CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL UC AT LAST FACE UP TO OUT-OF-STATE STUDENT DILEMMA?”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL UC AT LAST FACE UP TO OUT-OF-STATE STUDENT DILEMMA?”
It’s a dilemma that University of
California officials have long refused to confront, but one they may soon have
to face: How many foreign and out-of-state students can UC absorb and still
fulfill its mission of providing an elite education for the very best
California high school graduates?
The issue has become central at many
UC campuses, where an unprecedented 20 percent of this year’s freshman class
now hails from outside California.
The tens of thousands of
out-of-staters are a revenue bonanza for the system, whose support from the
state budget is hundreds of millions of dollars lower today than it was 10
years ago, even if it has rebounded a bit from the lows of the Great
Recession.
UC now depends greatly on the $23,000
surcharge out-of-state residents pay above the standard in-state tuition of
$12,192. That provided the system with almost half a billion dollars last year
and will yield even more in 2015.
But even the 20 percent overall figure
is misleading. For at the most in-demand UC campuses, Berkeley, UCLA and San
Diego, about 30 percent of new students this fall were foreign or from other
states. Meanwhile, at the least in-demand campuses, Merced and Riverside,
out-of-staters among freshman were just 1.2 percent and 6.9 percent,
respectively. This brings the average for the system way down. But just like
California high school grads, few out-of-state students are clamoring for
admission to Merced and Riverside.
All this leaves UC officials and
advocates able to claim accurately that “UC has not reduced the number of
California students it admits,” as retired UCLA Chancellor Charles Young put it
in response to a previous column, “either in the total number or the percentage
of…high school graduates.”
But with about five times as many
out-of-staters today as 10 years ago, Berkeley and UCLA and San Diego
unquestionably admit fewer Californians even though their enrollments are up a
bit. Yes, all Californians in the top 9 percent of their high school classes
are offered UC slots, but decreasingly at the campuses they – and the
out-of-staters – most want to attend.
There are some signs the complaints of
students shunted off to campuses they don’t really want in order to make way
for the high-paying out-of-staters are finally being heard.
UC President Janet Napolitano and
other officials this fall have indicated they may consider putting some kind of
lid on admissions of non-Californians, even though they simultaneously insisted
they’ve kept the university’s longtime commitment to California kids and their
taxpaying parents by increasing class sizes to allow for the influx of
non-Californians. They also propose to raise tuition in each of the next five
years, a plan vehemently opposed by Gov. Jerry Brown. No one says publicly this
is intended to make up for taking fewer out-of-staters in coming years, but it
looks like one intent.
All
this reinforces the fact that the most elite of UC’s campuses increasingly
cater to the wealthy, whether from other American states or from foreign
counties like China and Saudi Arabia which – rolling in cash – fund full
tuition for many of their young citizens at UC.
It’s not that in-state students are
not already paying plenty, too. UC tuition has just about tripled over the last
decade, increases topping 20 percent in some years. In terms of non-inflated
money, in 1980 the value of a median-level California home would buy more than
200 years of UC education. By 2011, it bought only about 30 years.
Which means tuition has climbed even
fast than housing costs, stunning in a state where home prices have risen
faster and higher than anywhere else in America.
While it’s true that the influx of
well-funded, high-paying non-California students increases diversity on
campuses, much of that diversity could also be achieved by recruiting more
heavily from underserved parts of California like the Central Valley, home to
myriad ethnic groups.
The bottom line is that more highly
qualified California kids than ever are being turned away from their
first-choice campuses, displaced by students from elsewhere.
It’s an open question whether and when
their parents’ displeasure over this will lead legislators to reduce budget
support for UC even more than they already have. That’s why Napolitano &
Co. must confront this entire issue, and soon.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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