California State University
From Free net encyclopedia
The California State University (CSU) is one of three public higher education systems in the state of California. (The others are the University of California and the California Community College System). It is incorporated as The Trustees of the California State University.
This CSU system is composed of 23 campuses and has 414,000 students supported by 44,000 faculty members and staff.
The CSU prepares about 60 percent of the teachers in the state, 40 percent of the engineering graduates, and more graduates in business, agriculture, communications, health, education and public administration than all other California universities and colleges combined. Altogether, about half the bachelors degrees and a third of the masters degrees awarded annually in California are from the CSU.
Since 1961 more than 2 million alumni have received a bachelor's, master's, and doctoral (Ph.D. and Ed.D) degrees from the university system. It offers more than 1,800 degree programs in some 240-subject areas.
California State University, Long Beach is its largest campus in terms of student body population.
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History
Today's California State University system is the direct descendant of the California State Normal School (now, San Jose State University) established by the California Legislature on May 2, 1862. A second California State Normal School campus was created in Los Angeles in 1882. In 1887, the California legislature inexplicably dropped the word "California" from the name of the San Jose and Los Angeles schools, renaming them "State Normal Schools." Later Chico (1887), San Diego (1897), and other schools became part of the State Normal School system. In 1919, the State Normal School at Los Angeles became the Southern Branch of the University of California (now the University of California, Los Angeles). In 1921, the State Normal Schools became the State Teachers Colleges, but the loss of the word "California" had taken its toll and by this time most of the campuses became identified by their city names plus the word "state" (e.g, "San Jose State," "San Diego State," "San Francisco State").
In 1935, the State Teachers Colleges became the California State Colleges and were administered by the California State Department of Education in Sacramento. The Donahoe Higher Education Act of 1960 gave the system greater autonomy from the State of California.
In 1972 the system became The California State University and Colleges, and all of the campuses were renamed with the words "California State University" in their names. At some of the older campuses, alumni successfully lobbied the California Legislature to revert the schools back to their pre-1972 names: San Jose State, San Diego State, San Francisco State, etc. In 1982, the CSU system dropped the word "colleges" from its name.
Today the campuses of the CSU include comprehensive and polytechnic universities and the only Maritime Academy in the western United States that receives aid from the federal Maritime Administration.
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Governance
Responsibility for the California State University is vested in the Board of Trustees, whose members are appointed by the Governor of the State of California. The Trustees appoint the Chancellor, who is the chief executive officer of the system, and the Presidents, who are the chief executive officers of their respective campuses.
The Academic Senate of the California State University, made up of elected representatives of the faculty from each campus, recommends academic policy to the Board of Trustees through the Chancellor.
Chancelors of the CSU
- Buell Gallagher (1961-1962)
- Glenn S. Dumke (1962-1982)
- W. Ann Reynolds (1982-1990)
- Ellis E. McCune [Acting] (1990-1991)
- Barry Munitz (1991-1998)
- Charles B. Reed (1998- )
Endowment
The California State University's permanent, collective endowment has grown to $678 million U.S. dollars as of the close of the 2004-2005 academic year. In addition, each of the 23 campuses of the CSU raise their own funds through donations and other external funding, and each campus controls its own separate endowment funds not counted in the above collective endowment amount. Link to CSU Endowment & Fundraising webpage
Campuses
The CSU is composed of the following 23 campuses listed here by order of the year founded:
- San José State University Founded 1862
- Established as the "Normal School of the State of California"
- California State University, Chico Founded 1887
- Also known as "Chico State"
- San Diego State University (SDSU) Founded 1897
- Also known as "San Diego State"
- San Francisco State University Founded 1899
- California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Founded 1901
- Also known as "Cal Poly," "Cal Poly San Luis Obispo," or "Cal Poly SLO"
- California State University, Fresno Founded 1911
- Also known as "Fresno State"
- Humboldt State University Founded 1913
- California Maritime Academy Founded 1929 and incorporated into the CSU in 1999
- California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Founded 1938
- Founded in 1938 as Southern Branch of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. The Pomona campus became independent from the San Luis Obispo campus 1966
- Also known as "Cal Poly Pomona"
- California State University, Los Angeles Founded 1947
- California State University, Sacramento Founded 1947
- Also known as "Sacramento State"
- California State University, Long Beach Founded 1949
- Also known as "Long Beach State"
- California State University, East Bay Founded 1957
- Formerly known as California State University, Hayward
- California State University, Fullerton Founded 1957
- California State University, Northridge Founded 1957
- Formerly known as San Fernando Valley State College
- California State University, Stanislaus Founded 1957
- California State University, Dominguez Hills Founded 1960
- California State University, San Bernardino Founded 1960
- Sonoma State University Founded 1960
- California State University, Bakersfield Founded 1965
- California State University, San Marcos Founded 1988
- Formerly the "North County Branch" of San Diego State University, the branch campus was relocated to San Marcos and became independent in 1988
- California State University, Monterey Bay Founded 1995
- California State University, Channel Islands Founded 2002
- Formerly a satellite campus of California State University, Northridge.
Laboratories
- Desert Studies Center (managed by California State University, Fullerton)
- Research consortium and field site
- official website
- Moss Landing Marine Laboratories (managed by San Jose State University)
- Oceanographic laboratory
- official website
- Mount Laguna Observatory (part of the Astronomy Department of San Diego State University)
- Astronomical observatory
- official website
Former Campuses
- Los Angeles State Normal School (aka State Normal School at Los Angeles) (founded 1882)
- By state law, converted to UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) in 1919
- Santa Barbara State College (founded 1909)
- By state law, converted to UCSB (University of California, Santa Barbara) in 1944
Differences between the CSU and UC systems
Both university systems are California publicly funded higher education institutions.
According to the California Master Plan for Higher Education (1960), both university systems may confer Bachelors or Masters degrees as well as professional certifications, however only the University of California has the authority to issue Ph.D degree (Doctor of Philosophy) and professional degrees in the fields of law, medicine, veterinary, and dentistry. As a result of recent legislation (SB 724), the California State University may now offer the Ed.D degree (also known as the Doctor of Education or "education doctorate degree") to its graduate students as well as certain types of professional doctorate degrees (for instance, audiology, etc.). Additionally, the California State University offers Ph.D degree (Doctor of Philosophy) as a "joint degree" in combination with other institutions of higher education, including "joint degrees" with the University of California and accredited private universities. This is why, for instance, San Diego State can qualify as a "Research I University" by offering 16 doctoral degrees.
The California State University (CSU) attempt is to accept applicants from the top 1/3 of California high schools. The University of California (UC) attempts to accept the top 12.5%. In an effort to maintain a 60/40 ratio of upper division students to lower division students and to encourage students to attend a California community college first, both university systems give priority to California community college transfer students. The state, which funds all three institutions, encourages this because the cost of educating a student through a community college is less.
While historicaly the requirements for admission to the CSU have been less stringent, due to changing demographics, campuses such as San Luis Obispo, Pomona, San Diego, Long Beach, and Humboldt have been forced to turn away students who would otherwise be CSU-eligible. In addition to the above campuses, Chico, Fullerton, San Marcos, and Sonoma are considered impacted. This means more students apply to these universities than the campuses can accommodate. Because of this these campuses have higher admission standards than the CSU minimum. Unlike UC, Cal State admissions are based more on GPA and SAT/ACT scores than other factors such as admission essays. In spite of the outline of the Donahue Higher Education Act many CSU campuses are in fact more selective than some UC campuses.
There are 23 CSU campuses and 10 UC campuses representing 414,000 and 191,000 students respectively. The cost of CSU tuition is approximately half that of UC.
See also
- University of California
- List of colleges and universities in California
- Colleges and universities
- California Master Plan for Higher Education
External links
California State University |
Bakersfield · Channel Islands · Chico · Dominguez Hills · East Bay · Fresno · Fullerton · Humboldt · Long Beach · Los Angeles · Maritime · Monterey Bay · Northridge · Pomona · Sacramento · San Bernardino · San Diego · San Francisco · San José · San Luis Obispo · San Marcos · Sonoma · Stanislaus |
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