FERMIN LEAL/EDSOURCE TODAY

Cal Land Long Embankment students walk across the campus during the fall semester.

California's public universities can no longer accommodate the increasing number of college-ready students because the state has failed to invest the needed resources in higher didactics, according to a report released today.

The report, "Access Denied: Rise Selectivity at California's Public Universities," institute that the University of California and California State University systems are now too small to serve the state'south growing population, forcing campuses to turn abroad a large number of eligible applicants.

"At a time when an educated workforce is crucial for the California economic system, is it off-white that it is more difficult for today's generation of Californians to enroll directly in a iv-twelvemonth university after high school than information technology was for previous generations?" asks the report published by Campaign for College Opportunity, a nonprofit advancement group focused on college education issues.

Key findings include:

  • The gap between the number of Californians applying to the UC and CSU systems and those who have been accepted has doubled since 1996.
  • To be admitted to UC, students need near perfect grades and SAT or ACT scores to get in, something that was not expected of applicants in previous generations. Freshman students admitted to six of nine UC campuses had an boilerplate GPA of 4.0.
  • Vi of 23 CSU campuses are fully impacted, meaning they have more applications from eligible students across all majors than they can accommodate. Every bit a result, these campuses have significantly raised admissions standards for all applicants.
  • Between 2009 and 2014, CSU campuses turned away 139,697 eligible students.
  • California ranks 49th nationally in the per centum of high school graduates who get on to enroll at four-year universities.

The report'due south release coincides with today's application deadline for fall 2022 admission to UC and CSU campuses. CSU expects to receive shut to 800,000 applications for admission for next fall, while UC anticipates well-nigh 200,000.

For fall 2015, CSU admitted about three-quarters of all applicants, while UC admitted just over half.

Large-scale budget cuts prompted past the recession are the main reason for the decrease in access, the report said.

Between 2006 and 2014, each system lost $1 billion in state funding, which forced campuses to slash enrollment, reduce staff, raise tuition, increase grade sizes and cut services.

The report recommends that the governor and lawmakers reprioritize funding for higher didactics to increase access for a wider range of Californians. Each system should also cap the number of out-of-state and international students, especially at the most pop campuses, and offer viable alternatives to qualified students who were turned away, including referrals to other public universities that may take space.

These solutions could aid California create a vision for college education that's aligned with the 21st century, the report said. "This vision includes ensuring that college opportunity and success are every bit bachelor to all Californians across the multifariousness of race/ethnicity, income status, and regions," the report said.

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