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News Releases
November
18, 2002
Media Contact:
Michael Dabney, (858) 822-3432
UCSD
EFFORTS PAYING OFF IN PREPARING
UNDERREPRESENTED STUDENTS FOR COLLEGE
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| Chula Vista
High School senior Andres Zacarias (seated), a member of UCSD's Early
Academic Outreach Program (EAOP), receives instruction from EAOP outreach
coordinator RebecaValenzuela (left) recently on how to register online
for the SAT college entrance exam. Looking on are Andres' parents,
Laura and Jesus Zacarias. |
Comprehensive steps by the University
of California, San Diego (UCSD) to work with area K-12 schools to prepare
educationally disadvantaged students for admission to the University of
California and other universities are paying off. For instance, UCSD’s
Early Academic Outreach Program – an initiative that offers an array
of academic, informational and motivational support from middle school
through high school in San Diego and Imperial Counties – reports
its efforts have yielded the following results in recent months:
- Students who participate in
the Early Academic Program (EAOP) throughout high school are twice as
likely to complete rigorous UC preparatory coursework by the end of
their senior year as their non-EAOP counterparts, according to an independent
study released this year on student participation in UC-sponsored EAOP
programs. The study, the first of its kind done on EAOP, establishes,
according to the UC Office of the President, a positive link between
outreach and UC admission.
- The number of high school
seniors from historically underrepresented groups (including African
American, Chicano/Latino, and American Indian) in San Diego and Imperial
Counties who were UC-eligible after completing the EAOP program has
increased steadily from 349 in 1998-99 to 456 in 2000-01, an overall
increase of 30.7 percent.
- In addition, preliminary data
for the 2001-02 school year indicate the number of UC-eligible EAOP
high school seniors from underrepresented groups in the area is expected
to increase from 456 to about 625 during this period.
- The number of seventh- and
eighth-grade underrepresented students served by UCSD’s EAOP program
increased from 3,913 in 1999 to 6,791 in 2001, an increase of 74 percent.
- Available data indicate significant
increases in the number of eligible African American, American Indian,
and Latino/Chicano students in San Diego and Imperial Counties who were
admitted to a UC campus after completing the UCSD-sponsored EAOP program.
For instance, the number of Chicano/Latino EAOP graduates admitted to
UC increased from 223 in 1999 to 312 in 2001, an increase of 39.9 percent.
In addition, the number of African American EAOP students from the area
admitted to UC increased from 27 in 1999 to 66 in 2001, a jump of 144.4
percent.
- Overall, of the approximately
1,500 high school seniors served each year by UCSD’s EAOP program
in San Diego and Imperial Counties, more than half are eligible to attend
UCSD and other UC campuses upon graduation, and more than 80 percent
will go on to attend college at a UC campus or elsewhere.
EAOP is a UC-systemwide program
administered by the UC Office of the President for more than 25 years.
EAOP programs are currently active on nine UC campuses, and in San Joaquin
Valley, representing the largest student-centered initiative in the state.
“Significant progress
is being made,” says Rafael Hernandez, EAOP director at UCSD, “especially
when you consider that many of these students will be the first in their
family to ever attend college. Through the hard work of our committed
staff and the positive relations we’ve developed with area schools,
parents and community, EAOP hopes to continue to have an impact on the
college-going rates of educationally disadvantaged students.”
UCSD’s EAOP program was
established in 1976 and currently serves more than 13,000 students at
96 schools in San Diego and Imperial Counties through the university’s
Student Educational Advancement Division, under Student Affairs.
Services provided by UCSD’s
program include: online distance tutoring via web cams with UCSD undergraduates;
PSAT/SAT exam preparation; campus visits; academic counseling; summer
residential experiences at UCSD; college admissions workshops; informational/instructional
sessions for parents, and academic outreach to Native American reservations.
For more information on EAOP
and other outreach programs at UCSD designed to increase the college-going
rates of low-income and underrepresented students, visit the UCSD Student
Educational Advancement website at: http://sea.ucsd.edu.
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