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Friday, May 29, 2026

Surprise! (You have to know math to do science! Who knew?) - Part 2 (Non-Statement)


Yesterday we posted about the open letter from STEM faculty asking that the SAT be reinstated for admission of students intending to go into STEM fields. In response, the chair of the Academic Council (the Academic Senate's systemwide entity, released the statement below - which, to be blunt, is really an evasive non-statement. All it says is that BOARS is thinking about admissions issues, something that is always true and by itself means nothing.

Statement from UC Academic Senate Chair Ahmet Palazoglu in response to letter from UC STEM faculty

UC Office of the President, May 27, 2026

UC Academic Senate Chair Ahmet Palazoglu made the following statement May 27:

In light of concerns raised by UC faculty about student preparedness for undergraduate study, in March I called upon our systemwide faculty Board of Admissions and Relations with Schools (BOARS) to address timely topics tied to students’ college readiness and UC’s admissions process. BOARS is in the process of proposing a roadmap of policy work and partnership-building with other state and K-12 education leaders in the next academic year and beyond.

Source: https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/press-room/statement-uc-academic-senate-chair-ahmet-palazoglu-response-letter-uc-stem-faculty.

Here is what a hypothetical real statement would say:

In light of concerns raised by UC faculty about restoring the SAT as one criterion of admissions, I am forming an emergency subcommittee of BOARS to review these concerns over the summer and issue an interim report as a discussion item for the Regents meetings in September.

Ratified

From the Daily Bruin: A union that represents more than 40,000 workers – and that has been in negotiations with the UC for more than two years – voted to ratify a contract with the University... The American Federation of State, City and Municipal Employees Local 3299 – which represents service, patient care and skilled craft workers across the UC – reached a contract with the University hours before it was set to begin an indefinite strike May 14. About 96% of participating members voted to ratify the contract...

The new contract does not include housing provisions, which union members previously demanded... However, a ballot measure that would support housing for UC employees gathered enough signatures to appear on the California ballot in November, according to AFSCME Local 3299’s website. The University of California Support Staff Down Payment Loans measure would require the UC to create a down payment loan system for first-time homebuyers who have worked for the University for at least five years. The program would be capped at 300 loans per year, and the loans would cover up to 20% of the purchase price of the house. Once the signatures receive state verification, the initiative will appear on the state ballot.

Full story at https://dailybruin.com/2026/05/22/afscme-local-3299-employees-vote-to-ratify-contract.

Straws in the Wind - Part 356

From the Columbia Dail Spectator: Graduating students booed acting University President Claire Shipman, CC ’86, SIPA ’94, for the second year in a row as she delivered her address at Columbia’s undergraduate Commencement ceremony... For both [years,] Shipman, who took office 14 months ago, and the class of 2026, Commencement marked the end of their turbulent tenures at Columbia, which have encompassed sweeping federal scrutiny, campus protests, and mass student arrests.

Shipman, in particular, has faced intense criticism for striking a $221 million deal with President Donald Trump’s administration in July 2025 after it canceled $400 million in grants and contracts to the University in March 2025.Last year, graduates also booed Shipman during her address. The outcry, however, was far more intense, as the ceremony came two months before the University reached its deal and two months after Columbia partially complied with several of the Trump administration’s demands in an attempt to restore funding...

Full story at https://www.columbiaspectator.com/news/2026/05/21/shipman-caps-contentious-presidency-with-appeal-to-generosity-of-spirit-at-undergraduate-commencement/.

Latest Scam


If you are a Southern California Edison (SCE) customer, you might have found this card in your mailbox. It is not from SCE. It is not an official anything. When yours truly typed the phone number shown into Google, up came a scam warning that a similar card had been distributed up north to PG&E customers. There was also a scam warning about cainitiative.com, a web address on the card. (I don't know if DWP customers have gotten similar cards.) 

Someone is trying to sell you something - or worse. Discard the card.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Surprise! (You have to know math to do science! Who knew?)

Back around pandemic time, UC (really the UC Regents) abandoned the SAT for undergraduate admissions. This step was taken despite the recommendations of an Academic Senate task force that it be retained as one of a group of criteria for admissions. UC never had an SAT-only policy. At the time, other universities took similar steps, although some have returned to testing.

The impetus for dropping testing at UC was the idea that testing impeded diversity. However, the Senate report had noted that the way the SAT was used at UC did not have that effect. Again, UC never had an SAT-only policy. 

The first (public) sign of trouble was a recent report from UC-San Diego math faculty that incoming students lacked basic high school math skills.* Now, from the LA Times:

More than 600 University of California faculty members, led by mathematicians at UC Berkeley, are calling on the system to reinstate standardized testing requirements for science, technology, engineering and mathematics applicants, saying that six years of test-free admissions has not reliably assessed readiness and professors are often teaching middle school math to incoming students. Without standardized testing in admissions, professors said they don’t know whether incoming students can handle college-level math. The open letter, addressed to top UC leaders, asks for SAT or ACT exams to be required beginning in fall 2027 and for STEM faculty to be given formal oversight of readiness standards in their majors...**

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Text of letter:

To the UC Regents, UCOP, Academic Senate leadership, and the people of California:

We write as University of California mathematics faculty, joined by faculty from other STEM disciplines. UC has long served students from every background and has been a powerful engine of social mobility for the people of California. That public trust must be protected for future generations. Today, UC’s mission is at risk. To preserve that mission:

We call for the reinstatement of the SAT/ACT mathematics requirement for applicants to STEM majors beginning with the 2027 admissions cycle, alongside STEM faculty oversight of readiness standards and admissions practices affecting those majors.

Over the past five years, we have seen a widening divergence in mathematical preparation levels within the same classroom. This trend indicates that current admissions practices do not provide a sufficiently reliable check on mathematical readiness for STEM majors. The UC San Diego Senate–Administration Workgroup on Admissions report documents this crisis in stark terms: in the last five years, the number of students whose mathematics skills fall below high school level increased nearly thirtyfold; moreover, 70% of those students fall below middle school levels, reaching roughly one in twelve members of the entering cohort. These findings are corroborated by data across our campuses. For example, for three consecutive years, 20-30% of UC Berkeley first-semester calculus students who participated in mathematical diagnostic testing displayed severe preparation deficits.

Basic mathematical fluency is analogous to literacy; without it, success in university-level STEM becomes structurally unattainable for students. We now observe preparation gaps so severe that instructors must reteach middle-school mathematics while simultaneously teaching the material students need for sciences, engineering, economics, and other quantitatively demanding fields. UC has been a national leader in supporting under-resourced students to do well in mathematics. However, UC has finite resources and can help only so many students, and only when the preparation deficits they need to overcome are within reach.

Furthermore, the widening spread between underprepared and well-prepared students creates polarized courses, weakening the foundation available to many students and making it harder to teach at the level required for advanced STEM work. UC is increasingly unable to provide its students with the education needed to become leaders in California’s scientific, technological, and economic future. We are already seeing the warning signs: longer pathways through prerequisite material, reduced readiness for advanced coursework, and growing pressure to dilute quantitative rigor. Left unaddressed, these trends will lead to declining graduation rates, longer time to degree, and reduced completion of STEM majors, with consequences for California’s highly skilled STEM workforce.

California’s public higher-education system is a coordinated pathway through community college, CSU, and UC that aligns students with the instruction best suited to their preparation.

The current admissions system is undermining this structure by admitting students directly into STEM UC programs without a reliable measure of whether they are prepared to succeed. This serves no one well.

The widening abilities gap followed the 2020 elimination of the SAT/ACT, a temporary measure that has now become a permanent vulnerability. This outcome was explicitly predicted by the Academic Senate’s 2020 Standardized Testing Task Force (STTF) report, which warned that removing these tests would eliminate a vital predictor of college success and obscure the impact of severe high-school grade inflation. Unfortunately, the outcomes cautioned against in that report have now materialized in the data across our campuses. All other leading STEM institutions, including the UC’s primary peers, have resumed using SAT/ACT in their admissions to ensure foundational fluency. For the University of California to remain a global leader in STEM, it is essential to restore these objective benchmarks.

Rather than measuring advanced mathematical ability, the SAT/ACT tests provide a critical baseline: a common external check that students have the core mathematical fluency required for university-level STEM coursework. SAT/ACT scores can also identify high-potential students in under-resourced schools whose talent might otherwise go unrecognized because of limited access to advanced coursework.

The SAT/ACT mathematics requirement is not an obstacle to equity; rather, it is a prerequisite for it. Failing to measure preparation gaps does not remove barriers; it moves them into the classroom, where they become harder to overcome. An admissions process that ignores foundational readiness does a disservice to the most vulnerable students. True access requires an honest assessment of the support students need and where, within California’s public higher-education system, they can best receive it.

The current admissions metrics, based primarily on GPA and essays, can no longer reliably distinguish readiness for university-level STEM majors in an era of severe grade inflation and AI-assisted application essays. We therefore call upon the University of California to:

1. Reinstate SAT/ACT Requirements: Require SAT/ACT mathematics scores for applicants to STEM-intensive majors, effective with the 2027 cycle.

2. Validate Academic Readiness: Use these scores as a common measure of basic readiness to provide a necessary counterweight to inconsistent high-school grades.

3. Establish Faculty Oversight: Ensure STEM faculty oversight of readiness standards and of admissions policies that materially affect STEM programs.

4. Mandate Institutional Accountability: Test admissions criteria against student outcomes, and revise them if they fail to predict readiness.

Obscuring preparation gaps harms both students individually and the University collectively. It offers the appearance of access while undermining the chance of success. UC must ensure that every student is challenged appropriately, supported in closing real gaps, and given a path toward a degree that retains its full value in the global economy. Restoring objective data and introducing faculty oversight will allow the University to support students effectively, provide institutional accountability, and preserve the standards that make a UC STEM degree meaningful.

Source: https://ucstudentsuccess.org/. About 70 UCLA faculty signed the letter.

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Note: Not addressed in the letter is the significance of having two tracks of admission. Those who want to pursue STEM fields (and maybe some others such as economics) would have to submit SAT scores. Those who want to be admitted to study other fields would not have a testing requirement. Many high school grads don't have firm ideas about future studies or careers. Many change their minds after they enroll.

Finally, there is the larger issue of why K-12 California students are graduating without basic skills.

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*https://www.kpbs.org/news/education/2025/12/02/uc-san-diego-is-trying-to-solve-a-remedial-math-problem.

**Full story at https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-05-27/uc-math-professors-demand-return-of-sat-for-stem-admissions.

Might be Legit

Yours truly has been told that some UC employees and emeriti/retirees may be eligible for some funds due to an antitrust settlement with Blue Cross and Blue Shield.

Info at https://www.bcbssettlement.com/.

If you are eligible, you might get some kind of notice of such a settlement. 

Even though the settlement is real, there could be scams associated with it. If you get an email or text about claiming benefits, be cautious about clicking directly on the message or calling phone numbers directly on the message.

Straws in the Wind - Part 355

From the Chronicle of Higher Education: ...The University of Oregon announced Thursday that a “significantly lower” number of first-year out-of-state students have enrolled for next academic year, resulting in $65 million in necessary cuts. The university will also freeze hiring and pay, and limit non-essential travel.

President Karl Scholz had warned last month that cuts may be on the way, noting that the competition for out-of-state students was “fiercer than it has ever been.” At the time he also cited international-enrollment challenges and “rising costs due to geopolitical tensions.” ...

Full story at https://www.chronicle.com/liveblog/finance-live-updates-union-warns-layoffs-are-coming-to-muhlenberg-college.