UCLA College of Letters and Science explained

UCLA College of Letters and Science
Motto:Fiat lux
Let there be light
Established:May 23, 1919
Website:College website

The UCLA College of Letters and Science (or simply UCLA College) is the arts and sciences college of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). It encompasses the Life and Physical Sciences, Humanities, Social Sciences, Honors Program and other programs for both undergraduate and graduate students. It is often called UCLA College or the College, which is not ambiguous because the College is the only educational unit at UCLA to be currently denominated as a "college." All other educational units at UCLA are currently labeled as schools or institutes.

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 ranked very highly and 11 were ranked in the top ten nationally by the National Research Council.

The College originated on May 23, 1919, the day when the Governor of California (William D. Stephens) signed a bill into law which officially established the Southern Branch of the University of California. At that time, a two-year Junior College was established as the university's general undergraduate program.[3] The Junior College held its first classes on September 15, 1919 for 260 undergraduates.

At its inception, the Junior College was truly a junior college in both name and fact, because it offered only a two-year lower-division program. Young people interested in earning bachelor's degrees were required to proceed to the Berkeley campus or other universities to attend upper-division third- and fourth-year courses. The inferior two-year program was intolerable to the many Southern Californians who had fought to establish the southern branch. They vigorously lobbied the Regents of the University of California for a third year of instruction at the southern branch, which was promptly followed by demands for a fourth year. The Southern Californians finally prevailed on December 11, 1923, when the UC Board of Regents approved a fourth year of instruction.[4]

At that time, the Junior College was transformed into the College of Letters and Science (named after its northern counterpart at Berkeley) and was expressly authorized to award the Bachelor of Arts degree. Charles H. Rieber, a philosophy professor, was named the first dean of the new four-year college. The College's original departments in 1923 were chemistry, economics, English, French, history, mathematics, philosophy, physics, political science, psychology, Spanish, and zoology.

On June 12, 1925, the College awarded its first Bachelor of Arts degrees to 98 women and 30 men.[5]

According to UC President Clark Kerr, the political science department at UCLA College in his experience was the second-strongest program in the entire UC system after the chemistry program at Berkeley.[6] To date, three faculty members of the UCLA political science department have become UC chancellors (as listed below).

The main disadvantage of the gigantic size of the College (as with its counterpart at Berkeley) is a coldly impersonal undergraduate experience, especially in large lower-division survey courses (before students declare specific majors, begin to work more closely with department advisers and faculty members in their chosen major, and switch to smaller upper-division courses).[7] It is because of this specific issue that UC President Clark Kerr experimented with residential college systems at the newer UC campuses at San Diego and Santa Cruz.[8]

Divisions

The College encompasses five divisions — Humanities, Life Sciences, Physical Sciences, and Social Sciences, as well as the Division of Undergraduate Education, which includes 83% of UCLA's undergraduate students. [9]

Alumni

See main article: List of University of California, Los Angeles people.

Notable faculty

Commencement ceremonies

The main graduation commencement ceremony for the College of Letters and Science is held annually on a Friday night in June in Pauley Pavilion. For two years in a row, the scheduled commencement keynote speaker had canceled the engagement. Bill Clinton canceled in 2008 for not wanting to cross a picket line. Actor and alumnus James Franco canceled in 2009 because of his filming scheduling conflicts. Rock band Linkin Park's Brad Delson accepted the last minute invitation to speak at the 2009 commencement ceremony.[12] [13] Mayim Bialik cancelled in 2016 for not wanting to cross a picket line.[14]

In various years, UCLA has received criticism from students for the relative obscurity of commencement speakers.[15] [16] [17] [18]

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Book: UCLA Registrar’s Office Academic Publications . UCLA General Catalog 2021-22 . 2021 . Regents of the University of California . Los Angeles . September 24, 2021 . College of Letters and Science.
  2. Web site: The College . 2022-09-13.
  3. Book: Dundjerski . Marina . UCLA: The First Century . 2011 . Third Millennium Publishing . Los Angeles . 9781906507374 . 26 . 21 February 2021.
  4. Book: Dundjerski . Marina . UCLA: The First Century . 2011 . Third Millennium Publishing . Los Angeles . 9781906507374 . 31 . 21 February 2021.
  5. Book: Dundjerski . Marina . UCLA: The First Century . 2011 . Third Millennium Publishing . Los Angeles . 9781906507374 . 33 . 21 February 2021.
  6. Book: Kerr. Clark. The Gold and the Blue: A Personal Memoir of the University of California, 1949–1967, Volume 1. 2001. University of California Press. Berkeley. 9780520223677. 317. 14 August 2020.
  7. News: Savage . David G. . Seniors Assail Undergraduate Education at UCLA Campus . September 17, 2023 . Los Angeles Times . May 23, 1985.
  8. Book: Kerr. Clark. The Gold and the Blue: A Personal Memoir of the University of California, 1949–1967, Volume 1. 2001. University of California Press. Berkeley. 9780520223677. 273–280.
  9. Web site: Department and Programs .
  10. Web site: UCLA astronomer Andrea Ghez named a 2008 MacArthur Fellow. UCLA. 2008-09-23.
  11. http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/three-ucla-professors-receive-49640.aspx Professors named to National Academy of Sciences
  12. http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/linkin-park-s-brad-delson-to-keynote-93860.aspx Linkin Park's Brad Delson to keynote UCLA commencement
  13. Larry Gordon, "Rock star to replace actor for UCLA commencement speech", Los Angeles Times, June 9, 2009
  14. Web site: Mayim Bialik withdraws as commencement speaker for UCLA College .
  15. Web site: Students debate university's choice for commencement speaker . 2009.
  16. Web site: Commencement speaker Gustavo Arellano faces opposition from members of community . 2010.
  17. Web site: Commencement speaker elicits lukewarm student response . 2015.
  18. Web site: The Quad: UCLA needs to step up its commencement-speaker game . 2017.