasing that by anywhere from 25% to 50% would be a big help, she added.

Campuses across UC could also be more efficient with how they review applicatio­ns, said Jesse Rothstein, a professor of public policy at UC Berkeley and an expert in college admissions. For example, Rothstein said he’s suggested that Berkeley admissions staff give more thorough reviews to applicants who have a realistic chance to be admitted and spend less time with applicatio­ns that aren’t competitiv­e.

UC considers 13 factors when reviewing applicatio­ns that range from grade point average to extracurri­culars to any special circumstan­ces that a student faces — such as a disability, low family income and whether a student is the first in their family to attend college.

“They have to read a lot of applicatio­ns quickly,” Rothstein said. “They’re somewhat underfunde­d and under pressure. And that means that they don’t give each applicatio­n the time it deserves. And I think there’s a lot that the universiti­es can do in the details to make sure that applicatio­ns do get the care they deserve.”

Guaranteei­ng admission

In-state students who graduate in the top 9% of their high school class are offered guaranteed admission to UC. But those students aren’t guaranteed that they will be admitted to the campus of their choice, just that they’ll be accepted to at least one of the campuses, even if it’s one they didn’t apply to.

UC could improve the current guarantee program by creating a local guarantee, where students would be promised admission to the campus closest to their high school if they meet certain criteria, said Audrey Dow, senior vice president of the Campaign for College Opportunit­y.

Black and Latino students attend the state’s CSU campuses and community colleges at higher rates than they do UC campuses, and those who do attend UC have a higher chance of graduating, Dow noted.

Dow said a local guarantee could go a long way in making Black and Latino students better represente­d at UC’s most competitiv­e campuses. Latino students, for example, make up 25% of the undergradu­ate student population at UCLA but 65% of the K-12 population in Los Angeles County public schools.

“I think if we guaranteed students admission to their local UC, provided they meet the admission criteria, we would see a very different demographi­c makeup. And one that is much more closely aligned with our California communitie­s,” Dow said.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY ANDREW REED — EDSOURCE ?? A student works on a computer in the quad area at California State University, Stanislaus.
FILE PHOTO BY ANDREW REED — EDSOURCE A student works on a computer in the quad area at California State University, Stanislaus.
 ?? FILE PHOTO BY ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS ?? Students walk across campus at California State University East Bay on February 25, 2020.
FILE PHOTO BY ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS Students walk across campus at California State University East Bay on February 25, 2020.

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