Javier Perez, who graduated from Benjamin Franklin High School in Highland Park, dreams of studying computer science at Dartmouth College.
“For me, it’s very important to be surrounded by the right people,” said Perez, who spent two days on the New Hampshire campus during the Spring College Tour and said he felt “about the people he met. Also, he likes the cold weather.
He is not alone. A Center for Public Policy Policy in California Report It was released this month to find that the share of California high school seniors enrolling in out-of-state colleges has nearly doubled in the past two decades, increasing by 8.5% by 20022.
West Coast and southwest colleges in particular sought out students from wealthy California in recruiting efforts. Making the move even more so is that many public universities are participating in a program that provides California reduced services to western colleges.
By 2022, 40,000 California high school seniors enrolled in out-of-state colleges, nearly a third went to Arizona, Oregon or New York, the researchers found in their analysis of enrollment data from National Center for the Study of Education. In 2002, the number was close to 15,000.
In Arizona, the most popular universities include Arizona State University, Grand Canyon University – known for its online programs – and the University of Arizona. Oregon State University drew the highest number of Californians in that state.
California grads who have moved to New York for college are drawn to smaller, less competitive colleges, which compete with the Military Colleges, often with tuition heftier than California’s state. Due to limitations in national enrollment data, the study could not sleep on courses, making it difficult to determine whether California students choose Out-of-Stature options due to financial aid services.
The researchers found that the majority of students leaving California for college chose less on average than the average California university. About half of the colleges are more selective than the California State University system, which will soon admit qualified students to its 16 campuses.
Lynda McGee, a recently retired Los Angeles college student who spent more than two decades at Downtown Magnets High School, said she sees the trend as a positive development. He said he often urges students to look beyond California, as they feel that campuses outside Shoninco are letting them into a more diverse range.
Arizona State, the University of Arizona and Oregon State have a strong reputation for recognition, actively recruiting in California and feel more threatened by students because they are closer to home, he said. Oregon State’s athletics programs are a particular draw.
Under the right circumstances, and after taking into account financial aid or tuition, private colleges can sometimes end up costing less than the University of California, said Erica Rosales, a tutoring program for low-income students in Los Angeles.
“For low incomes, a private institution that meets the full need without a loan is often the least expensive and most supportive option available,” Rosales said via email.
Rosales, who has spent two decades helping students navigate the college admissions process, noted that the cap on grants leaves some middle-class families unable to afford to send their children to a UC or CLU campus. Financial aid on CSU campuses typically covers tuition, not room and board, according to Rosales.
The promise of full funding is why Perez, who grew up in Guatemala and moved to the US three years ago, intends to attend an art college. He learned about his options for the college game. The program is sponsored by the East Coast Coast Coast trip to each college this year and provided him with a laptop for his applications.
Javier Perez, 18 years old, takes a book from the library. His three-hour journey to and from school involves riding a bicycle, two trains and a bus.
(Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times)
Perez said leaving California will allow him to find life in a small college town surrounded by nature. He liked to spend his days focusing on his studies instead of going to school. His current commute from his Koreatown home to his high-rise home in Highland Park takes three hours round trip, and involves riding a bike, two trains and a bus.
Perez, a prominent programmer who leads his competitive robotics team, aims to collaborate with 22 colleges, including Stanford University, Caltech and UCS and CSUS.
But his hopes are set on peace on the east coast, as shown by many schools on his list: Middlebury College, Columbia College, Columbia College, Brown University, Dartmouth College.
“I want to explore as much as possible in my college life,” Perez said.
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