Tell Me More about University of California—Los Angeles (UCLA) | Doing College | Elizabeth LaScala | PleasantonWeekly.com |

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By Elizabeth LaScala

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About this blog: I post articles to offer timely and substantive college admission guidance on important topics and issues. Originally from New York, I have a B.S. from Hunter College in NYC and advanced professional degrees from the University of...  (More)

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Tell Me More about University of California—Los Angeles (UCLA)

Uploaded: Oct 30, 2018
UCLA has been called America’s finest urban public university—and one of the best research universities in the world. With easy access to the beach, mountains and Hollywood glitter, it’s no wonder that UCLA received more applications last cycle than any other University of California campus. Further escalating its appeal is the fact that Los Angeles is a global capital for entertainment, aerospace, fashion, finance and healthcare. UCLA’s campus bleeds into Westwood Village, one of the most desirable neighborhoods in the world, a short drive to Beverly Hills and Bel-Air, where movie stars and other influential elites reside.

UCLA ranks among the country's top 10 public universities and its strengths span fields from the arts to engineering. UCLA accepted only 14 percent of those who applied to join the Class of 2022. Top name professors, innovative academic programs and cutting edge research drives the number of applications sky high each cycle—113,000 high school seniors applied to UCLA last November—more applications than any college in the nation, and the 30,000 undergraduate member campus is the largest number in the UC system.

Perfect grades, lots of honors and AP classes, as well as super strong test scores are “musts” to get in for most students. But that’s not all it takes to be admitted. A holistic application process in combination with data on trends over the last decade informs us that UCLA seeks to admit the most distinguished, talented and unique scholars in not only California, but across the US and abroad. It’s no wonder that those who get into UCLA are likely to stay put. 97% of the freshmen who entered in 2016 returned for their sophomore year. And 79% finished their degrees in four years. Both measures are excellent for such a large university.

As a national research university, UCLA is credited as the original home for more than 3,000 inventions, including the foundations for the Internet. UCLA is also a leading producer of talent for the motion picture industry. UCLA alumni, over 500,000 strong worldwide, including Francis Ford Coppola, Randy Newman and Tim Robbins have collected 38 Academy Awards. The most prominent campus in NCAA Division I athletics in the system, UCLA’s athletes have won 261 Olympic medals and captured 116 NCAA team championships — more than any other American university.

UCLA’s most popular majors are on the social sciences and biomedical sciences, but there are strong programs in many academic departments, in particular architecture, computer science, engineering, mathematics, nursing and the visual and performing arts. Although undergraduates have a selection of 125 majors and over 80 minors to choose from, there is no undergraduate business program. There is a major in business economics, which when paired with a minor in entrepreneurship studies is a desirable degree path in the job world.

One “need to know” about academics: the university calendar is based on a quarter system while similar schools, including UC-Berkeley run on longer semesters. On the quarter system the work goes faster and the grading is not any easier. Compound this with jumbo sized introductory classes, relative lack of access to professor support and 1200 clubs and organizations to join and you will clearly see that good study habits and the ability to resist the many beach, sun and party distractions is essential to academic success.

For seriously focused scholarly type students bent on working hard, joining UCLA’s campus is a spectacular opportunity. There’s a sense of pride in being a Bruin that is difficult to match at similar schools—and it lasts well beyond graduation.

This article is the fourth in a series about the University of California. Going alphabetically, the first article was about the top-ranked UC-Berkeley, the second was devoted to UC-Davis, and then UC-Irvine. To read those profiles click here.
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