Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Folsom High in Folsom CA is middle class, mostly white and Asian and has 637 seniors. 42% met or exceeded California's math standards. Grant High School is low income, mostly Black and Hispanic and has 410 seniors. 13% of the students met or exceeded California's math standards.
UCLA
Folsom:
119 applied, 9 admitted
Grant:
27 applied, 6 admitted
So, it sounds like 1.4% of the graduates in both schools were accepted to a UC. My read on that is that UCLA purposely tries to accept the top students from all schools, and this is irregardless of the school’s overall socioeconomic status. I’m not sure if there is anything surprising here, but is that the point you were trying to make?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Community college is free in California. Many, many intelligent kids opt there first because it makes sense and has guaranteed transfer programs.
But really, I don't know anyone who's been shut out of all UCs and CSUs they applied to.
Does CA have academically more-rigorous community colleges to accommodate those high performing students?
Anonymous wrote:
Folsom High in Folsom CA is middle class, mostly white and Asian and has 637 seniors. 42% met or exceeded California's math standards. Grant High School is low income, mostly Black and Hispanic and has 410 seniors. 13% of the students met or exceeded California's math standards.
UCLA
Folsom:
119 applied, 9 admitted
Grant:
27 applied, 6 admitted
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting into a UC not named UC Merced or Riverside is not that hard.
Generally don't suck and be in or near the top 10% of your class, participate in your school's community, show you are a decent human being and you'll get into one of them. Will it be Berkeley or UCLA? That's the crapshoot, but you will get into one of them.
Admission's statistics are available for every high school in the country. It isn't impossible or frankly even that hard because of all the UC's.
You say it isn’t that hard but then also say you have to be in the top 10% of the class which means it is hard to get in particularly at schools with a lot of high achieving kids. UW 3.9 GPA DC with ECs including significant volunteer work applying for a psychology major didn’t get into any UC except Merced nor did several of her friends get into UCs other than Merced or Riverside as well as few who got UCSC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting into a UC not named UC Merced or Riverside is not that hard.
Generally don't suck and be in or near the top 10% of your class, participate in your school's community, show you are a decent human being and you'll get into one of them. Will it be Berkeley or UCLA? That's the crapshoot, but you will get into one of them.
Admission's statistics are available for every high school in the country. It isn't impossible or frankly even that hard because of all the UC's.
It really depends on your major, no guarantees for Engineering or CS.
Maybe we need fewer college educated adults whose life goal is to be a pale imitation of ChatGPT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most Cal State campuses have high admit rates.
And, for those who really want a UC, the CC transfer path is popular. That's what my two nephews in CA did.
Other friends in CA have kids going OOS w/ merit to Arizona and Oregon.
Nobody wants to go there. I went to a Cal State school that’s frowned upon, but they prioritize work over theory (UC’s) and I had a full resume by the time I graduated and my BFF who graduated from a UC in engineering had no idea how to get a job and dropped out of the field a few years later. Yes, this is anecdotal and yes, maybe she was discriminated against because it was in the 90s.
In any case, it’s sad because I learned so much there and knew all my professors. It was a great place that set me up for success.
Also, yes UO is probably 1/3 Californians.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting into a UC not named UC Merced or Riverside is not that hard.
Generally don't suck and be in or near the top 10% of your class, participate in your school's community, show you are a decent human being and you'll get into one of them. Will it be Berkeley or UCLA? That's the crapshoot, but you will get into one of them.
Admission's statistics are available for every high school in the country. It isn't impossible or frankly even that hard because of all the UC's.
It really depends on your major, no guarantees for Engineering or CS.
Anonymous wrote:Community college is free in California. Many, many intelligent kids opt there first because it makes sense and has guaranteed transfer programs.
But really, I don't know anyone who's been shut out of all UCs and CSUs they applied to.
Anonymous wrote:Most Cal State campuses have high admit rates.
And, for those who really want a UC, the CC transfer path is popular. That's what my two nephews in CA did.
Other friends in CA have kids going OOS w/ merit to Arizona and Oregon.
Anonymous wrote:The UC's admit by high school. So a low performing high school in the ghetto will get as many acceptances as a high performing one.
The trick is to be in one of these school.
University High in Irvine is treated the same as Dominguez High in Compton. University High has 30 plus SAT NMSF, 100 Commended scholars. Dominguez High has zero.
Dominguez High sends the same amount of students to Berkeley and UCLA as does University High.
Anonymous wrote:Getting into a UC not named UC Merced or Riverside is not that hard.
Generally don't suck and be in or near the top 10% of your class, participate in your school's community, show you are a decent human being and you'll get into one of them. Will it be Berkeley or UCLA? That's the crapshoot, but you will get into one of them.
Admission's statistics are available for every high school in the country. It isn't impossible or frankly even that hard because of all the UC's.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone talks about how competitive the DMV area is, but it's even worse in California. In the Bay Area, every large high school is just as competitive as Langley or McLean in NOVA. Everyone is taking 15+ AP classes and getting 5s on the scores. Teachers refuse to give out As. Sports teams are impossible to join. Extracurriculars are impossible to stand out. Everyone is doing research, starting non-profits, winning chess tournaments, and doing other niche extracurriculars. And it sucks too because high schools in LA, Orange County, and San Diego are also brutally competitive and cutthroat. It's why someone with straight As in California can get denied from UC Riverside.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone talks about how competitive the DMV area is, but it's even worse in California. In the Bay Area, every large high school is just as competitive as Langley or McLean in NOVA. Everyone is taking 15+ AP classes and getting 5s on the scores. Teachers refuse to give out As. Sports teams are impossible to join. Extracurriculars are impossible to stand out. Everyone is doing research, starting non-profits, winning chess tournaments, and doing other niche extracurriculars. And it sucks too because high schools in LA, Orange County, and San Diego are also brutally competitive and cutthroat. It's why someone with straight As in California can get denied from UC Riverside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has really changed in the past 5-8 years. If you are from the Bay Area, high performing areas of LA or San Diego, you need over a 4.0 and your application/demographics/major/ type of EC needs to fit what a particular school has decided it will look for from your school district. There is a lot of variance in what is offered at different schools and lots of weird inconsistencies.
As UC has its own app and no supplemental questions, you can’t express your interest or alignment with a particular school. As you have no idea what they are actually looking for you can’t express why you have it, if you do.
At our school the GPA of admitted students to Davis, Cal Poly, and Santa Barbara is higher than the GPA of admitted students to UCLA , UC San Diego and Cal. Kids in the top 5% of our school usually get one mid tier at best. The kids who get UCLA and Cal are head scratchers as they usually aren’t in any school leadership, presidents of clubs, captains of academic teams, hackathon, science competition winners or sports team. It’s really weird.
UC requires applicants to choose from 8 essay prompts to submit four (4) essays. You must be confusing the UC app with the CSU app. Also, your HS is an anomaly, as evidenced by the average GPA ranges that are published annually.
UCLA seeks the highest performers who are the most well-rounded. Berkeley seeks the highest performers who are the most pointy. UCSD is a JV Berkeley. UCSB is a JV UCLA. UCI is a JV UCSD. And UCD is the UC system’s answer to the CSU system’s Cal Poly SLO.