LA Times
10/10/03
THE
BUDGET FALLOUT
College Prep Programs in
Peril
The governor's plan cuts funds that help get poor and
minority pupils to universities.
By Rebecca Trounson, Times Staff
Writer
Simone Leard puts it simply: If not for the UCLA students who
visited her classes at Crenshaw High School in Los Angeles almost every week for
four years, she wouldn't have known how to apply to college or what it takes to
get there.
The college students "told us what classes we needed to take,
how to take good notes, how to study," said Leard, the child of Jamaican
immigrants. Most of all, she said, "they made us think about college, all the
time."
But Leard, a second-year UCLA undergraduate who returns frequently to
Crenshaw to prod others toward college, is worried about the future of such
outreach and college-preparatory efforts.
The programs, which are aimed
at helping to guide poor and minority students toward four-year colleges, would
be cut significantly in January and all but eliminated for the next school year
under Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's recent budget proposals.
The
reductions, intended to help close a budget shortfall of at least $17 billion
through mid-2005, would save about $24 million for the current year and about
$85 million next year.
University of California and California State
University leaders have said they will fight for the programs. And several
legislators, including Assemblyman Marco Firebaugh (D-Los Angeles) are trying to
preserve the outreach funding.
A state Senate subcommittee is scheduled
today to discuss the first round of the proposed cuts.
But for now, the
reductions remain part of the governor's proposals, Vince Sollitto, a
Schwarzenegger spokesman, said.
Given the size of the budget deficit,
cuts in higher education could not be avoided, Sollitto said. He said the
proposed reductions were intended to preserve the university's core
instructional programs.
"In each instance, the reductions were very, very
difficult for the governor to make he hated to make some of these
but felt he had no choice," Sollitto said.
Supporters contend that the
outreach efforts help create a pipeline to college for disadvantaged but
academically qualified students.
They say that outreach is an essential
element in helping to keep their campuses ethnically diverse in the wake of the
state's 1996 affirmative action ban.
"At any and all costs, we have to
save these programs," Cal State Chancellor Charles B. Reed said last week. He
suggested that his system was willing to take an additional unallocated cut to
make up for it.
Speaking at the same UCLA conference on the budget
crisis, UC President Robert C. Dynes said the university could not walk away
from its commitments to the state's neediest students.
"We can't build a
fence around higher education. We have to go out and help find those diamonds in
the rough," he said.
Even the most vigorous advocates for the programs,
however, concede that it is difficult to gauge their effectiveness and success,
other than anecdotally.
The state's independent legislative analyst and
some others also have questioned the amount of funding for outreach, which has
declined in recent years but peaked at about $185 million annually in 2001-02.
The various efforts sometimes overlap and there are no reliable data to
show how well they work, said Steve Boilard, director of the higher education
unit in the legislative analyst's office.
"I wouldn't say that we should
just get rid of these programs, but perhaps this [budget crisis] is an
opportunity to get rid of some overlap and duplication," Boilard
said.
Some of the outreach programs focus on direct help to high school
students, including assistance on applications, campus tours, tutoring,
counseling and weekend and summer courses on college campuses.
The
students targeted include those who are in the first generation of their
families to attend college and those at high schools with low rates of UC and
Cal State enrollment.
Other parts of outreach help community college
students prepare to transfer to UC or Cal State. Some give extra training to
elementary school teachers and administrators and help low-performing schools
with curriculum development.
Outreach expanded significantly after the
passage of the anti-affirmative action Proposition 209 in 1996. At UC, the state
and the university nearly tripled their investment in the programs, to $90
million, from 1998 through 2002.
UC Regent Ward Connerly and other
conservatives have said they worry that the programs may be an end-run around
the state's ban on affirmative action, while staying within the letter of the
law.
But without the programs, the university would be in danger of
becoming a privileged society "bifurcated even more than it is by
income level, education and race," said Winston Doby, the UC system's vice
president for educational outreach.
UC administrators noted that 40% of
the African American and Latino freshmen enrolled at the university's eight
undergraduate campuses participated in outreach programs while they were in high
school.
Jeannie Oakes, a UCLA education professor who has performed
extensive research on education inequality, said a UCLA study released Saturday
illustrates the disparities that make outreach programs necessary.
The
study by the UC All Campus Consortium on Research for Diversity, which Oakes
directs, shows that students whose parents have college degrees were two to
three times more likely than others to attend high schools with "college-going
cultures" that include such things as information and assistance with
college.
Those same students were admitted to UC and Cal State campuses
at rates of more than 60%, compared with fewer than 7% of those at schools
without such cultures, the study showed.
Based on a survey last summer
of 3,000 18-year-old California high school graduates, the analysis also found
that college-educated parents were more likely than other parents to pay for
after-school help for their children, including tutors, SAT preparation classes
and private counselors.
Oakes said outreach programs help bridge the
gaps by providing similar services to low-income and educationally disadvantaged
students.
At the Cal State system, loss of the funding, among other
things, would end assistance for thousands of educationally disadvantaged
students admitted to the university but who need tutoring and other academic
support to remain in school, said Allison Jones, assistant vice chancellor for
academic affairs.
"If not for this program, many students would not have
the opportunity to go to college," Jones said. "But with it, they can succeed
here."
Some of the outreach programs' strongest advocates are their
former participants.
Octavio Estrella said he might not have gone beyond
community college without an outreach program that set him up with a mentor and
trained him to write research papers. He credits UC's Puente Project with
demystifying higher education for him.
Estrella eventually transferred to
UC Berkeley, where he graduated with a degree in sociology and ethnic studies.
He is now at UCLA, pursuing a doctorate in education.
"You can't measure
what it did for me," Estrella, 28, said. "It gave me a chance to realize
something that I had never thought was within my reach."
Leard, for her
part, said the students from UCLA's Early Academic Outreach Program had a
profound influence on her and others at Crenshaw.
The students, several
of whom remain in touch with her, helped her map out the courses that she needed
to get into college and then checked frequently to make sure she was on
track.
Now a program mentor, she worries that the students in her charge
at Crenshaw will not be able to get the same help.
"If we eliminate these
programs, I just worry that the state doesn't care anymore whether minority kids
and poor kids have that link to college," Leard said. "It seems like we're
saying that their education is really not that important."
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