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California State University, Los Angeles
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California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) is a public research university in Los Angeles, California, United States. It is part of the California State University system. Cal State LA offers 142 bachelor's degree programs, 122 master's degree programs, and 4 doctoral degrees: the Doctor of Philosophy in special education (in collaboration with the University of California, Los Angeles), Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership, Doctor of Nursing Practice, and Doctor of Audiology. It also offers 22 teaching credentials.[7][8]
Key Information
Cal State LA had a student body of 22,740 as of Fall 2024, which includes 19,350 undergraduates, primarily from the Greater Los Angeles area, and 3,390 graduate students.[6] It is organized into 9 colleges that house a total of 4 schools and approximately 50 academic departments, divisions, and interdisciplinary programs.[9] The university's forensic science program is one of the oldest in the nation. The Early Entrance Program in the Honors College for gifted students as young as 12 is the only one of its kind in the United States in promoting a direct transitional scheme from middle and high school to college without intermediary remedial education.[10] Cal State LA is a Hispanic-serving institution and is eligible to be designated as an Asian American Native American Pacific Islander serving institution (AANAPISI).
The 175-acre (71 ha) hilltop campus core is home to the nation's first Charter College of Education, the Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs, the Hertzberg-Davis Forensic Science Center, the Hydrogen Research and Fueling Facility, and the Luckman Fine Arts Complex.
It is also home to two high schools: the Marc and Eva Stern Math and Science School and the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts (LACHSA), the only arts high school in Los Angeles that allows students from any district within Los Angeles County to attend.
History
[edit]First half of 20th century
[edit]

The university is located on the site of one of California's 36 original adobes, built in 1776 by Franciscan missionaries and destroyed by fire in 1908. When the Spanish Franciscans founded the San Gabriel Mission in 1771, they dubbed the small river El Rio Rosa de Castillo. These lands once were part of a Mexican land grant known as Rancho Rosa Castilla. Juan Batista Batz, a Basque rancher from northern Spain and his wife, Catalina settled here in the 1852.[12][13][14][15] Batz used the land for farming and intensive sheep ranching. The inspiration for the name of the ranch, according to local historians, was the abundant amount of native wild Wood roses (Rosa californica) that grew near the ranch home along the creek. The Tongva Indians named this area, Ochuunga (Place of Roses).[16] The main drive through the campus is known as Paseo Rancho Castilla, in acknowledgment of the university's historic heritage.
Cal State LA was founded on July 2, 1947, by an act of the California legislature and opened for classes as Los Angeles State College on the campus of Los Angeles City College (LACC). LACC is a public community college in East Hollywood, Los Angeles located on Vermont Avenue south of Santa Monica Boulevard, the former campus of UCLA and originally a farm outside Los Angeles. As president of LACC, P. Victor Peterson became the acting president of the state college. Since the college had opened in September, 1947, with 136 students, it had grown in two years to over 2,000 students. Most were studying under the GI Bill, which had been largely responsible for establishment of the college. The first class of seven students graduated in 1948.
In 1949, when Howard S. McDonald became president of both Los Angeles State College and Los Angeles City College, the state college upper division classes were being taught in borrowed spaces on the City College campus by mostly part-time faculty. He hired administrators to help him formally organize the colleges. Then he found a site within Los Angeles[17] to house the new "Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences," which replaced the Los Angeles State College also in 1949 after being reconstituted by the Legislature.[18][17] McDonald enjoyed telling how some influential supporters of the University of Southern California opposed his selection of a piece of land in Baldwin Hills, and how then-Los Angeles Mayor Norris Poulson ran him out of Chavez Ravine so that he could lure the Dodgers baseball team to Los Angeles.
Second half of 20th century
[edit]
In 1952, the state proposed a new satellite campus for Cal State LA, at the time known as Los Angeles State College, and in July 1958, the campus separated from Cal State LA and was renamed San Fernando Valley State College (now known as California State University, Northridge).[19] The first master's degrees were awarded in 1952.
Since 1954, Cal State LA has been accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. The university's credential programs are approved by the Commission for Teacher Credentialing Committee on Accreditation.
In 1955, officials broke ground on the current location, dubbed the Ramona site at the time. The college then moved to its present campus in the northeastern section of the City of Los Angeles, 5 miles (8 km) east of the Civic Center.[20] The college opened in its new location in 1958, with McDonald becoming the first full-time president.[21] When McDonald retired in 1962, seven academic buildings on the new campus were completed and an eighth structure (North Hall, later named King Hall) was nearing completion. North Hall opened in September 1962.[17]
In 1962, the college welcomed its third president Albert D. Graves who was vice president of Academic Affairs of LASCAAS. The college also entered into its first contract to prepare students for the United States Peace Corps. The first group of 65 volunteers was trained for service in the Dominican Republic in the areas of teacher training, music teacher training and urban community action. The first Commencement at new site takes place in June 1963.
On December 6, 1963, the California State College (now California State University) Board of Trustees named the library after the late 35th president of the United States John F. Kennedy. An edifice plaque was unveiled during the John F. Kennedy Memorial Library naming ceremony on February 12, 1964, and in November 1969 the library North Wing is dedicated.
In 1964, the Board of Trustees of the California State Colleges changed the name of the college to the "California State College at Los Angeles" (CSCLA), and in 1968 to "California State College, Los Angeles", when it became part of the California State College (CSC) system. In 1972, CSCLA was awarded university status and was renamed California State University, Los Angeles (CSULA).[22]

In 1968, Cal State LA established the nation's first Chicano Studies department.[23]

In fall 1970, the South Tower and South Hall were completed and opened. July 1976 the CSU Board of Trustees approved the renaming of South Tower to Simpson Tower, in memory of Floyd R. Simpson, first dean of the School of Business and Economics. South Hall was renamed Salazar Hall in memory of slain Los Angeles Times journalist and KMEX-DT news director Ruben Salazar.
The original mascot of the school was the Diablo. In 1980, new university president James Rosser adopted a new mascot, Eddie the golden eagle, designed to be more reflective of the campus' highly diverse community. The theme was extended to student facilities such as the student union and bookstore.[24]
In 1993, the California State University Chancellor and Trustees approved development of Cal State LA's Charter College of Education, creating the first such college of higher education in the nation.[25]
In October 1998, the Center for Environmental Analysis, first of its kind funded by the National Science Foundation on the West Coast, opened on campus.[26]
21st century
[edit]
In September 2000, Governor of California Gray Davis chose the Cal State LA campus to hold a press conference at which he signed the historic bills expanding the Cal Grant program.[27]

Cal State LA departments of Social Work and Nursing, located within the university's College of Health and Human Services, were granted the status of School in Winter 2002.
Cal State LA Downtown is a satellite campus opened in January 2016. Programs are provided through the university's College of Professional & Global Education.[28]
Naming of the Rongxiang Xu College of Health and Human Services took place during the university's 69th Commencement on June 11, 2016. The naming recognized the largest gift in the university's history and named in honor of the late Dr. Rongxiang Xu, who was a surgeon and expert in regenerative medicine.
The Patricia A. Chin School of Nursing was dedicated as the first named school at Cal State L.A. in April 2018. Chin taught nursing at the university, later serving as director and, upon her retirement, professor emerita.
A statue of Cal State LA alumna and world champion tennis legend Billie Jean King was installed on the grassy area in front of the Physical Education building. When King was in school at Cal State LA, she had already won Wimbledon.[29]
University presidents
[edit]The following persons served as president of Cal State LA:[30]
| No. | Image | President | Term start | Term end | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | P. Victor Peterson | 1947 | October 31, 1949 | [31] | |
| 2 | Howard S. McDonald | November 1, 1949 | August 30, 1962 | [32][33][34] | |
| 3 | Albert D. Graves | September 1, 1962 | September 30, 1963 | acting[35][36][37] | |
| 4 | Franklyn A. Johnson | October 1, 1963 | November 10, 1965 | [38][39] | |
| acting | John A. Greenlee | November 11, 1965 | May 24, 1966 | [40][39] | |
| 5 | May 24, 1966 | August 30, 1979 | [41] | ||
| 6 | James M. Rosser | September 1, 1979 | August 30, 2013 | [42][43][44] | |
| 7 | William A. Covino | September 1, 2013 | June 30, 2023 | [45][46][47] | |
| interim | Leroy M. Morishita | July 31, 2023 | January 7, 2024 | [48] | |
| 8 | Berenecea Johnson Eanes | January 8, 2024 | present | [49] |
Campus life and cost of university
[edit]
As of the fall of 2016, Cal State LA switched over from the quarter to the semester system. Tuition and fees for in-state is $6,745, $17,245 for out-of-state and room and board $11,723 as of the 2018–2019 academic year with a student/faculty ratio of 25:1. Classes are scheduled Monday through Saturday from 7 am until 10 pm.
Near the edge of the city of Los Angeles, adjacent to the western San Gabriel Valley cities of Alhambra and Monterey Park, the campus affords views of the mountains to the north, the San Gabriel Valley to the east, metropolitan Los Angeles to the west, and the Palos Verdes Peninsula and Catalina Island to the south.
Construction on a $30 million University-Student Union (U-SU) building began in 2005; it opened in January 2009. The facility offers a place for students and faculty to congregate and interact before or after class. It replaced the 1975 U-SU building that was closed in 2004 due to seismic concerns. The U-SU offers a theater, a fitness center, and an array of other services dedicated to the student body. Its meeting rooms connect to those of The Golden Eagle building via a third floor bridge. The Golden Eagle includes a food court, a Barnes & Noble-operated bookstore and major conference facilities. The university food court is owned by the Coca-Cola Company, offering a selection of fast food restaurants that include El Pollo Loco, Carl's Jr., The Spot, and Juice It Up. The U-SU facility houses additional fast food options.
Cal State LA is one of only eight institutions in North and South America selected as a Rockefeller Foundation humanities fellowship residency site.[50]
As of fall 2018 Cal State LA has the second largest enrollment percentage of Mexican Americans and Other Latino Americans that are not Mexican-American in the Cal State University system.[51] Other Latinos Americans having heritage from Central America, South America and the Caribbean.
The HBO show Silicon Valley used the face of the U-SU as the building for the Hooli company.[52]
| Race and ethnicity[53] | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Hispanic | 76% | ||
| Asian | 11% | ||
| Foreign national | 6% | ||
| White | 4% | ||
| Black | 4% | ||
| Unknown | 2% | ||
| Two or more races[a] | 1% | ||
| Economic diversity | |||
| Low-income[b] | 77% | ||
| Affluent[c] | 23% | ||
Associated Students
[edit]Associated Students Incorporated (ASI) is the student government of California State University, Los Angeles. ASI is governed by a student board of directors who are elected each year by the student body of Cal State LA. ASI represents the interests of the student body and acts as the officially recognized voice of the students. In addition, ASI sponsors a number of campus events and activities using mandatory student fees.[54]
Eagle Advocates
[edit]Eagle Advocates, or ASI's Lobby Corps, is the sole student advocacy group representing the entire student body of the school.[55]
Janice Cordova Garden of Well-Being
[edit]
Cal State LA dedicated the Janice Cordova Garden of Well-Being on April 21, 2022, named in honor of the late wife of alumnus Richard Cordova. The garden is located in the heart of campus, between the Center for Engagement, Service, and the Public Good and the Student Health Center. It is a peaceful space that features a meditative walking path, artwork, and more than 50 types of plant life that promote relaxation, healing, and transcendence.[56]
Student housing
[edit]From 1964 to 1972, developer Louis Lesser built six off-campus, 10-story high-rise residential halls to house 3,600 students. The 175-acre (71 ha) campus lacked space for horizontal expansion, following the California State University expansion plan started in 1959. This doubled the university's housing capacity, making Cal State LA the largest in the California State University system. Maxwell Starkman & Associates, AIA, of Beverly Hills, designed the development plan. Unlike other components of the Cal State University system being developed in the 1960s, the residence halls were privately financed by Louis Lesser Enterprises, Inc. The first residential life complex phase I on-campus housing was opened in June 1984, and three years later, a second residential life complex Phase II was opened. Cal State LA has a student-housing complex where students can rent a house at double occupancy for $655.00 per month (as of November 2009). During 1984 Summer Olympics that took place in Los Angeles, Cal State LA student houses were upgraded and expanded because it housed the athletics of the 1984 Summer Olympics.[57][58]
Lesser also pioneered underground parking, with his Cal State LA development, at the time considered unusual enough to merit a separate newspaper section header, "Parking Underground", which described a two-level underground parking lot as a "concept" of "subterranean spaces".[58][59]

The Student Housing East project was completed in 2021. The North Campus Project provides for new student housing facilities, new soccer fields, and a parking structure within the northern portion of the Cal State LA campus. Scope of the Work: The student housing facilities provide 1,500 beds for freshmen and sophomore students, as well as an associated dining facility.[60][61]
Themed-living communities
[edit]Resident Scholars Housing The goal of Resident Scholars Housing is to provide Cal State LA Honors College and academically achieving students with themed housing that supports the mission and vision of the Honors College and the Institutional Learning Outcomes by forming a strong community of students through shared Honors classes, providing learning opportunities and social engagement beyond the classroom and engaging in a student-directed community. It also increases the following: student interaction with Honors faculty, staff and fellow students; involvement in the larger Los Angeles and Cal State LA community; and retention and graduation rates.[citation needed]
Halisi Scholars Living Learning Community The Halisi Scholars Living Learning Community is designed to enhance the residential experience for students who are a part of or interested in issues regarding the Black community living on campus by offering the opportunity to connect with faculty and peers, and engage in programs that focus on academic success, cultural awareness and civic engagement.[62]


Organization and administration
[edit]
Cal State LA is one of 23 campuses in the California State University system.[64] The CSU system is administered by a 25-member board of trustees, which adopts regulations and policies governing the entire system.[65] The system's chief executive officer is Chancellor Timothy P. White, who assumed office in 2012. Joseph I. Castro was appointed on September 23, 2020, by the CSU board of trustees to succeed White starting on January 4, 2021.
University leadership
[edit]The chief executive of Cal State LA is President Berenecea Johnson Eanes who succeeded William A. Covino in January 2024. She is the first female president of Cal State LA. The leadership team includes an executive vice president who also serves as chief operating officer and provost, and four vice presidents.[5]
Affiliations
[edit]Cal State LA is a member of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities[66] and the Coalition of Urban and Metropolitan Universities. The latter organization designated Cal State LA in 2018 as one of 33 U.S. universities that serve as "anchor institutions" driving economic growth in their communities.[67]
Cal State LA's College of Business and Economics (CB&E) is divided into six departments: Accounting, Economics & Statistics, Finance Law & Real Estate, Information Systems, Management and Marketing. CB&E is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB International).
The College of Ethnic Studies, Racial, and Social Transformation opened during the Fall 2020 semester.[68] It houses the university's three ethnic studies departments: Asian and Asian American Studies, Chicana(o) and Latina(o) Studies, and Pan-African Studies.[69]
Academics
[edit]| 2023[70][71] | 2022[72] | 2021[73] | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Applicants | 32,748 | 33,941 | 29,223 |
| Admits | 30,106 | 29,507 | 26,459 |
| Admit rate | 91.9% | 86.9% | 90.5% |
| Enrolled | 3,614 | 3,892 | 4,097 |
| Yield Rate | 12.0% | 13.2% | 15.5% |
| Average GPA | 3.3 | 3.35 | 3.31 |
Cal State LA is accredited by the WASC Senior College and University Commission (WSCUC). Specific programs, such as business (AACSB) and engineering (ABET), also hold specialized accreditations.
The Charter College of Education's Division of Special Education and Counseling has a joint PhD program in Special Education with University of California, Los Angeles, and an independent Ed.D. program in Educational Administration as part of the Division of Applied and Advanced Studies in Education.
Cal State LA's School of Nursing launched the Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) in the fall of 2012. The DNP has been accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC). The Patricia A. Chin School of Nursing, forms part of the Rongxiang Xu College of Health and Human Services. The graduate program offers a nursing education option and nurse-practitioner options in adult gerontology primary care, adult gerontology acute care, family, and family psychiatric/mental health.
With the nation's first Chicano Studies department (established in 1968), Cal State LA is a top source of bachelor's and master's degrees for Hispanic students in California.[50]
The American Historical Association awarded the 2022 Institutional Equity Award to the Department of History at Cal State LA.[74] For recruiting and retaining underrepresented racial and ethnic groups into the historical discipline.
The five most popular majors for 2020 graduates[75] Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support Services at 19%. Health Professions and Related Programs at 10%. Social Sciences at 10%. Education at 7%. Psychology at 6%. Homeland Security, Law Enforcement, Firefighting and Related Protective Services at 6%. Parks, Recreation, Leisure, Fitness, and Kinesiology at 6%. Engineering at 5%. English Language and Literature/Letters at 5%. Computer and Information Sciences and Support Services at 4%.
Colleges
[edit]- Rongxiang Xu College of Health and Human Services
- College of Natural and Social Sciences
- College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology
- College of Business and Economics
- College of Education
- College of Arts and Letters
- The Honors College
- College of Professional and Global Education
- College of Ethnic Studies
Departments and Schools
[edit]- Department of Child and Family Studies
- Department of Communication Disorders
- Department of Public Health
- School of Criminal Justice and Criminalistics
- School of Kinesiology, Nutrition, and Food Science
- Patricia A. Chin School of Nursing
- School of Social Work

Television, Film and Media Studies Center
[edit]The Television, Film and Media Studies Center houses the Cal State LA Studios part of the College of Arts and Letters.[76]
LA BioSpace
[edit]Created by grants from Los Angeles County and the U.S. Economic Development Administration, LA BioSpace is a university incubator.
LA BioSpace is part of a larger grant project based out of Cal State LA, LABioStart. This project hosts networking events and runs a Bioscience Entrepreneur Boot camp in addition to this incubator.[77]
Consortia
[edit]Ocean Studies Institute (OSI)
[edit]Opportunities for study in the coastal environment are provided by the Ocean Studies Institute (OSI), which comprises eight State University campuses: Fullerton, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Northridge, Pomona, San Bernardino, San Marcos and Dominguez Hills. The OSI operates out of the docks and laboratory facilities of the Southern California Marine Institute (SCMI), Fish Harbor, Terminal Island in the Los Angeles - Long Beach Harbor.
The OSI participates in training managers and scientists and educating the public by coordinating and facilitating marine educational and research activities. Seagoing research laboratory and instructional facilities are provided aboard the R. V. Yellowfin, oceangoing research vessel.
Several courses within the departments of Biological Sciences, Geological Sciences, Psychology and the College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology, among others, utilize the Yellowfin and other Consortium facilities. In addition, the eight campuses offer a course of study each fall at the USC Wrigley Institute for Environmental Studies on Santa Catalina Island. Courses cover topics in marine biology and ecology, and a research experience.[78]
Desert Studies Center
[edit]The Desert Studies Center is a field station of the California State University located in Zzyzx, California in the Mojave Desert. The purpose of the center is to provide opportunities to conduct research, receive instruction and experience the Mojave Desert environment. Is officially operated by the California Desert Studies Consortium, a consortium of 7 CSU campuses: Fullerton, Cal Poly Pomona, Long Beach, San Bernardino, Northridge, Dominguez Hills and Los Angeles.[79]
Faculty
[edit]Cal State Los Angeles' faculty include two presidential award-winning professors and 13 faculty members honored with the CSU Trustees' Outstanding Professor Awards.[80]
Professors
[edit]In December 1999 Raymond Landis, Dean of Engineering and Technology, was honored by the White House for outstanding student mentoring. The recognition earned the university its second presidential award.[81]
In September 1996 chemistry professor Carlos G. Gutiérrez was among the first honorees named by President Bill Clinton to receive the newly established annual Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring, at a White House ceremony.[82]
In fall 1995 chemistry professor Thomas P. Onak, was named California Professor of the Year by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education.[83]
In 1992 chemistry professor Phoebe K. Dea, was named California Professor of the Year by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education.[84]
Hal Fishman served as an assistant adjunct professor of political science for two years. Fishman won the Associated Press Television-Radio Association's first-ever Lifetime Achievement Award for his work as a Los Angeles local (KTLA) news anchor.[85]
Ann Garry, professor emerita of Philosophy; early pioneer of the field of feminist philosophy.
Distinguished Visiting Adjunct Professors
[edit]- Christopher Isherwood taught a course on Modern English Literature in 1961–1962. A noted author his Berlin Stories was the basis for the Broadway musical and film, Cabaret.[86]
- Dorothy Parker taught a course in the English department in 1962–1963. Parker, a writer and founding member of the Algonquin Round Table, was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1959.[87][88]
Trustee Professors
[edit]- Barry Munitz, fifth chancellor of the California State University system, and sixth president of the University of Houston[89]
Rankings
[edit]| Academic rankings | |
|---|---|
| Master's | |
| Washington Monthly[90] | 3 |
| Regional | |
| U.S. News & World Report[91] | 15 |
| National | |
| Forbes[93] | 227[92] |
| WSJ/College Pulse[95] | 401-500[94] |
| Top Performers on Social Mobility | 5 |
| Top Public Schools | 8 |
| Best Value Schools | 26 |
| Best Undergraduate Engineering Programs | 40 (At schools where doctorate not offered) |
| Civil Engineering | 11 |
| Computer Engineering | 11 |
| Nursing | 96 |
| Program | Ranking |
|---|---|
| Nursing Masters | 30 |
| Public Health | 51 |
| Fine Arts | 53 |
| Social Work | 60 |
| Rehabilitation Counseling | 64 |
| Speech–Language Pathology | 92 |
| Public Affairs | 96 |
The 2021 U.S. News & World Report's "America's Best Colleges" issue included the following rankings for Cal State LA in the category of regional universities in the Western United States: tied for 9th among public universities, tied for 26th among public and private universities, and ranked 11th in Best Value Schools.[75] The business program in the College of Business and Economics continues to be one of the top 10 in California among public institutions. In a separate category, Cal State LA's undergraduate computer science program is ranked among the top 20 in California.[97]
Nurse.org ranked Cal State La 5th on its Top 10 Nursing Schools in California ranking 2021.[citation needed]
Washington Monthly's 2020 College Ranking Guide named Cal State LA 10th out of 614 schools nationally in the Master's University category.[98] The magazine rates universities based on their contribution to the public good, considering factors that include research, service and social mobility. Also in the 2020 issue by Washington Monthly, Cal State LA ranked 3rd for "Best Bang for the Buck" out of 215 schools in the U.S. Western region.[99]
Money ranked Cal State LA 31st for Best Colleges for Engineering Majors and 31st in its evaluation of its 2020 Best Colleges ranking.[100]
Business Insider ranked Cal State LA #12 for its Best Return on Investment Business Insider 2020 rankings.[citation needed]
Forbes ranked Cal State LA 139th in its 2019 ranking of America's Best Value Colleges out of the 300 universities that were included.[101]
CollegeNET ranked Cal State LA #2 Social Mobility Index.[as of?][citation needed]
In 2018, Cal State LA was ranked the 14th top college in the United States by Payscale and CollegeNET's Social Mobility Index college rankings.[102]
In January 2017, Cal State LA was ranked #1 in the country for the upward mobility of students. The Equality of Opportunity Project followed 30 million students enrolled at over 2,200 colleges and universities, from 1999 to 2013, and concluded that the institution with the highest "mobility rate" was Cal State LA.[103]
Cal State LA was ranked 8th in the nation in the amount of B.A. degrees awarded in 2017 to Hispanics by Hispanic Outlook on Education Magazine.[104]
In 2014 Cal State LA was listed as one of Time magazine's top 100 colleges and universities, according to new criteria proposed by the White House that is based solely on accessibility, affordability, and graduation rate. Ranked at #24, Cal State LA is one of the seven CSU campuses that made the list.[105]
The National Science Foundation lists Cal State LA as the top baccalaureate institution of origin for Latino science and engineering Ph.D. recipients among all undergraduate and master's colleges and universities in the continental U.S.[106] The most recent findings cover 2008 through 2012 and were published in the NSF report, Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering: 2015. The data come from surveys conducted by the NSF, the U.S. Department of Education, the U.S. Department of Commerce, and the U.S. Department of Labor.[107]
Engineering competitions
[edit]
Founded in 1953 as the Department of Engineering, today's College of Engineering, Computer Science and Technology (ECST) was established in 2001.[108] ECST was funded by NASA to advance aerospace technology and space research.[50] Cal State LA's NASA University Research Center is the only one of its kind in the state of California. The objective of the program is to design and build a segmented reflector test-bed. The College of Engineering and Technology added the Department of Computer Science and officially became the College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology in June 2001.
Cal State LA's College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology is divided into five departments: the Departments of Civil Engineering, Computer Science, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Technology. Collectively, these departments offer 12 undergraduate programs, four graduate programs and two teaching credentials in collaboration with the Charter College of Education.
The Solar Eagle
[edit]The college has achieved international recognition with its advanced vehicles. Cal State LA's Team Solar Eagle has built three cars that competed in solar car races in the United States and Australia, winning a national championship at the American Solar Challenge in 1997.[109] The 1997 champion Solar Eagle III was the first solar and only Hot Wheels[110] reproduction of a student-built vehicle.[111] The Solar Eagle II is on display at the California Science Center in Los Angeles it place third in the nation. Cal State LA's Solar Eagle, the first solar-powered electric car designed and built by Engineering and Technology students, placed fourth in the nation and is first among California competitors in the transcontinental GM Sunrayce USA. The Solar Eagle is in display at the Cal State LA's Engineering, Computer Science and Technology building lobby.
-
Solar Eagle III National Champions
EcoCar competitions
[edit]In April 2011 Cal State LA was chosen to become part of the 3-year AVTC[112] EcoCAR2: Plugging into the Future competition managed by Argonne National Laboratory and sponsored by the US Department of Energy and General Motors. EcoCAR2 tasks 15 universities to modify a Chevrolet Malibu into a plug-in hybrid while maintaining safety and consumer acceptability. The university has chosen a parallel-through-the-road architecture as part of the competition.[113] The competition is a collaboration between the College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology and the College of Business and Economics, with Engineering handling the design and implementation of the vehicle systems and the Business handling budgeting, fundraising and promotion of the program.
In May 2013 Cal State LA's EcoCAR 2 team came home 2nd place overall in Year Two of the EcoCAR 2: Plugging In to the Future collegiate engineering competition.
Continuing their participation in AVTCs, Cal State LA is involved with General Motors' new competition series called EcoCAR3. This is a four-year competition where 16 universities across northern America were donated a 2016 Chevy Camaro and are focused on converting this traditional fossil fuel vehicle into a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle. Cal State LA's team has focused on developing a post-transmission parallel architecture for their vehicle. Additionally, the team has decided to deviate from the standard expectation of marketing their developed vehicle to consumers and is instead targeting law enforcement fleets as a business to business focus.[114] The EcoCar3 team will have four years (2014–18) to redesign and re-engineer a Chevy Camaro in an effort to reduce the energy consumption and greenhouse emissions of the vehicle, while maintaining consumer acceptability, performance, utility and safety. At the end of the four years, the student-built vehicles will participate in an over-the-road event, raising the stakes for vehicle, dependability and safety.[115]
AVTC competitions
[edit]In August 2006 Cal State LA became the first university west of the Mississippi and second overall to achieve successful flight powered by fuel cells. The unmanned aerial vehicle was developed by a team of mechanical engineering students working in Cal State LA's Multidisciplinary Flight dynamics and Control Laboratory (MFDCLab).[116][117]
Programs
[edit]Early Entrance Program
[edit]The Early Entrance Program (EEP) is an early college entrance program for gifted individuals of middle school and high school ages. The unique educational program is specifically designed to permit young, highly gifted students to enroll in college as full-time students. The Early Entrance Program was established at California State University, Los Angeles in 1982. The program allows qualified students as young as 12 years of age the opportunity to excel at the university level. The program maintains a population of approximately 130 full-time highly gifted teenaged students known as "EEPsters." Every year, approximately 100 academically gifted students from all over the United States apply to EEP, with around 30 applicants admitted. Students must achieve a minimum score of 550 on the evidence-based reading and writing section and 570 on the mathematics section of the SAT; or at least a 22 in English and a 23 in mathematics on the ACT.[10] After a preliminary interview with the EEP director, prospective students must also undergo a rigorous assessment period called a Provisional Quarter (or "Provie Summer") before final admission.
Forensic sciences
[edit]Cal State LA's growing forensic science program has been a part of the university curriculum since the founding of the school. It is home to one of the few and the longest-operating graduate Criminal Justice and Criminalistics program west of the Mississippi River,[118] located in the new Los Angeles Regional Crime Lab. The new Hertzberg-Davis Forensic Science Center, which was dedicated on May 11, 2007, jointly house the LAPD's Scientific Investigation Division, the L.A. County Sheriff's Department Scientific Services Bureau and Cal State LA Criminal Justice and Criminalistics programs.[119][120]
Sea floor engineering
[edit]Cal State LA also has a comprehensive seafloor-engineering program.[121] Research is conducted at the Naval Facilities Engineering Service Center in Port Hueneme, California.[122] In 2003, Civil engineering professor Mark Tufenkjian led Cal State LA to receive over half a million dollars in grant money. The award of $594,253 is the largest grant ever received by Cal State LA's Department of Civil Engineering.[123]
Cal State LA Experiential Learning
[edit]The Cal State LA spring water (bottled water), sold on campus, is the result of a partnership between the university's administration and the College of Business and Economics. Together the two branches of the university worked together to develop a product that would appeal to the student body and be affordable. The college has developed "experiential" learning projects, which students participate in during their final years of schooling. Other projects have included the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program, where students complete tax returns for small businesses and low-income community members, marketing and site selection research for the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory and a case study for American Apparel.[124][125]
Campus media
[edit]University Times
[edit]The University Times (UT) is a student-run newspaper. The first student newspaper, at that time called The College Times, was published in June 1948 for the first time. In 1965 The College Times was named the best newspaper by California Intercollegiate Press. On October 2, 1972 The College Times changed its name to University Times, in accordance with the change in university status. The name was the popular result of a campus-wide poll, with "Devil's Advocate" coming in second. Larry Hawthorne was the first editor-in-chief of the University Times.[126]
Golden Eagle Radio
[edit]This webcast station started in 2015.[127]
Golden Eagle Productions
[edit]Golden Eagle Productions (also known as GEP) is Cal State LA's primary film and television unit, composed of students creating and producing media content such as news and digital pieces, as well as original films and series.[128]
Greek life
[edit]Excluding the Greek Council and Order of Omega, as of the summer of 2019, the Cal State LA Campus is home to 25 social fraternal organization chapters, 10 fraternities (two new colonies), 13 sororities, and 2 co-ed fraternities.
Intercollegiate athletics
[edit]| Cal State LA Sports Programs[129] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Women's sports | Men's sports | ||
| Basketball | Baseball | ||
| Soccer | Basketball | ||
| Tennis | Soccer | ||
| Cross-country | Cross-country | ||
| Volleyball | Track and field (outdoor) | ||
| Beach Volleyball | |||
| Golf | |||
| Track and field† | |||
| † – Track and field includes both indoor and outdoor. | |||
The Golden Eagles are members of the California Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA) for all sports except women's tennis, which is in the Pacific West Conference, and women's beach volleyball and Indoor Track & Field, which are in the NCAA Division II independent schools. Cal State LA is the only CCAA University who has beach volleyball as a sport. Cal State LA competes in the Division II level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Prior to January, 1981, Cal State LA was known as the Diablos; the change to Golden Eagles was made by then-President James Rosser to create a more inclusive, less stereotypical mascot.[115]
The university fields as of 2019 fourteen intercollegiate teams for men or women in soccer, baseball, basketball, tennis, golf, volleyball, cross country, indoor track, and outdoor track and field.[129] Cal State LA's more than 11 acres (4.5 ha) athletic facility is named the Billie Jean King Sports Complex. The sports complex—which was approved by the CSU Board of Trustees in September 2010—features the Eagle's Nest Arena, the University Stadium, Jesse Owens Track and Field, Reeder Field (baseball), the swimming pool, and tennis and basketball courts. Development project plans for the complex include a new gym, athletic field and the Rosie Casals / Pancho Gonzales tennis center.[130] The center is a new two-story building which will include locker and training rooms on the ground floor with multi-use space and viewing areas on the second floor. It is 7,000 sq. ft. Completion date of fall 2021.
The Eagles Nest is home to the Cal State LA basketball and volleyball teams. The arena seats just over 3,200 fans at full capacity. In 1984, the Eagles Nest hosted the Summer XXIII (23rd) Olympics judo competition. In July 1984 the Olympic mural, Olympic Fantasy, a mosaic tile work by muralist Guillermo "Bill" Granizo, was installed on west side of the arena in remembrance of the event.[131][132][133]
Los Angeles Football Club (LAFC) of Major League Soccer selected Cal State LA in 2017 as the home of its new training facility, soccer operations headquarters, and youth academy.

LAFC trains on the site at the northern gateway of the campus, though it plays its games at BMO Stadium, which opened in 2018 in Exposition Park in South Los Angeles. The arrangement with Cal State LA was approved by the California State University Board of Trustees.[134]
Entering the 2017–2018 school year, Cal State LA has won a total of 75 conference championships in the university's history. This is in addition to the eighth national championships and 10 national runner-up finishes. Besides being located in close proximity to each other, Cal Poly Pomona and Cal State LA have competed heavily as conference rivals.
In 2021 Cal State LA men's soccer won the first national championship in program history. The national championship is the eighth from any sport in school history and Cal State LA's first since 1981.[135]
The surface parking lots immediately south across Hellman Avenue were replaced with soccer fields.[when?] These South Fields will be used by the university students, including students living in the existing student residence halls on site, and supports the Athletics Department programs. The North Field is anticipated to be used as a training soccer field by a major league soccer team, and will also be used as a training field by the community youth soccer organizations.
On Monday July 22, 2024 The Cal State LA Golden Eagles 2023 Women's volleyball team, along with other national champions from the previous academic year, was honored at the White House as part of NCAA Sports Day. The event featured Vice President Kamala Harris and NCAA Senior Vice President of Championships Lynda Tealer, who recognized the accomplishments of the winning teams. Shelby Grubbs, a senior member of the Golden Eagles, reflected on the event's significance, highlighting the team's historic achievement of securing their first national title despite entering the playoffs unranked.[136][137]
- Men's Tennis Team titles: 1963, 1964, 1965
- Football: 1964 (#1 on the UPI poll)
- Men's Track and Field: 1978
- Men's Archery: 1979
- Women's Badminton: 1981
- Men's Soccer: 2021
- Women's volleyball: 2023
Symbols
[edit]University Seal
[edit]The university seal is reserved for legal, formal and ceremonial purposes, including commencement materials, diplomas, transcripts, formal events, presidential documents and gift items from the President's Office. The seal, available in full-color or black-and-white, cannot be used in combination with the Cal State LA logo.[138]
University Mace
[edit]The university Mace is a ceremonial piece symbolizing the authority under which the university is chartered. It is identified with the Office of the President and is carried in academic processions for commencements and other official university gatherings. The honor of serving as mace-bearer is accorded to the Chair of the Academic Senate.
University Badge
[edit]The shield, with its urban architecture angles, represents the enterprising, global city in which it resides. Inside the shield, you will find iconic buildings and landmarks from the Los Angeles skyline. They are drawn to scale and ascend upward, from left to right, pointing toward the future. The thick bordure (outer edge of the shield) has open corners that represent a campus that opens out to the region it serves. The 'A' in Cal State LA, features an eagle's beak at its tip.[139]
Future developments
[edit]Administration and Student Affairs Building Abatement and Demolition
Plans and specifications for the abatement and demolition of the Administration and Student Affairs Buildings are being designed. The overall scope will be to demolish the buildings including their foundations.[140]
Notable alumni
[edit]Notable professors
[edit]See also
[edit]- Ernest E. Debs, Assembly member who sponsored bill establishing the university
- Hispanic Serving Institution
Notes
[edit]- ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
- ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
- ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.
References
[edit]- ^ "History of Cal State LA". California State University, Los Angeles. October 22, 2013. Retrieved April 16, 2020.
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- ^ a b "University Organizational Chart". California State University, Los Angeles. January 8, 2015. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
- ^ a b c d "Fall 24 Fact Sheet" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 22, 2025. Retrieved May 25, 2025.
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{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "University Catalog". California State University, Los Angeles. Retrieved April 28, 2020.
- ^ a b "Early Entrance Program". California State University website. California State University, Los Angeles. March 13, 2015. Retrieved April 28, 2020.
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- ^ John R. Chávez, 1998, Eastside Landmark:A History of the East Los Angeles Community Union, 1968-1993, ISBN 978-0-8047-3333-5, Stanford University Press
- ^ Sustainable Cities and Industrial Ecology in El Sereno Archived 2008-05-24 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Ogden Hoffman, 1862, Reports of Land Cases Determined in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, Numa Hubert, San Francisco
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- ^ J. N. Bowman, "The Rose of Castile", Western Folklore, Vol. 6, No. 3 (Jul., 1947), pp. 204–210, Western States Folklore Society.
- ^ a b c Lloyd, William E. (November 4, 2016). "In Memoriam". California State University, Los Angeles. Cal State LA. Retrieved April 5, 2018.
- ^ McDonald, Howard S. (1955). "Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences--Unique in American Higher Education". In Simpson, Roy E. (ed.). The California State Colleges. Sacramento: California State Department of Education. pp. 139–150.
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- ^ 2009 Golden Eagle mascot gets a make-over Retrieved on September 10, 2009
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- ^ "History of Cal State LA". California State University, Los Angeles. October 22, 2013. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
- ^ Gehring, John (September 20, 2000). "Calif. College-Aid Expansion Mixes Merit With Need". Education Week. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
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- ^ "Los Angeles City College Becomes State College". Hanford Sentinel. Vol. 60, no. 39. August 16, 1947 – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
Dr. Victor Peterson, dean of San Jose State College, has been named acting president of Los Angeles State College, subject to confirmation by the local board of education, it was announced today. Legislation that becomes effective Sept. 19, provides that Los Angeles City College, a two-year school, becomes Los Angeles State College for students attending an authorized third year of classes.
- ^ "Utah Educator to Head New State College". Los Angeles Times. October 2, 1949. p. 3.
Dr. Howard S. McDonald, 55, president of Brigham Young University at Provo, Utah, will be the president of the new Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences... He will be here to assume his new duties Nov. 1.
- ^ "LASC Leader Dr. McDonald Will Retire". Los Angeles Times. May 11, 1962. p. 37.
Dr. Howard S. McDonald, 67, president of Los Angeles State College for 13 years, announced Thursday that be will retire Sept, as administrator of the 16,000-student campus, largest of the state colleges.
- ^ "LASC Graduates Class of 2624". South Pasadena Review. Vol. 74, no. 47. June 11, 1962. p. 4 – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
Awarding degrees for his 13th and final time as president of Los Angeles State Coliege was Dr. Howard S. McDonald, who has announced his plans to retire on September 1.
- ^ "DR. GRAVES NAMED HEAD OF LA. STATE". Los Angeles Times. June 9, 1962. p. 10.
California State College trustees Friday appointed Dr. Albert D. Graves acting president of Los Angeles State College on the retirement of Dr. Howard S. McDonald there.
- ^ "LASC Acting President Tells Plans to Retire". Los Angeles Times. March 20, 1963. p. 29.
Albert D. Graves, acting president of 17,500 student Los Angeles State College, announced his intention to retire Tuesday. His action to leave California's largest state college eliminated him from consideration by California State College trustees as a successor to Howard McDonald, who retired in July.
- ^ "LASC's Largest Grad Class to Hear Graves". Los Angeles Times. June 6, 1963. p. 177.
Dr. Graves will retire from the college in September.
- ^ "Trustees Agree on Site for New State College School". Los Angeles Times. July 13, 1963. p. 2.
The board, of trustees, meeting at the new State Office Building, also appointed Dr. Franklyn A. Johnson, 41, president of Jacksonville (Fla.) University as president of Los Angeles State College which has 17,000 students.
- ^ a b "New Cal Head Lists Chief Problems". Los Angeles Times. November 11, 1965. p. 157.
Retention and recruitment of an able faculty, adequate salaries for them and additional parking spaces for students' cars are his three major problems, says Dr. John Alden Greenlee as he becomes acting president of California State College at Los Angeles. Only four months on the campus which has 20,000 students, Dr. Greenlee will succeed Dr. Franklyn A. Johnson, who leaves today for Washington to become director of the Job Corps in the anti-poverty program.
- ^ "Vacant Post Filled at State College". Los Angeles Times. October 21, 1965. p. 39.
Dr. John A. Greenlee was appointed acting president of California State College at Los Angeles Wednesday to fill the post being vacated by Dr. Franklyn A. Johnson... will assume his new post when Johnson leaves sometime in November.
- ^ "The News of the Day: The State". Los Angeles Times. May 24, 1966. p. 2.
California State College at Los Angeles has named Dr. John A. Greenlee president of the institution. Dr. Greenlee had been acting president of the college since the resignation last November of President Franklyn A. Johnson, who became director of the U.S. Job Corps.
- ^ "Black Educator to Head Cal State L.A. Campus". Los Angeles Times. May 22, 1979. p. 37.
Dr. James M. Rosser, vice chancellor of the New Jersey Department of Education, was named president Monday of California State University, Los Angeles, by the Board of Trustees of the 19-campus state university system... Rosser will become the sixth president of the university sometime before the fall quarter. He succeeds Dr. John A. Greenlee, who is retiring after 14 years.
- ^ "Latin Educators Hit Appointment of Cal State Chief". Los Angeles Times. p. 37.
Trustees, by an 8-7 vote, selected Dr. James Rosser, a New Jersey state education official, to become the new president of Cal State effective Sept. 1.
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- ^ "CSU Trustees Appoint William A. Covino as President of California State University, Los Angeles". Cal State LA. May 22, 2013.
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- ^ a b Los Angeles Times, March 15, 1964, Tom Cameron, "$118 Million Going into Expansion at L.A. State"
- ^ Housing Archived November 27, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
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- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on June 14, 2011. Retrieved January 25, 2014.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Greenlee Plaza | Spotlight". Calstatela.edu. Retrieved July 14, 2016.
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Further reading
[edit]- Dunham, E. Alden. "Colleges of the Forgotten Americans. A Profile of State Colleges and Regional Universities." (McGraw Hill, 1969).
External links
[edit]California State University, Los Angeles
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding and Early Development (1947–1960s)
California State University, Los Angeles traces its origins to the establishment of Los Angeles State College on July 2, 1947, through an act of the California State Legislature, aimed at expanding access to higher education amid surging postwar demand fueled by the G.I. Bill.[5] Classes commenced on September 19, 1947, with an initial enrollment of 160 students, primarily veterans, hosted on the campus of Los Angeles City College near Vermont Avenue and Santa Monica Boulevard.[8] P. Victor Peterson served as the inaugural acting president, overseeing operations focused on applied arts and sciences to address practical workforce needs.[5] Rapid growth marked the institution's early years, with enrollment climbing to 1,092 students by the second semester of 1947–1948 and exceeding 2,000 within two years.[8] The first graduating class, consisting of seven students, received degrees on June 17, 1948, alongside the debut of the student newspaper, The College Times.[5] In September 1949, the college was reconstituted and renamed the Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences, reflecting its emphasis on vocational and professional training, with enrollment reaching 2,187 under the leadership of second president Howard S. McDonald.[5] Athletics programs emerged, including intercollegiate basketball in 1948 and track in 1949, fostering campus spirit amid expanding academic offerings.[8] By 1952, the institution awarded its first master's degrees, signaling maturation beyond undergraduate instruction.[5] Enrollment surged to 7,501 by 1955, necessitating a permanent campus; groundbreaking occurred that year on the current El Sereno site along Ramona Boulevard, selected for its accessibility and capacity for expansion.[8] A satellite campus in the San Fernando Valley opened in 1956 to accommodate northern Los Angeles demand, which later evolved into California State University, Northridge.[8] The transition to the new facility accelerated in fall 1958, when ten buildings—including Library South—were completed, allowing the first classes on the dedicated grounds and marking the shift from temporary quarters.[5] Freshmen arrived in 1959, alongside innovative offerings like the first telecourse, underscoring adaptation to growing student populations through the early 1960s.[5]Expansion and Key Milestones (1970s–1990s)
During the 1970s, California State University, Los Angeles experienced significant infrastructural development and institutional evolution. In 1970, the completion and opening of South Tower and South Hall marked key additions to the campus facilities, enhancing academic and administrative capacity.[5] The institution achieved university status in 1972, leading to its formal renaming as California State University, Los Angeles, which reflected broader systemwide changes in the California State College framework.[5] That same year, the University Times student newspaper was launched on October 2, fostering campus communication.[5] Further expansions included the opening of the University-Student Union in May 1975, providing expanded student services and gathering spaces.[5] Athletic milestones featured the track team's NCAA Division II Championship win in 1977, though intercollegiate football was discontinued that December due to resource constraints.[5] The 1980s brought residential growth and high-profile events amid challenges. Phase I of the Residential Life Complex opened in June 1984, accommodating on-campus housing needs for a growing commuter-heavy student body.[5] The campus hosted judo events for the XXIII Olympiad in July 1984, elevating its profile as a venue for international competitions.[5] In October 1985, the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts commenced operations on campus, establishing a partnership for specialized secondary education.[5] Phase II of the Residential Life Complex followed in September 1987, further expanding housing options.[5] However, the October 1, 1987, Whittier Narrows earthquake inflicted substantial damage, resulting in one student fatality and necessitating repairs that tested institutional resilience.[5] James M. Rosser assumed the presidency in September 1979, guiding the university through this decade of physical and programmatic maturation.[5] In the 1990s, technological and cultural achievements underscored innovation. The Solar Eagle vehicle secured fourth place in the GM Sunrayce USA in June 1990, highlighting engineering student prowess in renewable energy competitions.[5] Approval of the Charter School of Education in 1993 expanded teacher preparation programs, while Solar Eagle II earned third place in Sunrayce 93 that June.[5] Infrastructure advanced with the Metrolink Station opening in October 1994, improving transit access, and the Luckman Fine Arts Complex in November 1994, bolstering performing arts facilities.[5] An alumnus, Samuel T. Durrance, participated in the longest space shuttle mission to date in March 1995, representing a pinnacle of aerospace-related alumni accomplishment.[5] These developments collectively supported enrollment stabilization and program diversification amid statewide higher education pressures.[5]21st-Century Challenges and Adaptations
In the early 2000s, California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) faced fiscal pressures from California's budget crises, including reduced state appropriations following the dot-com bust and subsequent economic downturns, which strained operational funding across the California State University (CSU) system.[9] By the 2010s, persistent underfunding compounded by rising operational costs led to structural deficits, with Cal State LA implementing cost-saving measures such as administrative efficiencies and selective hiring freezes.[10] Enrollment, which peaked around 27,000 students in the mid-2010s, began declining amid demographic shifts and competition from other institutions, dropping to approximately 25,080 by the 2023-2024 academic year and exacerbating revenue shortfalls.[2] [11] Labor disputes emerged as a recurring challenge, particularly in the late 2010s and early 2020s, with faculty from the California Faculty Association staging multiple strikes across CSU campuses, including Cal State LA. In December 2023, one-day rolling strikes disrupted classes at Cal State LA and other sites, demanding higher wages amid inflation and stagnant pay scales; these escalated to a historic five-day systemwide strike in January 2024, affecting thousands of instructors and leading to canceled lectures and exams.[12] [13] The actions concluded with a tentative agreement granting 5% raises and other benefits, though underlying tensions over compensation persisted.[14] The COVID-19 pandemic prompted rapid adaptations, with Cal State LA shifting nearly all instruction online by spring 2020 and maintaining predominantly virtual formats through spring 2021 to comply with health guidelines and mitigate transmission risks.[15] Faculty received training in remote teaching tools, and the university archived community experiences via a digital "Pandemic Diaries Project" to document impacts.[16] Post-pandemic, enrollment recovery lagged, but demand for hybrid and online options grew, reflecting broader student preferences for flexibility; however, high failure and withdrawal rates in foundational courses like chemistry and calculus—exceeding 30% in some CSU programs—highlighted equity gaps in virtual delivery, particularly for first-generation and low-income students.[17] [18] Recent years have seen intensified campus disruptions from protests, notably pro-Palestinian demonstrations in spring 2024 that occupied and barricaded the student services building, trapping President Berenecea Eanes Johnson in her office for hours and prompting delayed police intervention due to operational constraints.[19] [20] In response, Cal State LA enacted stricter time, place, and manner rules prohibiting encampments, overnight stays, and masks concealing identities during demonstrations, aiming to balance free expression with campus operations.[21] These events drew federal scrutiny, including a 2025 investigation by the U.S. Department of Education into alleged antisemitism across CSU campuses, citing complaints of hostile environments for Jewish students amid protest rhetoric.[22] Ongoing state funding deferrals, totaling $144 million systemwide for 2025-2026, have forced further adaptations like course reductions and potential layoffs at Cal State LA, where a $32 million deficit loomed in 2024-2025 from enrollment shortfalls and aid cuts.[23] [24]University Presidents and Leadership Transitions
![Berenecea Johnson Eanes, current President of California State University, Los Angeles][float-right] California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) has had nine presidents since its founding as Los Angeles State College in 1947.[25] The leadership has generally transitioned through retirements, with occasional acting or interim appointments to ensure continuity.[5] The following table lists the presidents chronologically, including tenures and roles:| No. | Name | Tenure | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | P. Victor Peterson | 1947–1949 | Acting president; oversaw initial enrollment growth from 225 to 1,092 students and first graduating class in 1948.[25] |
| 2 | Howard S. McDonald | 1949–1962 | Directed campus relocation to current site (groundbreaking 1955, first buildings 1958); retired.[25] [5] |
| - | Albert D. Graves | 1962–1963 | Acting president; appointed 88 new faculty and secured first Peace Corps training contract.[25] [5] |
| 3 | Franklyn Arthur Johnson | 1963–1966 | Oversaw national ranking of football team and renaming to California State College at Los Angeles in 1964; departed for federal role.[25] |
| 4 | John E. Greenlee | 1966–1979 | Implemented quarter system (1967), established first Chicano Studies Department (1968); retired.[25] [5] |
| 5 | James M. Rosser | 1979–2013 | Longest-serving president (34 years); led expansions including student housing and hosted 1984 Olympic events; retired.[25] [5] |
| 6 | William A. Covino | 2013–2023 | Enhanced rankings, diversity initiatives, and new academic centers; retired effective July 31, 2023.[25] |
| - | Leroy M. Morishita | July 31, 2023–January 7, 2024 | Interim president with over 40 years in CSU system.[25] [26] |
| 7 | Berenecea Johnson Eanes | January 8, 2024–present | First woman president; appointed September 13, 2023, by CSU Board of Trustees.[25] [26] [27] |
Campus and Facilities
Location, Layout, and Infrastructure
California State University, Los Angeles is situated at 5151 State University Drive in the University Hills neighborhood of eastern Los Angeles, California.[29][30] The main campus encompasses a 175-acre hilltop site overlooking the San Gabriel Mountains, offering an elevated urban setting proximate to downtown Los Angeles.[31][32] The campus layout centers on an academic core featuring buildings such as the John F. Kennedy Memorial Library, University-Student Union, and Golden Eagle complex with administrative offices, bookstore, and food services.[33] Academic facilities include the Annenberg Science Complex, Biological Sciences building, Engineering and Technology structure, Fine Arts gallery, King Hall, and Music facilities.[33] Athletic amenities comprise Jesse Owens Track, Reeder Field, tennis and basketball courts, and the University Gymnasium, while support areas house residence halls, the Student Health Center, and career services.[33] Parking infrastructure consists of structures A through E and lots 1 through 11, facilitating vehicle access across the terrain.[33] Infrastructure development is coordinated by the Facilities, Planning, Design and Construction department, which manages the design, construction, and maintenance of facilities to enhance learning and collaboration.[34] Space Management handles physical space improvements and allocations through dedicated committees.[35] Transportation options include the on-campus Cal State LA Transit Center serving Metro and Foothill Transit buses, alongside a Metrolink station for regional rail connections.[36][37] Enrolled students access unlimited rides via the Metro U-Pass program on participating LA County transit systems.[38]Student Housing and Residential Options
California State University, Los Angeles provides on-campus housing through three primary facilities: South Village, University Apartments, and Golden Eagle Apartments, offering a combined operational capacity of 2,576 beds.[39] In fall 2025, these residences housed 1,522 students at 72% occupancy, comprising about 8% of the total student body.[39] South Village, a traditional-style residence hall that opened in fall 2021, accommodates primarily undergraduate students aged 23 and younger, with one tower reserved for those aged 21 to 23.[40] It features double and triple occupancy rooms equipped with extra-long twin beds, desks, chairs, and wardrobes, alongside shared community restrooms and showers.[40] Amenities include Wi-Fi, television and streaming services, on-site laundry, a learning center, community kitchens, central heating and air conditioning, wellness zones, and floor-specific study and TV lounges; residents in South Village are required to purchase meal plans.[40][41] University Apartments, divided into Phases I and II, offer apartment-style accommodations with full kitchens including stoves, ovens, refrigerators, microwaves, and double sinks, plus central heating and air.[42] Phase I units consist of two bedrooms and one bathroom, housing four or eight residents with balconies, while Phase II units provide two- or four-bedroom configurations with two bathrooms, accommodating four or eight residents and featuring patios or balconies.[42] Furnishings encompass extra-long twin beds, desks, chairs, dressers, living room couches, dining sets, and window blinds; utilities, Wi-Fi, television services, laundry facilities, and a community center with 24/7 assistance are included.[42] Golden Eagle Apartments provide fully furnished independent living with single-occupancy bedrooms, major kitchen appliances, heating and air conditioning units, Wi-Fi, television access, and on-site laundry facilities, typically housing two or three residents per unit and appealing to graduate students.[43][44] Across all facilities, special interest communities support themed living environments to enhance connection and belonging based on shared academic or personal interests.[45] Academic year 2025-2026 housing rates vary by facility and room type, incorporating a $30 non-refundable program fee per semester and a $100 damage deposit, with detailed pricing available through the housing portal.[46] The university also offers resources for off-campus housing, including homestays, apartments, and extended-stay hotels, particularly for international students.[47]Campus Safety, Crime Trends, and Security Measures
The Department of Public Safety at California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) oversees campus security, led by Chief Larry Bohannon and staffed by officers including CSU alumni. It provides 24/7 patrol services, emergency response via 911 integration, and the Eagle Alert system for real-time notifications of threats or advisories to students, faculty, and staff.[48] Additional measures include active shooter response training videos emphasizing avoidance, denial, and confrontation strategies; educational presentations on crime prevention; and a safety escort service for nighttime transport.[48] The department collaborates with the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) for data sharing and incident response, while infrastructure features emergency blue light phones, security cameras, and access controls in residential areas to facilitate rapid intervention.[49] Crime statistics, mandated under the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act, are compiled annually from reports to university police, local law enforcement, and campus security authorities. The 2024 Annual Security Report details on-campus incidents for 2021–2023, showing low but fluctuating rates of violent crimes alongside rising property offenses, particularly motor vehicle thefts amid broader Los Angeles-area trends in catalytic converter and vehicle targeting.[49]| Crime Category | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Murder/Non-negligent Manslaughter | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Rape | 1 | 4 | 1 |
| Robbery | 0 | 3 | 1 |
| Aggravated Assault | 2 | 2 | 2 |
| Burglary | 9 | 13 | 9 |
| Motor Vehicle Theft | 7 | 19 | 25 |
| Arson | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Administration and Governance
Organizational Structure and Affiliations
California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) functions as one of 23 campuses in the California State University (CSU) system, a public university network established under the California State University and Colleges Act of 1960 and governed by the CSU Board of Trustees, whose members are appointed by the Governor of California with Senate confirmation. The CSU Chancellor, as the system's chief executive, directs statewide policy, budget allocation, and academic standards, while delegating operational authority to individual campus presidents who report directly to the chancellor. This hierarchical structure ensures system-wide coordination amid local autonomy, with Cal State LA's president overseeing approximately 1,200 faculty and 2,500 staff as of fiscal year 2023-2024.[52] Leadership at Cal State LA is headed by President Berenecea Johnson Eanes, appointed by the CSU Board of Trustees on September 20, 2023, and inaugurated on January 8, 2024, as the university's ninth and first female president.[53] Beneath the president, the administrative framework comprises divisions including Academic Affairs (led by the Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs), Student Affairs, Administrative Services, and Advancement and Development, coordinated through a Chief of Staff and supported by units such as Strategic Presidential Engagement, as detailed in the university's January 2024 organization chart. These divisions manage core functions like curriculum delivery, enrollment services, facilities, and fundraising, with cross-functional teams addressing operational efficiencies. Shared governance integrates input from faculty via the Academic Senate, which advises on academic policy under CSU-mandated procedures; staff through representative councils; and students through Associated Students, Incorporated (ASI), a nonprofit auxiliary established in 1948 and governed by an annually elected Board of Directors representing the student body of over 26,000. ASI oversees student programs, fees, and facilities independently but aligns with university policies, exemplifying the system's auxiliary model where such entities operate with fiscal autonomy under presidential oversight.[54] Cal State LA maintains regional accreditation from the WSCUC since 1954, subjecting it to periodic reviews for institutional effectiveness, with the most recent reaffirmation in 2019 extending through 2024.[55] System affiliations include participation in CSU-wide initiatives like the California State University Affordable Learning Solutions program for cost reduction and collaborative research consortia, while campus-specific ties encompass federal designations as a Hispanic-Serving Institution (enrolling over 50% Hispanic undergraduates since 1995), Minority-Serving Institution, and Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander-Serving Institution, influencing grant eligibility and programmatic focus.[52][56]Budget Management and Financial Challenges
The Budget Office at California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) oversees all phases of the university's budget, including planning, development, implementation, management, monitoring, and reporting, while providing guidance to academic and operational units to ensure efficient resource allocation.[57] Campus budgets are derived from allocations set by the California State University (CSU) Chancellor's Office, adjusted for strategic initiatives approved by the university president, with primary funding sources comprising state General Fund appropriations (approximately 60% systemwide) and student tuition and fees (40%).[58] [59] Cal State LA has encountered persistent structural deficits amid broader CSU system pressures, recording a $32.4 million shortfall for the 2024-25 fiscal year driven by declining enrollment, inadequate state support, and escalating operational costs.[10] [60] Enrollment fell 7.8% in fall 2023, positioning the campus 5.3% below budgeted targets and reducing both state funding and tuition revenue, as CSU receives no additional state dollars for enrollment above baseline targets.[61] [10] State funding for the CSU system totals $5.4 billion in the proposed 2025-26 budget, reflecting a net $122 million reduction after offsets, amid a $375 million ongoing cut that exacerbates campus-level gaps.[62] Rising expenses, including a $17 million compensation shortfall (after partial state coverage of $8 million for $25 million in employee cost increases) and inflation-driven hikes in healthcare and pensions from 2021-23, further strain resources.[10] To address these challenges, university leadership imposed a 12.4% across-the-board cut to all divisions in 2024-25, alongside a hiring freeze, deferral of capital projects, restrictions on non-essential travel and purchases, and efforts to generate revenue through space rentals and new programs.[10] [60] These measures follow reduction strategies initiated in 2023-24, continuing into subsequent years, and align with systemwide responses such as a 5.4% tuition increase yielding $188 million more in revenue.[10] [62] Consequences include a 6.9% reduction in course sections offered, leading to larger class sizes, limited elective availability, and extended time-to-degree for students, with systemwide elimination of 1,430 sections across select campuses in 2025.[10] [63] Potential layoffs and further program cuts loom if enrollment recovery falters or state support remains insufficient, as highlighted in a September 25, 2025, budget town hall.[23] [10]Political Climate, Ideological Leanings, and Governance Controversies
California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) exhibits a predominantly left-leaning ideological environment, consistent with broader trends in public higher education institutions in California, where faculty and student activism often aligns with progressive causes such as diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives and opposition to conservative policies. In 2016, university president William Covino initially canceled a scheduled speech by conservative commentator Ben Shapiro, citing concerns that the event's title—"Facts Don't Care About Your Feelings"—and proposed topics on multiculturalism and "the diversity problem" could exacerbate campus tensions amid recent racial incidents, prompting accusations of ideological censorship from free speech advocates.[64] Following public backlash, Covino reversed the decision, rescheduling the event in a modified format with additional panels, which supporters framed as an endorsement of intellectual diversity but critics viewed as a reluctant concession to external pressure rather than a commitment to unrestricted conservative discourse.[65] The campus political climate features frequent student and faculty protests reflecting left-wing priorities, including opposition to federal policies perceived as threats to academic freedom and diversity programs. In March 2025, Cal State LA students and faculty participated in demonstrations addressing multiple grievances, such as budget cuts, administrative overreach, and solidarity with pro-Palestinian causes amid national debates over campus encampments.[66] Tensions have escalated around free speech restrictions, exemplified by a 2022 incident where police removed a faculty member from a mayoral debate on campus for attempting to question a candidate, drawing rallies from supporters who argued it exemplified administrative intolerance for dissent.[67] The California State University (CSU) system's 2024 adoption of stricter protest policies—banning encampments and masking to conceal identities—has been criticized by faculty unions as chilling speech on issues like Gaza, though administrators maintain these measures ensure viewpoint-neutral order.[68][69] Governance controversies at Cal State LA intersect with ideological divides, particularly in handling federal scrutiny over alleged antisemitism and DEI-related disclosures. In September 2025, the Trump administration initiated a systemwide investigation into the CSU, including Cal State LA, for potential antisemitism and racial discrimination following post-October 7, 2023, campus protests, prompting the disclosure of employee personal data that sparked lawsuits from the California Faculty Association (CFA) accusing the administration of violating privacy without due process.[7][70] The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) concurrently probed similar allegations, amid claims from critics that progressive activism has tolerated antisemitic rhetoric under the guise of anti-Zionism, while defenders, including groups like CAIR, framed the inquiries as politically motivated attacks on free speech.[71][72] Broader CSU governance issues, such as inadequate responses to sexual harassment complaints and administrative retaliation, have fueled faculty no-confidence motions, with audits revealing systemic failures in Title IX processes that led to 2024 reforms.[73][74] These episodes highlight tensions between administrative deference to federal oversight and institutional commitments to progressive ideologies, with sources like faculty unions often attributing controversies to external conservative pressures rather than internal policy shortcomings.[75]Academics
Colleges, Departments, and Academic Units
California State University, Los Angeles is organized into six colleges that collectively house nearly 50 academic departments, divisions, and interdisciplinary programs offering over 140 bachelor's and master's degrees, along with doctoral programs in select fields.[76] These colleges encompass disciplines ranging from humanities and sciences to professional fields like engineering and health sciences, supporting the university's emphasis on applied learning and regional workforce needs.[32] The College of Arts and Letters focuses on creative and communicative disciplines, including departments of Art, Communication Studies, English, Journalism and Public Relations, Languages and Literatures, Liberal Studies, Modern Jewish Studies, Music, Philosophy, Television, Film and Media, and Theatre and Dance. It offers programs in areas such as creative writing, performing arts, and media production, with enrollment supporting interdisciplinary initiatives in cultural studies.[76] The College of Business and Economics provides instruction in accounting, economics, finance, information systems, management, and marketing through its departments, emphasizing practical business skills and entrepreneurial training aligned with Los Angeles' economic landscape. It includes specialized centers for small business development and international trade.[76] The Charter College of Education, designated as a charter college in 2005 to promote innovative teacher preparation, houses departments of Curriculum and Instruction, Educational Leadership, and Special Education, offering credentials, master's, and a Ph.D. in special education with a focus on equity and urban education challenges.[76][32] The College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology includes departments of Civil Engineering, Computer Science, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Technology, supporting programs in aviation administration, fire protection administration, and sustainable engineering practices, with hands-on labs and industry partnerships.[76][77] The Rongxiang Xu College of Health and Human Services, named in recognition of donor support, encompasses departments of Communication Disorders, Dietetics and Food Administration, Family and Consumer Sciences, Kinesiology and Nutritional Science, Nursing, Public Health, and Social Work, addressing public health needs through clinical training and community outreach in underserved areas.[76] The College of Natural and Social Sciences, the largest by faculty size with over 150 members, features departments of Anthropology, Biological Sciences, Chemistry and Biochemistry, Economics and Statistics, Geosciences and Environment, History, Mathematics, Pan-African Studies, Physics and Astronomy, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology, and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies, fostering research in STEM and social sciences with facilities like the California Forensic Science Institute.[76][78]Signature Programs, Centers, and Research Initiatives
California State University, Los Angeles maintains several centers and initiatives emphasizing applied research and interdisciplinary programs, particularly in STEM fields and public service. The Department of Television, Film, and Media Studies stands out for its practical curriculum in production, post-production, screenwriting, and media studies, capitalizing on the university's proximity to the entertainment industry in Los Angeles.[79] This program offers Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees, equipping students with skills for media careers through hands-on projects and facilities like the dedicated Television, Film and Media Studies Center.[79] In engineering and technology, historical student-led efforts such as the Solar Eagle solar car projects exemplify innovative research, with Solar Eagle III securing the national championship at Sunrayce 97 and participating in international competitions like the World Solar Challenge.[80] [81] Current STEM research is bolstered by the Maximizing Opportunities for Research Excellence (MORE) Programs, which provide undergraduate and graduate training, including the Research Infrastructure for Science and Engineering (RISE) collaborative MS-to-PhD pathways with UCLA, UC Irvine, UC San Diego, and other institutions.[82] The university's elevation to Carnegie Research 2 (R2) status in 2025 highlights expanded research expenditures exceeding $5 million annually and doctoral production.[83] Recent grants underscore targeted initiatives in sustainability and advanced materials. The College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology (ECST) received a $5 million National Science Foundation (NSF) grant in 2022 to establish a research center for urban sustainability, focusing on energy efficiency, water management, and environmental technologies tailored to dense urban settings.[84] In 2024, a $1 million NSF Partnerships for Research and Education in Materials (PREM) grant, partnered with UC Irvine, funds the Center for Bioinspired and Architectured Materials, advancing nanoscale research for applications in biomimicry and structural engineering.[85] Additional NSF funding, such as $880,000 in 2022 for STEM diversity pathways and $499,867 in 2025 for data-driven math education with Pasadena City College, supports broadening participation in technical fields.[86] [87] The Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs integrates empirical research into civic university initiatives, informing policy through data-driven analysis of governance and community issues.[88] Uniquely, the Prison Graduation Initiative, launched as California's first in-person prison education program (PEP) for bachelor's degree completion, delivers coursework to incarcerated students, achieving higher retention rates than traditional distance models through direct faculty interaction.[89] These efforts reflect Cal State LA's emphasis on accessible, impact-oriented research amid resource constraints typical of regional public universities.Enrollment Trends, Graduation Rates, and Performance Metrics
Total enrollment at California State University, Los Angeles, totaled 25,080 students during the 2023-2024 academic year, comprising 21,527 undergraduates and 3,553 graduate students.[2] Undergraduate enrollment for fall 2024 was reported at 19,354, reflecting a decline from prior years amid system-wide demographic shifts, pandemic disruptions, and competition from other institutions.[31] This aligns with broader California State University trends, where overall enrollment dipped post-2020 before a 2% system increase to 461,000 in fall 2024, primarily from record first-time freshman gains, though campus-specific variations persist due to local economic factors and transfer patterns from community colleges.[90] Graduation rates have improved under the CSU's Graduation Initiative 2025, targeting a 55% six-year rate for first-time students while addressing equity gaps. The four-year graduation rate for first-time freshmen rose from 7% in earlier cohorts to 25% in recent years.[91] The six-year graduation rate stands at 53% within 150% of normal program time, below the CSU system average of 62% for the 2018 cohort but showing progress from 47.1% for the 2011 cohort.[92][93] Transfer students from California community colleges achieve a two-year graduation rate around 50%, with incremental gains noted in GI 2025 reports.[94] First-year retention for full-time freshmen is 83%, exceeding state and national averages for public universities but indicating room for improvement in sophomore progression amid high commuter populations and socioeconomic diversity.[95] Performance metrics highlight persistent disparities, with lower rates for underrepresented groups despite targeted interventions; for instance, Latino male freshmen in the 2018 cohort trailed the system average by several points.[96] Overall, these indicators reflect causal pressures from underprepared incoming cohorts, limited advising resources, and external barriers like work obligations, rather than institutional shortcomings alone.[97]Rankings and Comparative Assessments
In the 2026 U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges rankings, California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) is tied for #13 among Regional Universities in the West, an improvement from #15 the prior year, reflecting metrics such as graduation rates, faculty resources, and student selectivity.[98] It ranks #8 among public regional universities in the West and #7 nationally for social mobility among regional schools, based on access for economically disadvantaged students and graduation outcomes.[98] The university also places #14 in Best Value Schools for the region, evaluating net cost against academic quality.[98] Program-specific rankings highlight strengths in applied fields. U.S. News ranks Cal State LA's undergraduate engineering programs #26 among schools offering doctorates, emphasizing performance in areas like civil and mechanical engineering.[98] Its accounting program was ranked #1 in California for 2024 by Best Value Schools, considering factors like tuition affordability and job placement, marking the fourth consecutive year at that position.[99] Operations management ranks #3 among affordable programs nationally per the same source.[99] In online education, Cal State LA placed #8 among U.S. public universities in 2024 rankings by a college guide, assessing course quality and student support.[100] Comparatively, Cal State LA outperforms many peers in value and mobility within the California State University system, which prioritizes teaching over research relative to University of California campuses. It topped the 2025 California Mobility Index by the College Futures Foundation for upward mobility, measuring low-income student access and completion rates ahead of other CSUs.[101] Money.com's 2025 rankings placed it among the top 40 U.S. colleges overall for return on investment, with nine CSU campuses in the five-star category but Cal State LA distinguished for regional impact.[102] Niche's 2024 assessments rank it #99 for Best Value Colleges nationally out of 1,563 and #181 for communications programs, though it trails elite CSUs like Cal Poly San Luis Obispo in selectivity and research output.[103] Globally, QS World University Rankings position it at 1401+ for 2025, reflecting limited international research prominence typical of regional publics.[104]| Ranking Category | Position | Source (Year) |
|---|---|---|
| Regional Universities West | #13 (tie) | U.S. News (2026)[98] |
| Top Public Regional Universities West | #8 | U.S. News (2026)[98] |
| Social Mobility (Regional) | #7 | U.S. News (2026)[98] |
| Best Value Regional | #14 | U.S. News (2026)[98] |
| Undergraduate Engineering | #26 | U.S. News (2026)[98] |
| Upward Mobility (CA) | #1 | College Futures Foundation (2025)[101] |
| Best Value Colleges (National) | #99 | Niche (2024)[103] |
Faculty and Staff
Composition, Diversity, and Hiring Practices
The instructional faculty at California State University, Los Angeles comprises approximately 2,817 members, with women holding 54.35% of positions (1,531) and men 45.65% (1,286).[105] Racial and ethnic composition reflects greater diversity than the CSU system average, with White faculty at 34.05% (932), Asian at 20.94% (573), Black or African American at 8.18% (224), and multi-ethnic at 1.24% (34); the remaining approximately 35% includes Hispanic or Latino and other groups, though exact breakdowns beyond these categories are not uniformly reported in aggregate data.[106] This distribution marks Cal State LA as having the highest racial/ethnic diversity among CSU campuses, where Whites constituted only 45% as of 2016, a figure that has since declined further relative to systemwide trends showing persistent White majorities elsewhere.[107] Faculty demographics lag behind the student body, which is over 60% Hispanic or Latino, highlighting underrepresentation of this group among instructors despite campus-specific diversity exceeding CSU norms.[108] Systemwide, CSU faculty remain predominantly White (around 60% in recent tenured/tenure-track data) and less reflective of California's demographics, with Latinx representation notably low compared to enrollment patterns.[109] [110] The university's Division of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging (DEIB) oversees initiatives to foster an inclusive environment for faculty recruitment and retention, emphasizing outreach to underrepresented groups.[111] Hiring practices align with CSU system policies, which prioritize broadening applicant pools through targeted recruitment and annual reporting on demographics of new hires, including tenure-track instructional faculty, librarians, and counselors; for instance, the 2024 CSU hiring summary tracks probationary and tenured appointments by race, gender, and ethnicity to monitor progress toward diversification goals.[112] Post-Proposition 209 (1996), which prohibits race- and gender-based preferences in California public employment, practices rely on expanded outreach rather than quotas, though federal probes into related systems like the University of California have scrutinized race-conscious metrics for potential Title VII violations.[113] No campus-specific controversies over merit dilution in hiring at Cal State LA are documented, but systemwide underrepresentation persists, potentially linked to pipeline limitations and competitive national markets for PhDs from underrepresented backgrounds.[107]Notable Faculty Achievements and Recognitions
Faculty members at California State University, Los Angeles, receive annual recognition through the Outstanding Professor Award, which honors sustained excellence in teaching, scholarly activity, and service to the university and community. In the 2024-25 academic year, recipients included Devika Hazra from the Department of Economics and Statistics in the College of Business and Economics, for her research on gender-based violence and inequality as well as leadership as Academic Senate Vice Chair; Eun-Young Kang from the Department of Computer Science in the College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology, who secured over $5.5 million in grants for equity-focused computing initiatives; Rupa Purasinghe from Civil Engineering in the same college, noted for leading departments and fostering industry partnerships; and Patrick Sharp from Liberal Studies in the College of Arts and Letters, recognized for co-leading program development and authoring works on speculative fiction.[114][115] The Outstanding Lecturer Award, given to non-tenure-track instructors for teaching and mentoring, went to Dinur Blum from Sociology in the College of Natural and Social Sciences in 2025, for research on student-athlete success and mentorship.[114][115] System-wide honors from the California State University include the Wang Family Excellence Award, which recognizes extraordinary commitment to student success and institutional mission; David Blekhman, a professor of technology in the College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology, received this in 2023 for founding the Hydrogen Research and Fueling Facility and securing over $36 million in grants for hydrogen technology research.[114] Blekhman also earned the President's Distinguished Professor Award at Cal State LA in 2025, highlighting superlative teaching and professional accomplishments.[114] Several faculty have garnered national and international distinctions, particularly through the Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program, which supports advanced research and teaching abroad. In 2025, Olaseni “Seni” Sode, associate professor of chemistry in the College of Natural and Social Sciences, received a Fulbright award to conduct research in France on sustainable materials.[116] J. Chris Bachman, associate professor of mechanical engineering, was selected for a 2025-26 Fulbright to Mexico to advance U.S.-Mexico engineering collaborations.[117] Arturo Pacheco-Vega, professor of mechanical engineering, obtained a 2025 Fulbright to the Czech Republic for thermal management studies.[118] Andrew Lyndon Knighton, professor of English in the College of Arts and Letters, received a 2024 Fulbright to teach literature and theater in Taiwan.[119] These awards, competitive and peer-reviewed, underscore faculty contributions to global scholarship amid Cal State LA's emphasis on applied and equity-driven research.[120]Faculty Governance and Academic Freedom Issues
In May 2022, during a Los Angeles mayoral debate hosted on campus, Pan-African studies professor Melina Abdullah was forcibly removed by campus police after attending without a ticket and being asked to leave; she had been sitting quietly prior to the escalation, which involved four officers carrying her out.[67] University President William Covino initially attributed the incident to the ticketing policy but later issued a public apology, acknowledging the removal as unwarranted and committing to revised protocols for campus events to prevent similar occurrences.[67] Faculty members, including through the California Faculty Association, condemned the action as potential overreach, proposing a no-confidence vote against Covino and raising broader questions about equitable access to political discourse on campus and the balance between event security and expressive rights.[67] [121] The Academic Senate has addressed academic freedom through policy revisions, notably in spring 2025 when the Faculty Policy Committee proposed integrating the standalone Principles of Academic Freedom into a consolidated Faculty Rights policy, emphasizing protections for research, publication, classroom discussion, and extramural speech while subjecting these to professional duties.[122] This change aimed to enhance clarity and accessibility in the Faculty Handbook, responding to presidential concerns and ensuring faculty recourse against institutional critiques from students, peers, or administrators.[122] The revisions maintain traditional freedoms—such as immunity from censorship when speaking as citizens—but tie them to accountability, amid ongoing senate discussions on shared governance amid budget pressures.[123] In 2025, federal investigations into alleged antisemitism under Title VI prompted the CSU system, including Cal State LA, to disclose personal information of faculty and staff potentially involved in campus protests, sparking lawsuits from the California Faculty Association alleging privacy violations and a chilling effect on academic expression.[124] [125] Faculty expressed anxiety over retaliatory scrutiny of speech related to Israel-Palestine issues, with the union arguing that compelled disclosures undermine professional autonomy despite the probes' basis in reported incidents of harassment.[126] [125] The Academic Senate passed resolutions opposing administrative expansions perceived to limit peaceful protest, framing them as encroachments on union-protected activities and faculty input in policy. These tensions highlight conflicts between compliance with federal civil rights mandates and safeguarding extramural discourse, with critics from faculty ranks viewing the disclosures as politically motivated despite evidence of campus disruptions warranting review.[127] [128]Student Life
Extracurricular Organizations and Campus Activities
California State University, Los Angeles maintains over 150 registered student organizations, covering academic, cultural, professional, recreational, and service categories, all requiring annual registration through the Center for Student Involvement (CSI).[129] [130] CSI provides support including funding access, event planning assistance, and leadership training to foster student-led initiatives.[130] These groups enable students to pursue interests beyond coursework, such as professional networking in fields like accounting via the Accounting Society or Latino-focused business through ALPFA.[131] Cultural and identity-based organizations include language-specific clubs like the Asociación de Estudiantes de Español, Chinese Culture Club, French Club, and Japanese Student Association, alongside honors societies such as Sigma Delta Pi for Spanish.[132] Discipline-oriented groups feature the Association of Student Social Workers (ASSW) and Masters of Social Work Student Organization (MSWSO) in social work, as well as political science clubs facilitating discussions and events.[133] [134] Financial and honors societies, including the Financial Management Association, Beta Gamma Sigma, and Phi Kappa Phi, offer career development and recognition opportunities.[135] Campus activities extend through the University-Student Union (U-SU), which organizes events like movie nights, arts and crafts sessions, leadership workshops, pet therapy, and off-campus trips to theme parks or musical theaters.[136] The Associated Students, Inc., in partnership with U-SU, supports broader involvement including community service projects, virtual fitness programs, e-sports, and alumni mentoring.[137] [129] Additional programming features lectures, symposia, music performances, theater productions, film screenings, and cultural events such as Día de los Muertos celebrations with music, performances, and ofrendas.[138] [139] Cross Cultural Centers further promote multicultural engagement via targeted events and resources.[140]

