CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“UC HEEDS ITS
CRITICS, WILL LIMIT OUT-OF-STATERS”
After more than three years of
steadfastly denying that increased enrollment of foreign and out-of-state
students could endanger the very California identity of the University of
California, it is stunning and encouraging to see the 10-campus system do an
about face.
That’s the upshot of two moves made by
the university’s Board of Regents, who voted overwhelmingly last fall to
increase in-state enrollment at the elite university by 10,000 in-staters
before the 2018-2019 school year. The increase will come in increments of 5,000
next fall and 2,500 students each of the next two academic years, the gradual
process needed as new quarters are built for the larger student body.
Regents took their second step in late
winter, setting a 20 percent systemwide cap on students from outside
California.
The two-prong approach is a direct
response to political pressure applied by parents of students with stellar
grades who nevertheless have had problems getting admitted to UC campuses of
their choice.
The second step is more of a
reassurance to parents and students than an actual reduction, since UC as this
term began – at an all-time peak in out-of-state enrollment – had 34,673
out-of-staters on campus out of 210,170 undergraduates, or 16.5 percent of the
student body. A state audit last year showed non-resident enrollment was up 432
percent over the last 10 years, while in-state enrollment had risen just 10
percent.
But the out-of-state load often seems
much higher than that because those students – especially foreign students –
are concentrated on UC’s most desired and prestigious campuses at Berkeley, Los
Angeles and San Diego, all of which enroll more than 20 percent from outside
the state.
How effective was parental and student
political pressure? Put simply, money eventually talked to UC officials. The
university system conceded for years that one reason it takes so many
out-of-staters is that they pay far more tuition than in-staters: about $27,000
a year more, a total of about $550 million in the last academic year.
This money helped the university to
some extent in compensating for a series of budget cuts inflicted during the
years of Govs. Gray Davis and Arnold Schwarzenegger, both of whom claimed to
support education, but consistently tightened UC’s purse-strings. This meant
less construction of everything from laboratories to dormitories and sometimes
interfered with recruiting of elite faculty, who could get higher salary offers
elsewhere.
But in recent months, state
legislators have pressured the university to favor California admissions more,
or pay a price. They offered $18.5 million in financial incentives if UC
allowed in more Californians and capped its non-resident enrollment. That’s
just what the Regents have now done, and they should soon reap the benefits.
All this will not reduce the quality
of competition for spots at UC, especially its best-known campuses. UCLA, for
example, last spring became the first American university receiving more than
100,000 applications for spots in its fall class. The campus added 1,000
Californians this year, but still has three times as many non-resident students
as it had just nine years ago. The 1,000-student in-state increase helped
rectify a 4 percent drop of in-state students over the last nine years.
But overall, the gains of
out-of-staters will not be reversed anytime soon, even while the needs of many
more solid California high school graduates are met. UC might need somehow to
convince more foreign students and students from Eastern states to enroll at
campuses like Riverside and Merced and Santa Cruz, which now have relatively
few out-of-staters. But their overall number will not drop, nor will their
financial support, which officials say was critical as the university system
maintained most of its high standards while state funding dropped during the
Great Recession.
The upshot of all this is that the
outrage of California parents who watched for years while their children met
every requirement for UC admission – and still didn’t get in – has produced
results.
It’s one of the rare times in recent
memory that legislators and other top state officials actually heeded their
constituents. There’s always hope this might lead to more responsiveness by
those same officials in other areas ranging from utility regulation to highway
maintenance and more.
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Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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