UC-Riverside

| | | | |

Doing Good

The Washington Monthly has a ranking of national universities by “their contribution to the public good.” It looks at such things as students on Pell Grants. UC-San Diego comes in as #1, UCLA as #2, UC-Berkeley #3, UC-Riverside #5, UC-Davis #8, UC-Santa Barbara #13, UC-Irvine #60. The full listing is at http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/college_guide/rankings_2011/national_university_rank.php

|

Got any spare change for the UC-Riverside med school?

The saga of the UC-Riverside proposed med school continues post-state budget. Now the request goes to local authorities: UCR Med School requests $12 million grant Nicole C. Brambila, Jun. 30, 2011| Desert Healthcare District board members are mulling over a multi-year $12 million grant request for the new UCR Medical School to help the fledging institution get the social capital it needs for accreditation. The med school was dealt a setback this week when its state funding became a casualty of the revenue shortfall and a $15 million budget request evaporated… Full story at http://www.mydesert.com/article/20110630/NEWS01/110630014/UCR-Med-School-requests-12-million-grant

|

Time to Fold?

The saga of the UCR med-school-to-be continues in the Riverside Press-Enterprise (excerpts): UC Riverside officials announced Wednesday that the opening of their proposed medical school will be postponed a year because they did not secure the ongoing state funding needed to gain accreditation. The announcement from Chancellor Timothy White came the day after Democrats in Sacramento passed a 2011-12 budget that did not include extra funding for the medical school. The budget, which Gov. Jerry Brown signed Wednesday night, cut another $150 million from the UC system on top of the $500 million reduction taken earlier this year… “We can’t…

| | |

UC-Riverside Wants $$$s for New Med School

Olds urges UCR lobbying group to help gain accreditation (excerpt) LORA HINES, Riverside Press-Enterprise, 6/22/11 The dean of UC Riverside’s proposed medical school on Wednesday appeared before university supporters and urged them to contact Sacramento lawmakers to secure ongoing state funding needed to accredit the school. Dr. G. Richard Olds asked members of the Citizens University Committee, a UCR lobbying group, for assistance in securing state money. Earlier this month, university officials were informed by an accreditation panel that the medical school would not be accredited because the state had not committed to ongoing funding. The medical school needs a…

|

More Commitment of Funds We Haven’t Got? UC-Riverside Med School

UCR med school stalled over funding: National medical committee withholds preliminary accreditation for UC Riverside medical school. June 8, 2011, LORA HINES, Riverside Press-Enterprise Preliminary accreditation for UC Riverside’s proposed medical school is on hold because the state has not budgeted ongoing money to fund it, university officials said Wednesday. The decision by the national Liaison Committee on Medical Education to withhold the accreditation means the school opening, slated for summer 2012, could be delayed for a year, university officials said… University and county officials said they will boost efforts to get lawmakers to commit funds for the medical school….

| |

Differential Tuition Pricing at UC: The Sky Would Fall Says the Contra Costa Times. But Would It?

The Contra Costa Times on 5/12/11 had an editorial indicating that differential tuition among the UC campuses would be a bad idea. Below is an excerpt: FINANCIAL ADVERSITY can spawn positive innovation; it also can lead to huge mistakes. Establishing variable tuition at the University of California campuses would be the latter. Advocates of different tuition rates for each campus argue that it would allow individual campuses to raise more revenue during a time of tight state budgets and that consumer demand should play a bigger role in the cost of education. However, the likely result of variable tuition is…

|

Reality (TV) at UC-Riverside

Some time back, before “reality” TV became popular, BBC had a program in which the CEO of a firm or organization would visit worksites and perform regular jobs to see what was really happening. For an example, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfdW6mgBEG0. (In that excerpt, the CEO of a fast food chain in the UK visits a local restaurant.) Canadian broadcasting later made a similar series. Now that reality TV is much in vogue, CBS has “Undercover Boss” which is based on the same premise. However, in the CBS version, the CEO fixes the various problems discovered, hands out money and benefits to…

|

Quote without comment

UC Riverside leaders consider sweeping cuts in face of budget crisis (excerpt) Larry Gordon, LA Times, March 8, 2011 Should library hours be cut? Could some academic programs be closed or merged? Will turning down air conditioners and fixing leaky sprinklers save much money? UC Riverside administrators are mulling such questions as they face an expected reduction in the campus’ core budget next year of at least 8%, or $38 million, even as they cope with higher pension costs and energy bills. The decisions could affect the livelihoods of employees and quality of education for more than 20,000 students at…

|

Aftermath of Recently-Ended Political Season at UC-Riverside: Provost Candidate in the Soup

Campbell withdraws as UCR provost candidate Duane W. Gang, Dec. 17, 2010, Riverside Press-Enterprise Former California congressman and U.S. Senate hopeful Tom Campbell withdrew today as a candidate for UC Riverside’s open executive vice chancellor and provost position, the university announced. Campbell interviewed on campus Dec. 10, but some faculty and students raised objections to his candidacy because of his stance on immigration. During his unsuccessful primary campaign this year for the Republican Senate nomination, Campbell expressed support for Arizona’s SB1070, a controversial law targeting people suspected of being in the country illegally. In a statement, UC Riverside spokeswoman Kris…

Minority Success in Graduation Rates Reported at UC-Riverside

UC RIVERSIDE: Diversity is more than numbers (excerpt) Sunday, November 7, 2010 By DAVID OLSON The Riverside Press-Enterprise After Obi Okafor found out he had been accepted to four University of California campuses, he did some research. “I went online to look at the demographic spread and saw that UCR had the highest African-American student population,” Okafor said. “I felt that was where I would feel more comfortable going to school.” High-achieving black students such as Okafor illustrate why UC Riverside has earned a national reputation not only for enrolling a large number of black and Latino pupils but for…