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Guaranteed transfers for community college? California may chart a path.

When the University of California system proposed a universal guaranteed admissions program for community college students in March, it piqued the interest of those who seek entry into one of the most selective university systems in the United States.

If California legislators approve the guaranteed transfer program, for the first time it would include all nine UC campuses – including the Los Angeles, Berkeley, and San Diego campuses. It would also create a universal set of acceptance criteria for the more than 2 million California students who attend 116 community colleges in the state annually.

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What’s the best way to help community college students who want a four-year degree? In California, a proposal hopes to offer transfer students access to universities that have typically been out of reach.

Students would not be guaranteed enrollment at the newly added schools, but they would be guaranteed to get into the UC system. 

“Students get excited about a simpler path, and they are looking for California leaders to work out the challenges and make it happen,” says Jessie Ryan, with The Campaign for College Opportunity.

She says that the proposal needs to make clear how financial aid can be transferred from school to school, and that housing needs to be considered for acceptance, given that many students have work or family obligations nearer their homes.

Scott Colonese, a first-year student at Los Angeles City College, has his eye on UCLA, a school he says offers a variety of subjects he can pursue. 

“I think having a guaranteed path to get in is fantastic,” he says. 

When the University of California system proposed a universal guaranteed admissions program for community college students in March, it piqued the interest of those who seek entry into one of the most selective university systems in the country.

Scott Colonese is one of them. Multiple times a week he drives from his one bedroom apartment in Hollywood to Los Angeles City College with a 40-pound cello and hard case strapped to his right shoulder. A first-year student from Stockton, California, he made a pit stop at LACC before moving onto the place where he envisions himself.

“I want to go to UCLA,” the 18-year-old beams confidently, after attending classes on the LACC campus. “It’s the variety. I’d like to go into modeling. I want to go into some film stuff. I want to do music and just do art in general. So UCLA is a great place to be able to explore opportunities like that.” 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

What’s the best way to help community college students who want a four-year degree? In California, a proposal hopes to offer transfer students access to universities that have typically been out of reach.

The University of California, Los Angeles, and several other southern California branches of the university system rejected him straight out of high school, even though he had a 3.9 GPA, he says. “I was unlucky,” he adds, “but I think having a guaranteed path to get in is fantastic.”

If California legislators approve the guaranteed transfer program, for the first time it would include all nine campuses – adding three of the most selective schools: UCLA, the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of California, San Diego. It would also create a universal set of acceptance criteria for the more than 2 million California students who attend 116 community colleges in the state annually. 

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