UC Davis has enrolled 30,065 students this fall, a decrease of 164, or 0.5 percent, over last year. Looking at the Davis main campus only, the student population is expected to average 26,560 over the three quarters of the academic year.
The overall student count includes health science interns and residents as well as students in two non-state supported programs: the MBA program for working professionals and the Master of Forensic Science program.
The number of undergraduates (including teaching credential students) decreased by about 1.4 percent, from 23,509 last fall to 23,171 this fall; the number of graduate students rose by about 2.9 percent, from 3,915 last fall to 4,027 this fall.
Regarding ethnicity, non-white ethnic groups comprise 60.28 percent of all domestic undergraduates, up from last fall's 57.75 percent.
Included in the overall count, 4,266 first-year students came directly from high school, compared to 4,786 last fall, for an almost 10.9 percent decrease.
The decline follows Gov. Arnold Schwarz-enegger's call for a 10 percent cut in freshman enrollment and the plan to divert many UC applicants to community college for two years as part of UC's Guaranteed Transfer Option (GTO) program. Although the state budget agreement resulted in UC campuses offering freshman admission to GTO students and other eligible applicants, the number that enrolled did not offset the decline in admission offers made in the spring.
New transfer students numbered 1,848 this fall, compared to last fall's 1,751 final tally, for a 5.5 percent increase.
Freshman SAT scores and GPAs
The average Scholastic Assessment Test-I score of freshman applicants admitted for fall 2004 was 1,255, up from 1,235 last year. The average grade point average was 3.90, up from 3.87 last year.
The average SAT-I score of enrolled freshmen was 1,180, down slightly from 1,181 in fall 2003. The average grade point average was 3.74, up from 3.73 in fall 2003.
Admission exam scores and the GPA are two of more than a dozen factors UC Davis considers in seeking to enroll students that demonstrate high academic achievement or exceptional personal talent and a student body that encompasses the broad diversity of backgrounds characteristic of California.
Profile of this fall's student body
Men account for 44.9 percent of the total student population, and women 55.1 percent. Almost 93.1 percent of students are California residents. About 2.6 percent are from other parts of the United States, while about 4.3 percent are international students.
For the general campus, 5,651 students are classified as freshmen; 4,187 as sophomores; 6,328 as juniors; 6,854 as seniors; 151 as teaching credential students; 1,677 as master's or professional degree candidates; and 2,695 as doctoral degree candidates. In the health sciences, 93 are designated as students in the Family Nurse Practitioner/Physician Assistant Program, 50 as master's degree candidates, 293 as doctoral degree candidates, 914 as professional degree candidates, and 855 as interns and residents. In addition, 278 students are enrolled in the MBA program for working professionals, and 39 are in the Master of Forensic Science program.
Undergraduates by ethnicity
Of the 23,020 general campus undergraduates (excluding teaching credential students), 22,777 are U.S. citizens or permanent residents. The ethnic breakdown among the U.S. students, contrasted with last year's figures (in parentheses), is: African American, 2.59 percent or 589 (2.53 percent or 585); American Indian/Alaskan Native, 0.74 percent or 169 (0.71 percent or 165); Caucasian, 39.72 percent or 9,047 (42.25 percent or 9,759); Chinese, 17.39 percent or 3,961 (16.11 percent or 3,720); East Indian/Pakistani, 3.27 percent or 744 (3.05 percent or 704); Filipino, 4.72 percent or 1,074 (4.64 percent or 1,071); Japanese, 1.87 percent or 427 (1.94 percent or 448); Korean, 2.77 percent or 632 (2.73 percent or 630); Latino and other Spanish, 2.76 percent or 629 (2.70 percent or 623); Mexican/Chicano, 8.02 percent or 1,827 (7.86 percent or 1,815); other Asian, 2.65 percent or 603 (2.36 percent or 546); Pacific Islander, 1.24 percent or 282 (1.48 percent or 342); Puerto Rican, 0 percent or one (0.01 percent or two); Southeast Asian, 0.02 percent or five (0 percent or one); Vietnamese, 5.58 percent or 1,270 (5.20 percent or 1,201); other ethnicities, 2.14 percent or 487 (2.29 percent or 529); and 4.52 percent or 1,030 (4.14 percent or 956) are of unknown ethnicity.
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Fall quarter enrollment comparisons
Fall 2004
Undergraduate: 23,171
-- Ag & ES: 4,664
-- Engineering: 3,114
-- Letters & Science: 10,227
-- Div. of Biological Sciences: 5,015
-- Teaching Credential: 151
Graduate Studies: 4,027
Professional Schools: 2,867
-- Grad Sch. of Management*: 396
-- Law: 570
-- Medicine**: 1,251
-- Veterinary Medicine**: 611
-- Forensic Science Program: 39
Total: 30,065
Fall 2003
Undergraduate: 23,509
-- Ag & ES: 4,642
-- Engineering: 3,319
-- Letters & Science: 10,614
-- Div. of Biological Sciences: 4,793
-- Teaching Credential: 141
Graduate Studies: 3,915
Professional Schools: 2,805
-- Grad Sch. of Management*: 384
-- Law: 547
-- Medicine**: 1,239
-- Veterinary Medicine**: 608
-- Forensic Science Program: 27
Total: 30,229
*Figures for the management school include students in the MBA program for working professionals: 278 this fall and 266 last fall.
** Numbers for the medical and veterinary schools include interns and residents. The medical school has 759 this fall compared to 736 last fall; the vet school has 96 this fall compared to 91 last fall.
Media Resources
Julia Ann Easley, General news (emphasis: business, K-12 outreach, education, law, government and student affairs), 530-752-8248, jaeasley@ucdavis.edu