In the aftermath of SP-1 and Proposition 209, the University of California has adopted several strategies in order to maintain access. In the long term, the university seeks to work with individual students to improve their academic preparation and to expand partnerships with the K-12 public sector. The state’s need to educate more of its minority citizens is urgent, however, so in the shorter term the University has focused on three strategies in its admissions process: comprehensive review, Eligibility in the Local Context (ELC), and the Dual Admissions Program (DAP). The paper also discusses the use of standardized tests in judging students’ readiness for university-level work, and especially changes to the SAT tests that have come about...
Higher education is the door to opportunity for social advancement in our society and is often tied ...
On what bases should students be admitted to highly selective public colleges and universities? In T...
College admissions committees, not markets, ration access to many of the most selective U.S. college...
There is considerable interest in the impact of policy alternatives to race-based affirmative action...
1996 was a momentous year for higher education in the United States. In that year voters in Californ...
In July 1995, the University of California\'s Board of Regents voted to ban consideration of race an...
In this paper, I focus on three cases of admissions processes that are particularly crucial to equal...
Eligibility is a policy construct unique to California. UC and CSU are the only US universities that...
The past several years have seen numerous efforts to scale back or eliminate affirmative action in p...
After passage of Proposition 209, the University of California began searching for race-neutral admi...
Proposition 209 banned the use of racial preferences in admissions at public colleges in California....
Proposition 209 banned the use of racial preferences in admissions at public colleges in California....
A University of California faculty committee, the Board of Admissions and Relations with Schools (BO...
As part of the University of California's recent reconsideration of the role of the SAT in admission...
This paper briefly reviews the various efforts undertaken by the University of California to maintai...
Higher education is the door to opportunity for social advancement in our society and is often tied ...
On what bases should students be admitted to highly selective public colleges and universities? In T...
College admissions committees, not markets, ration access to many of the most selective U.S. college...
There is considerable interest in the impact of policy alternatives to race-based affirmative action...
1996 was a momentous year for higher education in the United States. In that year voters in Californ...
In July 1995, the University of California\'s Board of Regents voted to ban consideration of race an...
In this paper, I focus on three cases of admissions processes that are particularly crucial to equal...
Eligibility is a policy construct unique to California. UC and CSU are the only US universities that...
The past several years have seen numerous efforts to scale back or eliminate affirmative action in p...
After passage of Proposition 209, the University of California began searching for race-neutral admi...
Proposition 209 banned the use of racial preferences in admissions at public colleges in California....
Proposition 209 banned the use of racial preferences in admissions at public colleges in California....
A University of California faculty committee, the Board of Admissions and Relations with Schools (BO...
As part of the University of California's recent reconsideration of the role of the SAT in admission...
This paper briefly reviews the various efforts undertaken by the University of California to maintai...
Higher education is the door to opportunity for social advancement in our society and is often tied ...
On what bases should students be admitted to highly selective public colleges and universities? In T...
College admissions committees, not markets, ration access to many of the most selective U.S. college...