@rockydog1 Thank you! Yeah, I’ll let everyone know what happens
Does receiving an invite to the chancellor’s reception guarantee admission to UCSB? I’ve heard mixed things about this for out of state applicants, like myself . I’m sooo nervous
Anyone just receive an email inviting them to a brunch with alumni and staff before the Chancellor’s Reception in LA?
@angelicluna99 nope and I searched this board for the word “brunch” and it doesn’t seem like anyone was asked in previous years either. Maybe if is for a certain targeted audience.
To all who received a chancellor’s reception invite-- I attended the one yesterday in DC, and YES! It means you’re accepted congrats everyone
@eaa7390 congratulations! Can you share what you thought of the reception? As an OOS student, were you planning on attending UCSB as one of your top choices? Did it change your perception of the school?
@eaa7390 appreciate the follow up, congratulations!
Just coming from UCSB NY Reception. All invitees are accepted. So, congrats for those who attended. Some got red ribbons signifying regents.
Impressions: I really loved it. University seem to care about UG students a lot. Chancellor was just AWESOME!!! My son is still waiting for other schools but, my wife and I are thoroughly sold on UCSB.
@CantbelieveNJ Thank you for the info!
Really happy for your son!
Today, I attended the Chancellor’s Reception at the Westin Los Angeles. During the presentation, they shared that they received more than 82,000 freshmen applications at UCSB this year and those that were invited to the Chancellor’s Reception were in the Top 15% of the applicant pool. It was really cool when they asked the students to stand and then to hear that they were officially given admission offers to attend UCSB. They acknowledged the Regents students with red ribbons on their ID badges. They went on to say that all portals will be updated on March 21st. After hearing the faculty/student panel and watching the videos today, UCSB seems like an amazing school but I can’t make my decision until I hear from all of the other universities that I applied to. Good luck to everyone!
This is a long “pay it forward” post because I appreciate all that others have posted in years past.
We went to the Chancellor’s Reception today at the Westin in Los Angeles. The invite said to check in at noon with the program beginning at 1 pm. It was very crowded. They had seating for 1500 people with over 1000 in attendance.
The director of admissions spoke first and announced that they received a record breaking 82,000 undergraduate applications and 45% of the applicants had GPAs of 4.0 or above. She said that they read 82,000 personal insight questions x 4 and read each two times! She said that they are looking for students who make UCSB stand out and for students who make UCSB rankings climb. They are looking for student leaders for their over 500 student led organizations. They are looking for change agents and future scholars.
She said that the students in the audience represent the top 15% of their applicants. Regents scholars had red ribbons attached to their name tags. The director of admissions said that Regents scholars represent the top 2% of applicants. She then asked the students to stand and everyone got excited and started applauding. When she announced that everyone was accepted, there wasn’t as much excitement as I expected so I suppose most people knew. Either way, after that, every person we met said “Congratulations!” so it made you feel good. She ended with “We think you have what it takes to make our campus a better place.”
Next she introduced Chancellor Yang. He is the best marketing tool that UCSB has (except for the California coast line). He was so warm, natural and sincere. He had a great sense of humor and really seemed to care about the students and his school.
Chancellor Yang announced that there were 122 volunteers - faculty, alumni, deans and students - who were there to provide us with information about UCSB. There were UCSB students there representing just about every major to socialize and answer questions from new admittees. He said several times that he realized that everyone has heard from other schools and that he knew we had other choices as well.
He spoke about UCSB being part of AAU (http://www.news.ucsb.edu/2009/012707/ucsb-chancellor-henry-yang-chair-association-american-universities), having 6 noble laureates and being ranked #8 in US News for National Public Universities.
He distinguished the difference between UCSB and some of the other schools we might be considering in that UCSB gives a high priority to undergraduate education. He (Chancellor Yang) teaches an undergrad course every year and his course will be offered online this year as well. He lives on campus near the students and he ended with “We know that you have choices and we hope that you consider being part of the UCSB happy family.”
Next was a video. For those who have gone to the admissions sessions at UCSB, it is the same video they show there. After the video, they had a panel of faculty and students answering questions that people submitted with their RSVP. The panel discussion ended just after 2 pm.
There was a 30-40 minute break where you could go to tables and learn about housing, financial aid, education abroad, ROTC, etc. Our experience was that it was way too crowded and too noisy to hear anything. They had someone dressed as a gaucho and Instagram frames for photos.
After the break, there were three “Academic Interest Workshops” Time wise - they went from 2:45 - 3:30 so, for future attendees, make sure you eat lunch before because many were hungry. They did have cookies and brownies but again, it was very crowded so difficult to get to the food. The three workshops were:
- Research and Creative Opportunities - Honors programs, creative arts projects and research opportunities
- Exploring Your Academic Options - Academic advising options, summer programs and using your resources to make the campus feel smaller.
- Opportunities Outside the Classroom - Education abroad, internships, pre-professional programs, leadership and engaging in student organizations.
We attended #3. The panel was John Park - a professor of Asian American studies, the Dean of Student Life, the religious studies prof in charge of Education Abroad and three students. There was lots of good insight and lots of good perspective. They again emphasized that they focus on the undergraduate experience. They have more opportunities for undergraduate research. They asked us to look for what our exit plan is after college. They asked us to think about where we would have opportunities to find our passion.
The students brought up the fact that school always comes first. Even though they are part of clubs, have jobs, internships, etc. you can’t do anything on campus if you are not a student. Being a student is a priority and everyone knows that. They also said that there is value in finding out that you don’t like something. Being on the quarter system, you can try a class or join a club or try a different opportunity and realize that it isn’t something you like. There is value in learning that because you can only find your passion if you try things you don’t like and try things that you do.
Hope this is helpful for future applicants and attendees.
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I attended the Los Angeles Chancellor’s Reception today!
Before the Reception began, they had around 100 faculty, students, and alumni in the showroom roaming around who came up and answered questions and shared their insight and experiences. It was a great chance to hear a particular student’s perspective and what they are able to do at UCSB. Very helpful and I immediately felt more welcome and included because everyone was so nice and bubbly!
The videos they played were really good in my opinion, very dramatic an exciting and it showcases the campus and the beautiful scenery very well. The second video they played was mainly about why graduating seniors at UCSB loved the school so much, and that video actually made me a bit teary lol.
I believe the Chancellor’s Receptions are very successful and help students remember UCSB, especially when students have other school choices, because of the welcoming atmosphere and the feeling that the school is reaching out to you.
I love Chancellor Yang! He is so funny, down-to-earth, and insightful! Loved hearing his jokes as well as knowing that he lives on campus, teaches an undergraduate course every quarter, and is always walking around campus and talking to students. He makes each student feel included and important.
Similarly, I was happy to learn that the professors also value each student greatly, and have a great open door policy and will be happy to help students, which is hard to find in such a large university.
The reception as well as stuff I read online really made me biased towards UCSB
They also said that most popular major for incoming freshmen is undeclared.
For those that received an invite but didn’t attend, the director of admissions said that the portals will be updated on 3/21. Until then, your invitation serves as your offer of admission. :-bd The big packet is “in the mail.” She made it sound like it was in the mail now but I don’t think it will be mailed until after 3/21.
I just went to the LA reception today so I want to give my two cents. The parking there is quite expensive, so I wasn’t expecting that. Also everyone was wearing formal attire (just for future references). All of those who went to the reception were accepted. The reception ended before 4 pm (around 2-3). There was pretzels and brownies there along with coffee. The reception went over the campus, environment around campus, and activities you can do.
Received Chancellor’s Invite and was accepted with honors today. Anyone receive invite and not get offered honors?
@lkg4answers I did! Super psyched, mostly for priority registration lol
@lkg4answers same for our D as well.