Our State college system has an almost one billion dollar deficit. Staff, classes and majors are being cut. Curriculum is not about education, but radical, anti-American indoctrination. Even math classes are used to kill our common sense and American values and principles.
“The legislation also would expand a California State University program that offers qualified seniors in Riverside County admission to 10 CSU campuses.
“Tens of thousands of California students are fully qualified to go to CSU, but don’t jump the hurdles of the admission process,” Cabaldon said. “At the same time, many CSUs are seeing precipitous declines in enrollment and need more students to sustain their high quality academic programs. High schools and community colleges have the transcript information they need in order to validate that a graduating student is CSU-admissible. Getting an acceptance letter will nudge thousands more to attend and help the CSU system as a whole.”
Maybe the potential students have decided they want an education—and California government schools, as they know, do not provide that. Maybe young people want a career—taking gender and ethnic studies, gives them slogans to bring to the next riot on campus, but not a career.
Bill to automatically admit eligible graduates to CSU moves forward
EdSource, 5/6/25 https://edsource.org/updates/bill-to-automatically-admit-eligible-graduates-to-csu-moves-forward
A bill that would automatically admit all eligible high school graduates to California State University campuses cleared its first hurdle on Wednesday. Senate Bill 640 passed the Senate Education Committee and is headed to the Senate Appropriations Committee.
The bill is modeled after West Sacramento’s Home Run program, started by Sen. Christopher Cabaldon, when he was the city’s mayor, according to a press release from Cabaldon’s office. The program admits all high school seniors to Sacramento City College tuition free.
The legislation also would expand a California State University program that offers qualified seniors in Riverside County admission to 10 CSU campuses.
“Tens of thousands of California students are fully qualified to go to CSU, but don’t jump the hurdles of the admission process,” Cabaldon said. “At the same time, many CSUs are seeing precipitous declines in enrollment and need more students to sustain their high quality academic programs. High schools and community colleges have the transcript information they need in order to validate that a graduating student is CSU-admissible. Getting an acceptance letter will nudge thousands more to attend and help the CSU system as a whole.”