I graduated from UCSD, and those were some enjoyable years. Perfect weather, brilliant professors, I could walk to the beach about 15 minutes from my dorm, plentiful and healthy food on campus, and beautiful pools with gyms. Now, it's even better with a train that can take you straight to downtown San Diego or the border, and it hooks up to Amtrak to Los Angeles along the coast. Great diversity with people from all over the world. Also, excellent access to one of the best hospital systems in the country. It was a great blessing for this Chicano guy from Paramount, CA.
UCLA is 31% Asian. UCSD is 33% Asian. Berkeley is 40% Asian. California's Asian population is only 15%. California schools have access to a different set of demographics, and many students from these demographic groups are simply raised to have a much higher commitment to education and academics than the white majority and demonstrate higher output when it comes to academic performance and standardized college admissions tests. This is what boosts the reputation of public universities in California. Education is about the students and it is the students that do the hard work. Tax dollars can create opportunities in education but they do not buy the hard work that students actually have to do that ultimately boosts the reputation of the universities.
@piscesgroovesupreme Of course, this issue matters. California's population is about 15% Asian, but at universities like UC Berkeley, 40-50% of admissions are granted to Asian students, while UCLA admits about 30%. This reflects the strong cultural emphasis on education within many Asian communities, which often leads to higher academic achievement and impacts the acceptance rates for Asian applicants. Additionally, California is much more competitive than states like Alabama or Iowa, not because it is simply a larger state, but because the 15% Asian population significantly impacts the competitiveness of its universities. The diverse and academically driven demographic creates a unique and highly competitive admissions environment.
They make it way too hard for out-of-state transfers especially the UC system. You have to be a resident for 366 days to qualify for resident tuition and a relatives house does not count that's bs. Otherwise out of state tuition is way more than the in state tuition. I did not want to go the CSU as it is not good from what I researched.
The spending per student comparisons vs other states are not accurate. California is high cost of living so the overall spending per student of course is higher than other state.
Of course you're entitled to opinion, but I'm guessing you've failed to get the employment you seek, which is dependent on taking internships, and joining business clubs, etc. And you could prove that you went to UCLA by naming some professors you had, and in what department.
I graduated from UCSD, and those were some enjoyable years. Perfect weather, brilliant professors, I could walk to the beach about 15 minutes from my dorm, plentiful and healthy food on campus, and beautiful pools with gyms. Now, it's even better with a train that can take you straight to downtown San Diego or the border, and it hooks up to Amtrak to Los Angeles along the coast. Great diversity with people from all over the world. Also, excellent access to one of the best hospital systems in the country. It was a great blessing for this Chicano guy from Paramount, CA.
My dream schools are UC Berkeley and UCLA.
same! I'm applying to them this year!
California the best State in the Nation. 4th Economy in The world!
The best Public Colleges and University in US, Folks.
UCLA is 31% Asian. UCSD is 33% Asian. Berkeley is 40% Asian. California's Asian population is only 15%. California schools have access to a different set of demographics, and many students from these demographic groups are simply raised to have a much higher commitment to education and academics than the white majority and demonstrate higher output when it comes to academic performance and standardized college admissions tests. This is what boosts the reputation of public universities in California. Education is about the students and it is the students that do the hard work. Tax dollars can create opportunities in education but they do not buy the hard work that students actually have to do that ultimately boosts the reputation of the universities.
How many Asians a university enrolls is not an objective or relevant ranking criteria, bffr
@piscesgroovesupreme
Of course, this issue matters. California's population is about 15% Asian, but at universities like UC Berkeley, 40-50% of admissions are granted to Asian students, while UCLA admits about 30%. This reflects the strong cultural emphasis on education within many Asian communities, which often leads to higher academic achievement and impacts the acceptance rates for Asian applicants.
Additionally, California is much more competitive than states like Alabama or Iowa, not because it is simply a larger state, but because the 15% Asian population significantly impacts the competitiveness of its universities. The diverse and academically driven demographic creates a unique and highly competitive admissions environment.
They make it way too hard for out-of-state transfers especially the UC system. You have to be a resident for 366 days to qualify for resident tuition and a relatives house does not count that's bs. Otherwise out of state tuition is way more than the in state tuition. I did not want to go the CSU as it is not good from what I researched.
Santa Barbara, good news!
The spending per student comparisons vs other states are not accurate. California is high cost of living so the overall spending per student of course is higher than other state.
Money and state funding. But I'll listen.
This should be good
Go Bears!
#Coin20DollarGold1848California.
went to UCLA, over Rated. The premise of this entire video is false
Of course you're entitled to opinion, but I'm guessing you've failed to get the employment you seek, which is dependent on taking internships, and joining business clubs, etc. And you could prove that you went to UCLA by naming some professors you had, and in what department.
You failed to give reasons why UCLA is over Rated!
@@BlackOperations530 I was a student there. Unimpressed to say the least.
Her teeth are fun!
ok Stanley.
@yodaforce420