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Friday, April 3, 2026

Getting In - Part 4

We have been posting about UC admissions including the various services promising to reveal the secrets of UC's decision process. The fact that the process at each campus is opaque undoubtedly costs the university public support. While you could argue that UC procedures are not more opaque than, say, Stanford's, UC is a public institution. 

Below is a recent opinion piece expressing frustration with UC admissions.

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The UC admissions process is secretive and uneven. Here’s how to fix it

By Paul Gardiner, San Francisco Chronicle, March 29, 2026

University of California admissions decisions are out. Some 200,000 applicants and their families are finally seeing the results of a process whose rules are unwritten, whose scoring is secret, and whose outcomes can be difficult to explain.

The admissions process should be redesigned around the following four key principles.

First, transparency. The UCs should publish exactly the algorithm that they use to evaluate applicants and each applicant should see how their application was scored. Admissions offices tend to speak in reverential terms about using the current “comprehensive review” process to shape an incoming class, as if they were organizing an intimate dinner party, but the process is so arbitrary that it annually turns up stories of students with near-perfect records, typically Asian, who get rejected while apparently inferior candidates are accepted. In reality, UC Santa Barbara, a middle-tier UC, receives 110,000 applications, of which it accepts 42,000 and enrolls 5,000. There is no shaping going on. This is a numbers game.

There is an ongoing debate about what the goals of the admissions process should be. 

The current merit-influenced system accounts for family background by factoring in a student’s high school, which serves as a proxy for race and ethnicity, the consideration of which California voters have prohibited. Some would prefer a purely merit-based system. Others believe that, as a public university system, the UC should offer every minimally qualified student an equal shot — a lottery, in other words. 

I don’t want to take sides in that debate. I just want to argue that the process should be transparent. No sane person would come up with our current income tax system but it has been assembled over time by majority support and its transparency enables you to calculate your tax exactly. Every applicant should be able to calculate their admission score using whatever process the UCs define.

Second, UC admissions offices should have to demonstrate the value of every element of how applications are scored. The application should not require students to submit anything unless it has predictive value for student success. A student’s academic record meets this standard. Portfolios required by Art and Music programs probably do, too. But do essays predict student success when many are now written by AI? Do lists of extracurriculars identify special talents or just result in shameless self-promotion? 

Third, admissions offices must evaluate an applicant’s academic records accurately. High school transcripts have become unreliable due to grade inflation. At UC San Diego, one in 12 freshmen has math skills below middle school level. One quarter of students in remedial math had entered the school with a 4.0 grade average in math, and some of them had completed calculus. Thousands of applicants were proficient in math but UCSD was unable to identify them or chose not to admit them.

Accurate assessment requires external calibration. The UCs could do this themselves: if a high school repeatedly sends students with 4.0 GPAs who can’t do middle school math, admissions officers should calculate a credibility-adjusted GPA for future applicants from that school. As the saying goes: Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me. 

Better calibration would come from AP exam scores. Ninety percent of UC-eligible students attend schools that offer AP courses. Seventy percent of students who take any AP exams take at least one in 10th or 11th grade. The UCs already use AP scores for class placement after admission and they award so much college credit based on them that high scorers can graduate in three years instead of four.  Students who score 5 on the AP exam are stronger than those who score 1, even if both got an A in the associated high school class. But Admissions considers only the class grade. 

Fourth, UC admissions officials should be explicit about background and context adjustments for applicants. The UCs have a policy called “eligibility in the local context” that guarantees UC admission to eligible applicants who are in the top 9% of their graduating classes. It is clear who is eligible for this adjustment. But it is not clear how this factors into admissions decisions given that each campus makes its admissions decisions independently. 

Each UC favors local applicants but they are not specific about where each UC draws its boundaries and how much of a boost local applicants receive. They adjust for the range of classes offered at a high school but don’t say how they measure this nor what adjustment results.

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Source: https://www.sfchronicle.com/opinion/openforum/article/uc-admission-application-university-22103492.php.

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PS: For the record, the "photo" above is AI-generated.

Straws in the Wind - Part 301

From the Philadelphia Inquirer: With continued uncertainty about federal research funding, the University of Pennsylvania’s engineering school [last] Friday launched a $200 million fund to finance innovative projects at their earliest stages. The initial fund will support research and educational advances at the School of Engineering and Applied Science over the next five years, the school said.

“The federal government is no longer a reliable partner,” said Vijay Kumar, Penn’s engineering school dean. “And what we’d like to do is to make sure that we can establish partnerships on which our faculty can rely on, going into the future. And that’s through philanthropy.”

It is the largest such venture ever launched by the engineering school and comes as President Donald Trump’s administration continues to threaten research funding at the nation’s universities. Penn earlier this year directed its schools and centers to cut 4% from certain expenses in the next fiscal year while keeping in place earlier reductions made in response to Trump administration’s policies and ongoing threats to federal funding. The new fund is not designed to replace lost federal funding, Kumar said. Penn traditionally has received about $1 billion in federal research funding annually. But he said it can fund early-stage research and back research areas the Trump administration may not support, such as climate change and vaccinations...

Full story at https://www.inquirer.com/education/penn-engineering-research-fund-trump-20260328.html.

Wikipedia Solicitations - Part 2

We have previously posted about solicitations from Wikipedia "editors" to write a nice page for you.* Such solicitations inevitably involve paying for the service. They may be outright scams. Or they may involve claims that seem to suggest that whatever they write is what will appear on Wikipedia.

If you get a solicitation such as the one reproduced at the bottom of this post, the best advice is not to respond and delete the message.

You can also report them: paid-en-wp@wikipedia.org

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*https://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2026/01/wikipedia-solicitations.html

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It's worth also repeating that Wikipedia is OK as a source for non-controversial information. Controversial political topics are another matter. Note also that if you ask an AI source about a controversial issue, it is likely to reproduce Wikipedia interpretations as if they are facts. Caution advised.







 

Will Harvard Continue to Lead the Charge? - Part 137

From the Harvard Crimson: Dean of Undergraduate Education Amanda Claybaugh announced Monday that Harvard College will delay implementation of its controversial grading reform to fall 2027 and introduce a new “SAT+” grade, marking the most significant revisions yet to a proposal aimed at curbing grade inflation. The updated Subcommittee on Grading plan — which will be put to a Faculty of Arts and Sciences vote at its meeting next Tuesday — comes after months of debate among faculty, students, and administrators since the proposal was first introduced in February.

The original version, centered on a strict cap on A grades, drew sharp backlash from students and cautious concern from faculty. If approved, the policy would be reviewed at the end of its third year. The revised proposal makes three major changes: it pushes back the implementation timeline by a year, modifies how the cap on A grades is calculated, and adds a new grade within the SAT/UNSAT system.

Under the new timeline, the policy would take effect in fall 2027 rather than the originally proposed 2026-27 academic year. The plan also calls for a committee, appointed by Harvard College Dean David J. Deming, to oversee the rollout. The proposal has become a flashpoint on campus since its release, with students and faculty raising concerns about the A-grade cap and the speed, and breadth, of the proposed reforms...

Full story at https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2026/3/31/college-grading-proposal-update/.

Now that the dust has settled...


...We went looking through the archives. As blog readers will know, yours truly is not a fan of deleting historical figures when they turn out to be flawed. He's also not a fan of cult worship of historical figures even if they aren't flawed. So here from a blog post of March 29, 2019 is the now non-person [name omitted!] with Shirley Temple. To learn more about the background of this photo, go to:

https://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2019/03/ucla-closed-today-cesar-chavez-day.html 

and find out.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

The Combo

As we have noted in the past, after the big student-worker strike, UC adopted a proactive bargaining policy combining labor relations and public relations. Yet another example:

University of California Proposes Systemwide Pay Increases for Medical Residents

March 30, 2026

The University of California presented a comprehensive economic package for medical residents and fellows as part of ongoing negotiations with the Committee of Interns and Residents (CIR-SEIU). The proposal reflects UC’s commitment to fair, consistent compensation while supporting patient care and clinical training across its health system. 

CIR-SEIU represents approximately 6,300 medical residents and fellows across the UC system who provide essential patient care while completing advanced medical training at UC hospitals and medical centers. 

Medical residents are physicians in training who work in demanding clinical settings while continuing their education. UC residents remain among the highest-paid trainees at public universities nationwide and receive a strong overall compensation and benefits package. 

“Medical residents are essential to both patient care and the future of medicine,” said Missy Matella, Associate Vice President for Systemwide Employee and Labor Relations at the University of California. “This proposal reflects our commitment to supporting their education and training while providing competitive, predictable pay.” 

UC’s proposal, presented during bargaining sessions held March 17–18, is designed to provide steady salary growth over a four-year period...

The proposal includes: 

  • Annual salary increases of 3.5% 
  • Additional yearly step increases to provide consistent earnings growth 

Negotiations continue to move forward...

Full news release at https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/press-room/university-california-proposes-systemwide-pay-increases-medical-residents.

Straws in the Wind - Part 300

From The Atlantic: The events of the past three months seem almost perfectly engineered to spark campus unrest. In January, mass-deportation operations led to the brazen killing of U.S. citizens at the hands of masked immigration agents. In February, the Environmental Protection Agency declared that it would no longer regulate greenhouse-gas emissions. A few weeks later, the Trump administration joined forces with Israel to launch an attack on Iran without congressional approval. One might expect left-leaning college students to have practically started a revolution.

But campuses across the country—places where, just two years ago, students occupied buildings and colonized the quad to protest Israel’s war against Hamas—are strangely silent. These days, those same students mostly head to class. The extent of the change is jarring. David Sengthay, a Stanford senior and the head of the undergraduate-student senate, told me that protests typified the university’s history, up to and including his first two years in Palo Alto. But by the time he returned as a junior, in fall 2024, something was different...

Sengthay said that he and other Stanford students had envisioned college as a “playground for free speech and democracy” before the greater responsibilities and pressures of adult life. They’ve since discovered that the rules of the game have changed.

Full story at https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/03/campus-protests-trump-iran/686518/.