Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The College is the largest academic unit at UCLA and the largest in the entire UC system. [1] The bulk of UCLA's student body belongs to the College, which includes 50 academic departments, 99 majors, 25,000 undergraduate students, 2,700 graduate students and 900 faculty members. [2] Virtually all of the academic programs in the College are ...
For Fall 2020, UCLA Engineering received 24,039 freshman applications and admitted 2,640 for an admission rate of 11.0%. [19] Admitted students had a median unweighted grade point average (GPA) of 4.00, a median weighted GPA of 4.59, and a median SAT score of 1540. [20]
UCLA's overall freshman admit rate for the Fall 2019 term was 12.3%. [140] As of 2020, the basis for selection at UCLA includes several academic and nonacademic factors. Those considered "very important" are all academic; they are rigor of secondary school record, academic GPA, standardized test scores, and application essay(s). Those ...
UCLA is unveiling a new initiative to help students afford college without loans, seeded with a $15-million gift from Bruins alumnus and real estate investor Peter Merlone.
A win Saturday would be UCLA’s first in the rivalry game at home since 2018. The road team has won every game since 2020, when USC rallied for a 43-38 victory in an empty Rose Bowl during the ...
And how well Frenk will transition from a career at smaller private universities — the University of Miami has 18,000 students — to the much larger public UCLA and the 10-campus UC system ...
For the next fifteen years, public health instruction at UCLA was within a system-wide University of California public health school. In 1957, UCLA started a program that led to an advanced degree in public health. The UCLA School of Public Health was created on March 17, 1961, and Lenor S. (Steve) Goerke was named the first dean. [5]
[4] Unlike the University Extension program, the IIR was under the control of university faculty and focused on research rather than popular education. In 1964, the university created the Centers for Labor Research and Education (or Labor Centers) at UCLA and UC Berkeley to more directly serve organized labor.