UCD Class of 2010 read this!

<p>UC Davis Gears up for Largest Freshman Class
May 15, 2006</p>

<p>The University of California, Davis, is marshaling resources to welcome what could be its largest first-year class ever, with almost 900 more freshman applicants than expected accepting offers of admission for fall 2006.</p>

<p>As the campus readies for an incoming class with greater ethnic diversity and a record number of Regents Scholarship winners, it is taking steps to provide additional classes, housing and other student services.</p>

<p>“UC Davis is enthusiastic to welcome so many highly qualified students to the campus,” said Fred Wood, interim vice provost for undergraduate studies. “We are committed to ensuring that they have the opportunity to thrive in their university experience.”</p>

<p>The campus was planning to enroll between 4,753 and 5,093 freshmen; by the May 1 deadline, however, a total of 5,953 students indicated their intent to register at UC Davis in the fall.</p>

<p>Some attrition occurs over the summer, and it is expected to reduce the number of freshmen who actually enroll in the fall. Even so, Wood said, the campus must prepare for a significant increase in the size of the incoming freshman class.</p>

<p>“This is a challenge for the entire campus community,” he said. “Faculty and staff members are hard at work. We’re asking our new students and others for understanding, patience and flexibility.”</p>

<p>Contributing factors
Pamela Burnett, director of undergraduate admissions, said two factors might explain the unexpected increase in the number of students intending to register as freshmen.</p>

<p>Increased efforts to attract prospective students to UC Davis contributed to an 8.6 percent increase in freshman applications. And other efforts geared toward admitted students met with overwhelmingly positive results – seen, for example, in high attendance for campus tours and Southern California receptions.</p>

<p>Last year, 23.5 percent of freshman applicants admitted to Davis completed a statement of intent to register; this year, 26.7 percent accepted offers of admission.</p>

<p>Burnett also said some other colleges and universities across the country have been surprised by a particularly unpredictable admissions season, spurred in part by the trend of individual students applying to more universities to improve their options.</p>

<p>For example, The Wall Street Journal reported recently that admissions officers have been increasingly challenged to predict the rate of admitted students who will accept their offers. In a 2005 survey of more than 200,000 college students, the UCLA Higher Education Research Institute found that more than one in four students said they had applied to six or more colleges, compared with 18 percent of students 10 years earlier.</p>

<p>Academic needs
Deans are working with their departments to add courses and expand the number of those offered in the evening. Current students who will be juniors and seniors in the fall are being encouraged to enroll in some courses from the broader selection of summer offerings and, for fall, to explore upper-division courses to satisfy their remaining graduation requirements.</p>

<p>UC Davis, for example, is giving freshmen and sophomores the first opportunity to enroll in certain critical introductory classes before registration for these courses is opened, in a second round, to juniors and seniors.</p>

<p>“This will help ensure that the new students will be able to take the courses that they need and at the appropriate time in their academic career,” Wood wrote in a recent e-mail to those expected to return as upper-division students in the fall.</p>

<p>“We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this restriction may cause you,” Wood said. “We want to assure you that we will continue our work during the spring and summer to add capacity for fall so that seats will be available for you.”</p>

<p>The campus also will continue to encourage current students to take advantage of summer instruction. Earlier, UC Davis announced a $300 credit for students who complete eight or more units in each of two Summer Sessions. Registration started May 9 for the summer classes, which begin in late June and early August.</p>

<p>Housing
The office of student housing is taking steps to be able to offer university housing to all freshmen. Measures include adding beds to existing rooms, converting common spaces to bedrooms and negotiating arrangements with an apartment complex adjacent to campus.</p>

<p>“UC Davis has a long tradition of offering university housing to all freshmen,” said Bob Smiggen, director of student housing. “And we’re going to continue that.”</p>

<p>Historically, about 90 percent of freshmen want to live in university housing, so the number of beds might need to be increased by about 750, from 4,436 beds to about 5,200.</p>

<p>An estimated 388 rooms in Segundo North and Tercero South residence halls will be converted from double to triple rooms to house 1,164 students. The triple rooms in these newer residence halls were designed with greater square footage and higher ceilings to accommodate three students. An additional 123 rooms in Pierce and Thille halls also will be converted to triple rooms for 369 students. Families opting for the triple rooms will save about $1,200 over the cost of a double room for the academic year.</p>

<p>Some common study spaces in the Segundo high-rises and Pierce, Thille and Regan halls will be used to create triple or quad rooms for about 110 students. These rooms are about twice the size of a typical residence hall room.</p>

<p>The campus currently is working with the nearby apartment complex to have one- and two-bedroom units available for about 120 freshmen. Student residents, who would sign leases with the apartment management, would be able to purchase UC Davis meal plans and participate in residential education and social programs offered by the campus.</p>

<p>Student Housing also is planning to have some student resident assistants share their rooms with a student until other space becomes available.</p>

<p>Other services
To accommodate the larger class, an extra session has been added to the schedule for Summer Advising, a three-day program to help new students transition to studies and life at UC Davis.</p>

<p>Janet Gong, associate vice chancellor for student affairs, said several work groups are identifying student services that might need to be augmented or modified to serve the larger number of students. The groups are focusing on three primary areas: academic support services, such as peer-based advising and tutoring; physical and mental health support; and student activities.</p>

<p>“We will be looking for innovative approaches to meet the increased demand we anticipate for some services,” Gong said, adding that more services may go online for students’ convenience.</p>

<p>Wood and Gong said the campus has a history of meeting enrollment challenges. In 2004, the campus successfully integrated an additional 500 students at the last minute. Late summer negotiations over the state budget had made it possible for the University of California to welcome students who had been diverted to community colleges.</p>

<p>Quality and diversity of the class
As UC Davis prepares for the new freshman class, officials are pleased by the academic talent and diversity of backgrounds the students will bring to campus.</p>

<p>Among the freshman applicants who accepted offers of admission are 143 recipients of the prestigious UC Regents Scholarship, a merit-based award valued at a minimum of $7,500 a year. This is the largest number of winners in the history of the campus.</p>

<p>The campus also reported some modest gains in the entering class better reflecting the mix of the state’s population. More than 17.4 percent of the students accepting offers of admission are from historically underrepresented groups – African American, American Indian and Chicano/Latino. Last year, they accounted for 14.6 percent.</p>

<p>Overall, campus enrollment has been about 30,000 for the last three years. The campus will be better able to project fall 2006 enrollment in a few weeks when the deadline passes for transfer applicants to accept admission offers and when numbers become available for continuing, graduate and professional students.</p>

<p><a href=“http://www.news.ucdavis.edu/search/news_detail.lasso?id=7758[/url]”>http://www.news.ucdavis.edu/search/news_detail.lasso?id=7758</a></p>

<p>Summary: "Get ready to live in a triple."</p>

<p>does this mean ucd is easy to get into?</p>

<p>No, admissions has stayed the same. However, UCD let more students in this year to meet their goals for enrollment. UCD is basically more popular this year. The yield rate is higher this year.</p>

<p>no im pretty sure they have the same enrollment every year. At least until they undergo the "final solution". Oh whoops, did i say that outloud? Well every year they set out to locate and find those extra students they want to trim off their set limit and, well, i knew a friend once and sadly that friend is no longer here with me today.</p>

<p>okay, mak2675 I have no clue what the hell your post meant. o_o </p>

<p>And eep, crowded = less dorms and less room in classes ):</p>

<p>Enrollment grew this year, and so did admissions. UC Davis clearly announced it this year in order to fill their new goal of 4.7-5k students in their freshman class.</p>

<p>Basically, 900 more people SIRed than they were expecting.</p>

<p>integtypeR- no this doesnt mean that Davis was easier to get into this year. In fact, this means that Davis is getting better because more of the people that were admitted decided to come. When the yielding rate for a school goes up, so does their ranking by USNWR</p>

<p>Actually, US News no longer uses yield as a factor in their rankings. And a higher yield does not necessarily mean "better"; for all we know, first-tier UCs (UCB, UCLA) might have been more competitive this year, causing more people to end up attending second-tier UCs. Really, any number of factors may have contributed to a higher yield.</p>

<p>You know what this means...</p>

<p>many more biking accidents!</p>

<p>ilikeoranges has a very good point. Beware of bike accidents particularly in the first few weeks because there will be plenty.</p>

<p>ugh, overcrowded school doesn't sound so appealing.</p>

<p>bike accidents? o.O</p>

<p>UCD has an amazing ability to absorb additional students. I wouldn't worry too much about the additional kids in the class since they easily handled an additional 400 in 2004 without any problems.</p>

<p>I actually got into a bike accident with myself vs a curb, and I had casts on both my arms almost up to my shoulders for 1 week, and splints for another week. So basically I couldn't write for 2 weeks in the middle of midterms! Luckily, teachers here understand and let me take it later, or not take it at all. But it is still very hard to catch up in courses (especially language courses!) after not writing for 2 weeks.</p>

<p>^
omg! i'm so sorry to hear that! i've been afraid of something like that...so maybe i shouldn't bike at all...</p>

<p>Sounds like study rooms are being converted into dorm rooms, RAs are being asked to have a temporary roomate (whatever temporary means) and efforts are being made to find space off campus...Have fun registering for classes....this wave will ride four years.</p>

<p>The class issue probably won't be much of one since they are adding classes to accommodate the increased numbers and not letting the older classes register for the classes that are typically taken by freshman until all the freshman have registered. It might however make it a little tougher to change classes once you have your schedule but like most things if you are persistent about sitting in on a class as a prelude to being added, you will likely be successful since many kids figure out pretty quickly that a certain class isn't for them and drop them soon after the quarter starts.</p>

<p>With this much overcrowding, I think that the quality of education offered at UCD may be hurt. UCD is already a middle tier UC, so I am wondering if it will become a bottom tier UC as a result of drowning available resources under the load of a massive wave of new students it may not be prepared to handle? Seems to me that UCD's administration doesn't have a handle on things. Maybe it's time to put some new people in charge at UCD?</p>