Fewer freshmen have applied to UC schools
- Share via
Marisa O’Neil
University of California campuses received fewer applications from
high school students for fall 2004 than last year, the first time the
system has seen a drop in 10 years.
Freshman applications systemwide dropped by 4.1% and dropped by
1.4% at UC Irvine, according to a report released by UC officials on
Tuesday. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s proposed state budget calls for
UC campuses to cut freshman enrollment by 10% -- a task made easier
with a smaller pool of applicants.
“We never welcome a decrease in applications,” UC spokesman Hanan
Eisenman said. “But given that we’re being asked to decrease freshman
enrollment by 3,200 students next year, a slight reduction [in
applications] may ease pressure on the system.”
Schwarzenegger’s budget also requires UC schools to increase fees
by 10% for undergraduate and 40% for graduate students. That comes on
top of other recent increases.
Overall, UC campuses saw 1.3% fewer applications than last year --
a 3.8% drop since fall 2002. International students had the biggest
drop at 37.5% overall, 56% for transfer students.
After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the government tightened
requirements on student visas, which may have contributed to fewer
international applications, Eisenman said.
“We believe the decrease [in applications] may be tied to modest
growth in graduating high school students this year at less than 1%
and UC fee increases due to state budget cuts,” Eisenman said.
“Another factor is the new federal immigration policies, which make
it more difficult for international students.”
The total number of transfer students applying, however, increased
by 5.7% for all campuses and by 13% for UCI.
Students applying for their freshman year at UCI are also getting
smarter. The mean high school grade point average went to 3.64 from
3.61 last year and SAT composite scores increased from 1152 to 1164
out of a possible 1600.
The UC president’s office has instructed each campus to set
freshman enrollment targets of 400 fewer students this year to meet
Schwarzenegger’s requirements, Eisenman said.
Those who meet eligibility requirements but don’t get accepted may
be selected to take part in a transfer program, which would guarantee
their acceptance after they fulfilled course requirements at a
community college, he said. Another program is also planned that
would accept eligible students at the Riverside or new Merced campus
even if they don’t qualify for the transfer program.
Merced, the UC system’s 10th school, is scheduled to open in fall
2005.
Orange Coast College’s enrollment, on the other hand, increased by
12% this spring, said Nancy Kidder, administrative dean of admissions
and records.
“We’re seeing a steady increase for the last four years,
predominantly in students under 21,” she said. “We anticipate an
increase through at least 2010.”
Because of budget cuts, the school has cut course offerings by
about 20%, but demand has not slowed down, Kidder said. She estimates
the school turned away 4,000 students last fall because students
could not find the courses they needed.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.