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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-San Diego (UCSD)

Uploaded: Jun 2, 2021
The University of California-San Diego (UCSD) first opened its doors in 1960. Since then, it has grown to become one of America’s leading research universities, and one of the top 30 in the world. Last year, Money ranked UCSD as the ninth best college for your money in the country, and third among public colleges. Located near the Pacific Ocean, the modern UCSD campus is home to over 30,000 undergraduates. Want to take a study break? Beaches are only a short walk or bus ride away.

Gaining admission to UCSD is getting tougher. In 2006 UCSD accepted 49 percent of high school seniors. Freshman classes have gotten larger since then, but the acceptance rate has fallen to 38 percent for the first-year students who began classes this fall. Over 100,000 students wanted a seat in this fall’s freshman class. Only UCLA attracted more interest in the UC system.

The middle 50% of UCSD’s entering freshmen class had GPAs between 4.0 and 4.3. Their ACT composite scores ranged from 29 to 34. SAT scores ranged between 1310 and 1520. Freshmen who start at UCSD usually finish. Freshman retention rates have averaged 95 percent since 2006, excellent for a very large school. Sixty-five percent of the freshmen who entered UCSD in 2013, the most recent year information was available, finished on time. Like the other UC campuses, over 90 percent of UCSD’s junior transfer students come from California’s community colleges.

UCSD’s academic special sauce is science and technology. US News ranked the university’s Jacobs School of Engineering 13th among public engineering schools. Jacobs offers 17 undergraduate programs in computer science and engineering, including unique majors in nano engineering and structural engineering. The Scripps Institute of Oceanography has three Nobel laureates and undergraduate programs in earth science, environmental science and policy, marine biology, oceanic and atmospheric sciences. UCSD also offers tremendous depth within the social sciences; for example, the cognitive science major includes six specialties. There are also nine ways to pursue international studies, including a joint major with international business. Being close to the Mexican border, UCSD offers not only a major in Latin American Studies; it also offers concentrations in Mexico as well as migration and border studies.

Over 650 companies have been launched by and/or utilize technology produced by UCSD faculty, staff and alumni. One, Fluxergy, a medical diagnostic company based in Irvine, California, that designs and builds rapid point-of-care diagnostic testing devices, istesting a system that would diagnose COVID-19 in minutes rather than hours or days. Have an idea that could turn into a new business? UCSD has The Basement, its own small business incubator and mystartupXX, an entrepreneurship accelerator program targeted to women. Most large public universities give graduate students high priority for research opportunities. But UCSD has eight academic enrichment programs to encourage undergraduate research as well as an Academic Internship Program.

UCSD is the most residential of the UC system campuses; nearly 40 percent of the undergraduates live on campus. UCSD’s residential college system helps make this very large school feel much smaller. After making their own ranked selections, incoming freshmen are assigned to one of seven residential colleges: Marshall, Muir, Revelle, Roosevelt, Seventh, Sixth and Warren. Each has its own general education curriculum, dining, housing, residence life programs, academic advising, traditions and community focus. For example, Muir, named for Sierra Club founder John Muir, celebrates self-reliance, calculated risk-taking and the joys of finding your own direction. Students should choose their rankings of the residential college system very carefully.

Outside of residential college life, UCSD has more than 500 student organizations. UCSD also competes in 23 NCAA Division I varsity sports, including water polo, in the Big West Conference, which includes system rivals UC-Davis, UC-Irvine, UC-Riverside and UC-Santa Barbara.

UCSD is not as urban, nor as spirit and sports oriented as UC-Berkeley and UCLA. But the academics are no less challenging. The UCSD campus also has a stronger residential community identity that you will not find at the two higher profile UCs. At UCSD, if you choose the right residential college to support your academics, you can make friends and professional connections that will last a lifetime.

This article is the seventh in a series about the University of California. Going alphabetically, these profiles include UC-Berkeley, UC-Davis, UC-Irvine, UCLA, UC-Merced and UC-Riverside. To read them all click here.

Elizabeth LaScala PhD guides college, transfer and graduate school applicants through the complex world of admissions. She helps students choose majors and programs of interest, develops best match college lists, offers personalized essay coaching, and tools and strategies to help students tackle each step of the admissions process with confidence and success. Elizabeth helps students from all backgrounds to maximize scholarship opportunities and financial aid awards. Call (925) 385-0562 or visit Elizabeth at her website to learn more.
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Comments

Posted by j0hnwi11iams, a resident of Birdland,
on Jun 12, 2021 at 10:19 am

j0hnwi11iams is a registered user.

I put my son, a graduate of Amador, through UCSD. One of the criteria we used was that a lot of his high school friends were going there. Having his peers attend the same college was very beneficial for him. Of course he went on to make more friends in college, but having close friends as a freshman definitely helped. He went on to graduate early and is now working full time as a software engineer at a renowned high tech company.

I would encourage parents to consider where their child's peers are going, and factor that in as you narrow in on a choice of school.


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