University of California, Riverside: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Ucr-belltower.jpg|thumb|200px| Carillon Tower, which stands in the center of campus.]] |
[[Image:Ucr-belltower.jpg|thumb|200px| Carillon Tower, which stands in the center of campus.]] |
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The 2006 U.S. News & World Report College Rankings place UC Riverside #4 nationwide for campus diversity,{{citeneeded}} although Riverside is known to have frequent problems with racial violence.{{ref|racism}} |
The 2006 U.S. News & World Report College Rankings place UC Riverside #4 nationwide for campus diversity,{{citeneeded}} although Riverside is known to have frequent problems with racial violence and hate crime.{{ref|racism}} |
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According to 2003-05 data published by the UC Office of the President (Merced excluded) {{citeneeded}}, UCR had the highest percentage of low socioeconomic status (SES) students compared to other UC's. Low SES was defined as family income below $30,000 per year and first generation college. Based on Academic Performance Index data, the freshman classes at UCR are composed of the highest percentage of students graduating from low-performing high schools. The retention rate for freshmen is 85%, the lowest of any UC.{{ref|USNews2}} Additionally, 95% of UCR alumni do not give back to their alma mater, which corresponds to an alumni giving rate of 5%. This figure is the lowest of all the UC campuses (UCLA and UC Davis are 16% and 10%, respectively), and it is also the lowest of any university in the nation.{{ref|NewUniverisity}} UC Riverside ranked #12 nationwide for "least happy students" according to The Princeton Review's 2004 publication of "Best 351 College Rankings". {{citeneeded}} Nearly 50% of students surveyed at StudentsReview.com would not return to UC Riverside if they were given the choice. {{citeneeded}} |
According to 2003-05 data published by the UC Office of the President (Merced excluded) {{citeneeded}}, UCR had the highest percentage of low socioeconomic status (SES) students compared to other UC's. Low SES was defined as family income below $30,000 per year and first generation college. Based on Academic Performance Index data, the freshman classes at UCR are composed of the highest percentage of students graduating from low-performing high schools. The retention rate for freshmen is 85%, the lowest of any UC.{{ref|USNews2}} Additionally, 95% of UCR alumni do not give back to their alma mater, which corresponds to an alumni giving rate of 5%. This figure is the lowest of all the UC campuses (UCLA and UC Davis are 16% and 10%, respectively), and it is also the lowest of any university in the nation.{{ref|NewUniverisity}} UC Riverside ranked #12 nationwide for "least happy students" according to The Princeton Review's 2004 publication of "Best 351 College Rankings". {{citeneeded}} Nearly 50% of students surveyed at StudentsReview.com would not return to UC Riverside if they were given the choice. {{citeneeded}} |
Revision as of 20:58, 20 April 2006
The neutrality of this article is disputed. |
The University of California, Riverside is a public, coeducational university situated in Riverside, California beside Box Springs Mountain. It is one of ten University of California (UC) campuses and is popularly known as UCR or UC Riverside.
History
On February 14, 1907, the University of California Board of Regents established an experiment/research station on 23 acres of land on the east slope of Mt. Rubidoux in Riverside, California. [citation needed] The purpose of this research station was to conduct various agricultural experiments such as fertilization, irrigation, improvement of crops, and air pollution research. It was here that the navel orange was introduced to the United States. [citation needed] The laboratory was later moved in 1917 to the west slope of Box Springs Mountains. It was not associated with any particular campus but rather with the system as a whole.
The laboratory was dubbed the Rubidoux Laboratory and slowly grew in size. When the laboratory celebrated its fiftieth anniversary, the laboratory had grown considerably in size with several new buildings and usage of its acres for experimental plantings. The laboratory's original two staff personnel increased to 265 personnel by 1957. [citation needed] In 1961, to reflect the growth of the laboratory, the name was changed to the Citrus Research Center and Agricultural Experiment Station. At the time, the director was Alfred M. Boyce for which Boyce Hall, the home to the Entomology and Biochemistry Departments, is named.
University President Robert Gordon Sproul persuaded Gordon S. Watkins, former dean of the College of Letters and Science at University of California, Los Angeles, to undertake the organization of a small college of liberal arts at Riverside, California. In 1949, Watkins accepted the job and started five years of planning, faculty recruitment, and building construction. He became the first Chancellor of the Riverside campus and presided at the opening of the College of Letters and Science with 131 students in February 1954. [1]
Since its opening, UC Riverside has expanded significantly, with a peak undergraduate enrollment of 15,399 students in 2003. However, for each subsequent year, total enrollment of students has declined to its current number of 14,649 [2]. UCR was originally projected to grow to 25,000 students by 2015,[3][4] but the trend has not been consistent with recent figures. Financially, UCR has received sufficient funding to become a comprehensive university, but has lagged behind other UC schools with respect to growth in this area. Despite being the fourth University of California campus to open, today it ranks the lowest in "financial resources," according to US News and World Report.[5] [6]
Academics
UCR provides 78 majors and 45 minors, 50 Master's degree programs, and 38 Ph.D programs. It is the only UC campus to offer an undergraduate degree in Creative Writing and, along with the Berkeley campus, one of only two UCs to offer an undergraduate degree in Business Administration.
Overall, US News & World Report ranks the University of California, Riverside undergraduate program #85 among national universities and #37 among public institutions. Compared to other UC schools, UCR has the lowest peer assessment score, selectivity rank, and ranking overall. Most of its graduate programs do not rank as high as their respective UC counterparts [7]. UC Riverside does not have any Nobel laureates on its faculty, unlike most of the other UC's. In 2005, the Princeton Review ranked UC Riverside among the bottom twenty universities for "Professors Get Low Marks [for Teaching]," "Professors Make Themselves Scarce," and "Teaching Assistants Teach Too Many Upper-Level Courses." [citation needed]
Currently, all UC-eligible high school seniors in California who apply to the Riverside campus will be offered admission.[8] As such, UCR's acceptance rate has always been amongst the highest (79% for 2004-05) and average GPA/SAT (3.48 and 1074, respectively) amongst the lowest, compared to the other UC schools. In order to attract more competitive applicants, UCR has invited home-schooled and other nontraditional students to submit a portfolio of their work in addition to test scores.[9]
The Thomas Haider (pronounced 'hayter') Program in Biomedical Sciences offers a joint medical degree program with UCLA. The first two years of medical instruction are taught on the UCR campus, and the biomedical teaching complex consists of two trailer-sized classrooms located adjacent to the campus greenhouses.[10] Third and fourth year clerkships are conducted at UCLA and its affiliated hospitals along with the rest of the UCLA medical school class. Students admitted in the program receive a B.S. in Biomedical Sciences from UCR and an MD degree from the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. In the past, the UCLA program was only offered to biomedical science majors, but effective 2002, all qualified majors may apply to the program during their senior year. Up to twenty-four of each year's applicants are chosen to attend medical school at UCR and UCLA. Students not selected are still eligible (and encouraged) to apply to other medical schools, but are frequently limited to D.O. and third-tier programs, according to MDApplicants.com statistics.[11]
UCR's library system is divided into general collections, music, media, and science specialties. General collections reside in the Tomás Rivera library, and science and technology literature are stowed in the Science library building. Of note, UCR is host to the world's largest academic collection of Star Trek material[12], and houses the 80,000 volume Eaton Collection of science fiction, horror, fantasy, and utopian literature - the world's largest such compilation available to the general public. Nevertheless, UCR lacks a dedicated medical library to provide resources to its 48 UCR/UCLA medical students on campus.
UCR is a primary partner in the Riverside Regional Technology Park, which also includes the City of Riverside and County of Riverside. The park is intended to assist entrepreneurs in developing new products. [13]
Student life
According to the 2005 College Board profile, 28% of all undergraduates live on campus. UC Riverside has a reputation for being a "commuter school", [citation needed] although housing is available to all students for their first year. Additional housing is being constructed, but even so, only 30% of students choose to remain on campus for the weekend.[14]
The 2006 U.S. News & World Report College Rankings place UC Riverside #4 nationwide for campus diversity,[citation needed] although Riverside is known to have frequent problems with racial violence and hate crime.[15]
According to 2003-05 data published by the UC Office of the President (Merced excluded) [citation needed], UCR had the highest percentage of low socioeconomic status (SES) students compared to other UC's. Low SES was defined as family income below $30,000 per year and first generation college. Based on Academic Performance Index data, the freshman classes at UCR are composed of the highest percentage of students graduating from low-performing high schools. The retention rate for freshmen is 85%, the lowest of any UC.[16] Additionally, 95% of UCR alumni do not give back to their alma mater, which corresponds to an alumni giving rate of 5%. This figure is the lowest of all the UC campuses (UCLA and UC Davis are 16% and 10%, respectively), and it is also the lowest of any university in the nation.[17] UC Riverside ranked #12 nationwide for "least happy students" according to The Princeton Review's 2004 publication of "Best 351 College Rankings". [citation needed] Nearly 50% of students surveyed at StudentsReview.com would not return to UC Riverside if they were given the choice. [citation needed]
Riverside is sometimes referred to as "The 909", which makes reference to the region's former primary area code but also carries somewhat of a negative connotation (compared to wealthier nearby Los Angeles and Orange Counties). Despite the 2004 prefix change to "951," the nickname remains in use. [citation needed]
On the other side of the Pomona Freeway, the University Village (UV) provides several shops and restaurants. UV's movie theaters also serve as lecture halls during the day, with a shuttle taking students every 15 minutes. The Commons serves as a small student center for the campus and includes study rooms and restaurants with benches for dining. Construction is underway to more than double the size of the Center from 65,000 square feet to 140,000 square feet.[18] The new 50 million dollar Student Commons (slated for completion in 2008) is expected to include large buildings containing expanded meeting rooms, dining, and places to study.[19] The university has attempted to institute new instructional technologies such as online discussion groups, and its free wireless internet coverage has been praised by Intel[20]
The Riverside area is referred to [citation needed] as a “smog belt” because of its above-average level of air pollution. The associated brown haze can be seen in the Carillon Tower photo on the right, visible in the bottom third of the sky. In a comparison by the National Campaign Against Dirty Air Power (2003), the Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario area was found to be the most polluted region based on year-round soot measurements when compared to other U.S. cities. [citation needed] A study in the New England Journal of Medicine (2004) found that levels of pollution in Riverside were among the highest in southern California, and that the air in this region can damage the lungs of growing children. [21]. [NEJM 2004;351:1057-1067].
Organization
Chancellors and Previous Chief Campus Officers
- Gordon S. Watkins (Provost 1949-1956)
- Herman Spieth (Provost 1956-1958/ Chancellor 1958-1964)
- Ivan Hinderaker (Chancellor 1964-1979)
- Tomás Rivera (Chancellor 1979-1984) First Minority UC Chancellor
- Daniel G. Aldrich (Acting Chancellor 1984-1985)
- Theodore L. Hullar (Chancellor 1985-1987)
- Rosemary S.J. Schraer (Chancellor 1987-1992) First Female UC Chancellor
- Raymond L. Orbach (Chancellor 1992-2002)
- France A. Córdova (Chancellor 2002-present )
Colleges and Schools
UCR's academic departments and programs are organized into five colleges and schools:
- UC Riverside College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences;
- UC Riverside College of Natural and Agricultural Sciences;
- UC Riverside Marlan and Rosemary Bourns College of Engineering;
- UC Riverside A. Gary Anderson Graduate School of Management;
- UC Riverside Graduate School of Education.
UCR's University Extension program provides continuing education to community members of the Inland Empire.
Future Professional Schools
- UC Riverside would like to establish a traditional medical school, and is currently planning a proposal to UC.[22]
- UC Riverside has proposed a Law School that the Regents of California have put on hold due to the budget crisis[23]
Athletics
UCR competes in NCAA Division I of the Big West Conference, despite lacking a football team. The volleyball and basketball teams currently play in the Student Recreation Center. Construction of an actual arena has been proposed, although UCR athletic attendance ranks near the bottom of all Big West schools.[24]
Unlike every other undergraduate UC campus, UC Riverside does not have a marching band, but instead features a rock band with horns, a guitar, and a drummer. During many athletic events, UCR brings its kilted bagpipe and drum ensemble. Due to NCAA's restriction against amplified instruments, UCR sometimes must "rent" a marching band from other colleges such as UCI and UCSB.[25][26]
The official UCR mascot is "Scotty," a Highlander tartan-wearing bear.
Notable Faculty
- Ivan Strenski - Ph.D., Holstein Family and Community Professor of Religious Studies
- Jorge Silva-Risso - Ph.D., Professor of Marketing and Director at marketing research firm J.D. Power and Associates.
- David Pion-Berlin - Ph.D., Professor of Political Science, Specialty in Latin American Studies
- John V. Tunney - Professor of Business Law, former United States Senator and Representative
- Carl Cranor - Ph.D., Professor of Legal Philosophy, Philosophic Issues in Science and the Law, Moral Philosophy, Regulatory Policy, Political Philosophy, and Pioneer of toxic tort litigation, serving as reference to Federal Judges, elected to U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment, the Collegium Ramazzini (International Headquarters in Carpi, Italy), and the American Association for the Advancement of Science
- Paul Hoffman - Ph.D., Professor of Early Modern Philosophy, Moral Psychology, Philosophy of Mind, and considered to be one of the most prominent leading scholars on the Metaphysics of Descartes in the philosophy community
- Richard Cardullo - Professor of Biology, Expert on mammalian fertilization, biophysicist
- Umar Mohideen - Professor of Physics, measured the Casimir Effect
- George Edgar Slusser - Professor of Comparative Literature, science fiction expert
- John Baez - Professor of Mathematics, mathematical physicist
- Victor Rodgers - Professor of Bioengineering
- Susan Straight - Writer and Professor of Creative Writing
- Clifford Trafzer - Writer and Lecturer of Native American Studies and History Departments.
- Austin Turk - Noted Criminologist and Professor of Sociology.
- Emory Elliott - Noted American Literature scholar and Professor of English
- Frank Vahid - Noted Computer Scientist and Professor of Computer Science
- Walid A Najjar - Noted Researcher in the field of Compilers and Reconfigurable Computing and Professor of Computer Science
- Bob Toledo - Former UCR football coach; 13th head coach of UCLA
Notable alumni
Academia, Science, Technology
- Charles E. Young - First UCR student body president and former chancellor at University of California, Los Angeles.
- Ed Gomez - Former Student Regent, currently Professor at San Bernardino Valley College.
- S. Sue Johnson - Regent, University of California and chair of the Board of Regents 2000-2002.
- Eric Mathur - Former Vice President of Scientific Affairs and Molecular Diversity at Diversa.
- Tim White - Professor, Integrative Biology and Research Paleo-Anthropologist. Internationally recognized expert in the field of paleo-anthropology.
Arts, Film and Literature
- Billy Collins - The eleventh U.S. Poet Laureate
- Linda - Cast, MTV's "The 70's House".
- Jamie Chung - Cast, MTV's The Real World: San Diego, The Inferno II
- Johanna - Cast, MTV's The Real World: Austin
- Lindsay Ridgeway - Actress, "Boy Meets World" Sitcom
- Nona Colorado - Actress, Save the Last Dance, Blue Crush films.
- Mark Andrus - Writer for "As Good As It Gets" Oscar nominated film.
- Stephen Breen - 1998 Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist.
- Susan Elizabeth George - Internationally acclaimed mystery writer.
Athletics
- Troy Percival - Professional baseball pitcher for the Detroit Tigers.
- Pat Hill - Head football coach at Fresno State.
- Butch Johnson (football player)-Former professional football player for the Dallas Cowboys and the Denver Broncos
- Gary McCord - Professional golfer/CBS announcer and analyst.
Business and Politics
- Byron H. Pollitt, Jr - Executive Vice President and CFO of Gap Inc..
- Paul Niwa - Senior Vice President, Broadband and Chief Editor for Stockhouse.com.
- Ruben Barrales - Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of the Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, The White House.
- Ronald Neumann - Former U.S. Ambassador to Algeria.
- Rod Pacheco - California Assembly Member, 64th district.
- Gloria Romero - California Assembly Member, 49th district.
- Judith Valles - Mayor, San Bernardino.
Nobel Laureates
- Dr. Richard R. Schrock - Chemistry, 2005 and MIT professor
Points of interest
University Village
External links
Notes
- ^ Martinez, Richard. "700 Join in UCR's Second Founder's Day Celebration." Riverside Press Enterprise, October 7, 1987.
- ^ "The University of California Statistical Summary of Students and Staff, Fall 2005" (PDF).
- ^ "UCR Facts and Impacts (4/06/06): UCR Fact sheet". Retrieved Apr 6.
{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "US News and World Report America's Best Colleges 2006, National Universities: Top Schools".
- ^ "US News Best Colleges 2006". Retrieved November 23.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "MSNBC/Newsweek: UC Yourself in California?".
- ^ "Wikipedia: List of Backronyms". Retrieved March 31.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "UCR Campus map, zoomed in on Biomedical Teaching Complex, 2 small trailers".
- ^ "UC Riverside puts out want ad for home-schooled".
- ^ "MDApplicants.com (UC Riverside data)". Retrieved March 31.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "J. Lloyd Eaton Collection". Retrieved November 23.
{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "US News and World Report America's Best Colleges 2006, National Universities: Top Schools".
- ^ "US News and World Report America's Best Colleges 2006: UC Riverside profile".
- ^ "Wikipedia: Inland Empire (California)".
- ^ "Racism Rising in the Golden State".
- ^ "Classrooms@UCR". Retrieved November 23.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ "Air pollution and lung development". Retrieved Mar 17.
{{cite web}}
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