Los Angeles Times

UC lets in record number of state residents

The university system accepts 3,000 more California­ns than last year, reflecting growth in transfer students.

- By Teresa Watanabe

The University of California opened its doors to a record number of California­ns for fall 2018, led by growth in transfer students from across the state, according to preliminar­y data released Wednesday.

The public research university’s nine undergradu­ate campuses offered seats to 95,654 California­ns, nearly 3,000 more students than last year. Overall, UC admitted about three-fifths of the 221,788 California, out-ofstate and internatio­nal students who applied.

“After reviewing yet another record-breaking number of applicatio­ns, our campuses have offered admission to an exceptiona­lly talented group of students,” UC President Janet Napolitano said in a statement. “With the benefit of a UC education, these accomplish­ed young people from different background­s, with diverse beliefs and aspiration­s, will make California and the world a better place.”

The data reflect UC’s stepped-up efforts to reach more deeply across California for community college students, as it responds to growing pressure from Gov. Jerry Brown and the Legislatur­e to open access for more residents.

Brown has long advocated the transfer option as a cheaper alternativ­e to a four-year degree at a time when the state is projected to face a shortfall of 1.1 million college-educated workers by 2030, and he has used his budget power to prod UC to adjust its admission poli-

cies. In recent years, state elected officials also have successful­ly pressed UC to boost enrollment of California­ns and limit out-of-state and internatio­nal students.

The mix of offers for freshmen and transfer students slightly shifted this year in response to such pressure. Most campuses increased offers to California transfer students and decreased them for freshmen.

UCLA, for instance, admitted 562 fewer freshmen but 64 more transfer students this year. Berkeley, Merced, Riverside, Santa Barbara and Santa Cruz also boosted their admission offers to state transfer students. Offers to California freshmen were down at Berkeley, Irvine, San Diego and Santa Cruz in addition to UCLA.

“Transfer students are the future of our university,” said Youlonda CopelandMo­rgan, UCLA vice provost of enrollment management.

One of them is Francisco Cruz Tapia, a 24-year-old transfer student from Moreno Valley College who plans to study computer engineerin­g at UCLA this fall. He said he chose to start at a community college to stay closer to family and save money. His costs were minimal, he said, because he lived at home and received a fee waiver for his classes.

At UCLA, his tuition and fees will be covered by a Cal Grant and university aid, but he said he’ll need to pay rent in the expensive Westwood area. Cruz Tapia said, however, that the costs will be worth it for a chance to pursue his research interests in artificial intelligen­ce.

“It was really challengin­g to transfer because I had to take a lot of math and physics classes, but I’m excited to go to one of the top universiti­es in the nation,” Cruz Tapia said.

UCLA particular­ly focused on recruiting in the Central Valley this year as part of an effort between UC and California Community Colleges to increase students from areas with historical­ly low transfer rates. Under the partnershi­p, launched in September 2016, the college system gave UC $2.6 million to help students at 39 of its 114 community colleges become more competitiv­e applicants.

Copeland-Morgan said UCLA chose to work with four Central Valley colleges — San Joaquin Delta, Bakersfiel­d, Solano and Reedley — because students there are more geographic­ally isolated, often low-income and the first in their families to attend college. Many have less access to the resources and informatio­n needed to succeed in the competitiv­e world of college admissions, she said.

Her recruiters made multiple trips to the colleges to help students and counselors understand how to become not only eligible but also competitiv­e for UC admissions. UC requires a minimum 2.4 GPA for California transfer applicants, but Copeland-Morgan said most successful UCLA applicants have at least a 3.6 GPA.

UCLA boosted applicatio­ns from those colleges by 29% and admission offers by 34% this year. Overall, the Westwood campus admitted students from 109 state community colleges.

This year, Santa Cruz showed the biggest gain in admission offers to California transfer students, increasing to 7,027, from 5,328 last year. Santa Cruz and Riverside were under fire by Brown for being the only two of eight campuses that failed to meet a ratio of one transfer student per two freshman. He withheld $50 million from UC last year until the campuses met or made “good faith efforts” to meet that target, releasing the money in May after deciding they’d made enough progress.

This year, Napolitano announced that the university system would guarantee admission of all qualified community college students.

In another move to boost transfers, the UC Academic Senate developed a road map of courses needed to enter 21 popular majors — a move aimed in part at helping transfer applicants avoid wasting time and money on unnecessar­y classes.

Community college counselors say they’ve noticed the difference.

Daniel Nannini, a transfer counselor at Santa Monica College, said that more of his students received offers this year from multiple UC campuses and that the university’s “customer service” has improved. A UC Santa Barbara admissions officer, for instance, took the time to call and encourage a student to take one more unit to become eligible to enter the university.

“In the past, if you missed the cut, you missed the cut,” Nannini said. “They’ve really stepped up their game.”

Chancellor Eloy Ortiz Oakley of the California Community Colleges also hailed UC’s work with transfer students.

“This is great for the university, the community colleges and most important for the state of California,” said Ortiz Oakley, who also serves as a UC regent. “The question going forward is whether we can sustain the effort and build the infrastruc­ture so we can encourage and support a diverse set of students from across the state.”

Among freshmen applicants, Asian Americans remained the largest group admitted at 36%, followed by Latinos at 33%, whites 22% and African Americans 5%.

Offers to internatio­nal and out-of-state students also increased.

UC regents last year approved an 18% cap on nonresiden­t students at five campuses and voted to allow those campuses that already exceed that limit — Berkeley, Los Angeles, San Diego and Irvine — to keep but not increase the higher percentage they enroll.

teresa.watanabe @latimes.com Twitter: @teresawata­nabe

 ?? Carolyn Lagattuta ?? UC PRESIDENT Janet Napolitano discusses UC Santa Cruz at Cabrillo College. The University of California has increased its efforts to recruit transfer students.
Carolyn Lagattuta UC PRESIDENT Janet Napolitano discusses UC Santa Cruz at Cabrillo College. The University of California has increased its efforts to recruit transfer students.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States