University of California, Santa Cruz

  • Founded: 1962
  • Address: 1156 High St, Santa Cruz, CA - California, United States (Map)
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Since its founding in 1965, the University of California, Santa Cruz, has earned international distinction as a university with high-impact research and an uncommon commitment to teaching and public service.

A campus with world-class facilities and one of the most visually spectacular settings in higher education, UC Santa Cruz offers rigorous academic programs and cutting-edge research opportunities that teach students how to think, not what to think.A commitment to environmental stewardship and community engagement are central to UCSC's core values.From 652 students in 1965, the campus has grown to its current (2016-17) enrollment of more than 18,000 students. Undergraduates pursue bachelor's degrees in 65 different majors supervised by divisional deans of arts, engineering, humanities, physical & biological sciences, and social sciences. Graduate students work toward graduate certificates, master's degrees, or doctoral degrees in 41 academic programs under the supervision of the divisional and graduate deans.

Faculty and emeriti who have been attracted to Santa Cruz include 10 members of the National Academy of Sciences, 22 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and 34 members of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

In competition with scholars throughout the United States, UC Santa Cruz students and alumni have won National Science Foundation Fellowships, Fulbrights, Guggenheims, and other prestigious awards in numbers that far exceed expectations for a campus of this size.For more information, please see the Campus Achievements web site and the campus's An International Reputation for Excellence factsheet. And visit 50years.ucsc.edu, a special web site commemorating the campus's 50th anniversary.

All undergraduates, whether they live on campus or off, are affiliated with one of the UC Santa Cruz colleges (Cowell, Stevenson, Crown, Merrill, Porter, Kresge, Oakes, Rachel Carson, Nine, and Ten). Students may take classes in any number of colleges and academic units throughout the campus; core courses within each college provide a common academic base for first-year and transfer students.

In addition to their course work on campus, many UC Santa Cruz students participate in fieldwork or field study programs. Off-campus internships are an integral part of programs in community studies, economics, environmental studies, health sciences, Latin American and Latino studies, psychology, and teacher education. More information is available about academic field study programs, as well as other available internships off campus, from the UC Santa Cruz Career Center.Students also can arrange to study at other UC campuses, at the University of New Hampshire or the University of New Mexico, in Sacramento, in Washington, D.C., or at host institutions affiliated with the UC Education Abroad Program.

At the conclusion of work in their major, all UCSC seniors must pass a comprehensive examination or, in some majors, complete a senior thesis or equivalent body of work.

Graduate study began at UC Santa Cruz in 1966 with programs in astronomy, biology, and history of consciousness, a program that combines the humanistic disciplines with links to the social sciences, natural sciences, and arts. In 1967, graduate programs in chemistry, literature, and Earth & planetary sciences were introduced.Today, UC Santa Cruz offers graduate study in 41 different advanced-degree programs. Please see the Graduate Studies web site for additional information.

In 1997, building on the campus's core Computer Science and Computer Engineering Departments, UCSC began its first professional school, the Jack Baskin School of Engineering, and introduced a new undergraduate electrical engineering major. This was followed the next year by a major in information systems management. In 1997-98, UC Santa Cruz began offering a "distance-learning" version of the M.S. in computer engineering, with a concentration in networking engineering, at its Silicon Valley facilities. In 2001, an undergraduate major in bioinformatics was launched and, in 2003, M.S. and Ph.D programs in bioinformatics were initiated. The engineering school has continued to expand its academic offerings, and today students can enroll in 10 undergraduate and 13 graduate-degree programs.

In 2003, retired engineer and philanthropist Jack Baskin — whose $5 million gift had established UCSC's engineering school — made additional gifts to the campus for a new engineering building, Engineering 2, and established an endowed chair in the Department of Biomolecular Engineering.

In conjunction with graduate teaching and intellectual inquiry, the campus is home to two Organized Research Units: the Institute of Marine Sciences and Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics. The University of California Observatories/Lick Observatory is a Multicampus Research Unit headquartered at UC Santa Cruz. UC's Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics (IGPP), a Multicampus Research Unit, includes a branch on the UCSC campus established in 1999. UC Santa Cruz also is one of several UC campuses sponsoring the Institute for Quantitative Biomedical Research (QB3), and the Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society (CITRIS), two of the California Institutes for Science and Innovation established in 2000-02. More details and a complete list of research groups are available at the research programs web site.

Over the years, UC Santa Cruz researchers in these units have been generously supported by contracts and grants — speaking to the value of their research activities. In the past five years (2011-12 through 2015-16), support in this form totaled $680 million.

The 10 UC Santa Cruz undergraduate colleges — each a separate community with its own buildings and administration — are built around a core of shared university facilities. These include the main and science/engineering libraries, performing arts buildings, visual arts studios, classrooms, computer facilities, and a complex of highly specialized buildings for the physical and biological sciences, and for engineering. Athletic facilities are provided on the east and west sides of the campus.

Significant private funds — gifts valued at more than $75 million in 2015-16 — have been donated to build or enhance academic, student-life, and other facilities at the campus, as well fund programs, research, and scholarships.In the fall of 2013, the campus publicly announced its first-ever comprehensive fundraising campaign. The $300 million goal was surpassed in 2016, well before the campaign's planned conclusion on June 30, 2017.

The campus was planned by architect John Carl Warnecke and landscape architect Thomas Church. Ralph Rapson designed the original Theater Arts Center. Antoine Predock of Albuquerque was the architect for the award-winning Music Center, and SRG Partnership of Portland, Oregon, for the Seymour Center at Long Marine Lab. The Engineering 2 Building, which was dedicated in fall 2004, won a merit award for design from the American Institute of Architects, Los Angeles Chapter.Anshen + Allen Los Angeles was the architect for Engineering 2.

The architects for the residential colleges were as follows: Cowell — Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons; Stevenson — Joseph Esherick & Associates; Crown — Ernest J. Kump Associates; Merrill — Campbell Wong & Associates and Wong & Brocchini; Porter — Hugh Stubbins and Associates; Kresge — MLTW/Moore-Turnbull; Oakes — McCue, Boone & Tomsick; Rachel Carson College — Simon Martin-Vegue Winkelstein Moris; Colleges Nine and Ten — Esherick Homsey Dodge and Davis.

UC Santa Cruz is increasing both its enrollment and resources and diversifying its educational and research opportunities. New academic programs are considered and added when desirable and feasible. The campus's physical growth is guided by its most recent Long-Range Development Plan which is being updated. In 2013-14 the campus initiated a strategic planning process to identify priorities and published its final report in March 2017.A number of state-of-the-art buildings have been completed on campus in recent years, including the Biomedical Sciences Building, the Humanities and Social Sciences Facility, the Digital Arts Research Center, and the McHenry Library expansion. A restored and updated Quarry Amphitheater is scheduled to reopen in fall 2017.

UC Santa Cruz continues to move forward with its Silicon Valley Campus, a multi-disciplinary teaching and research hub that is home to a master’s degree program in games and playable media, engineering faculty, the new office of industry alliances and technology commercialization, UCSC Silicon Valley Extension, and UC Scout.

Where they work

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What they do

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Community Reviews (7)

The education here is top-notch, with passionate educators who truly invest in their students' success, and I've watched my child flourish academically and personally in this inspiring environment.
By Zinhle Sibisi (Sep, 2024) | Reply

University of California Santa Cruz. Greetings! My name is Christopher. I am a Junior at UCSC. The campus is spectacular. The school is young. I say UCSC is constantly improving. In particular, besides being one of the top schools in California, UCSC is home of some of the most beautiful coastal scenery in California. UCSC's most prominent and outstanding academic characteristics are supported by Jack Baskin Engineering. However the school's is best know for its research in the Physical Sciences. In the future, UCSC will see more prosperity than ever before.
By Marius O. (Oct, 2010) | Reply

I've really enjoyed my time at UCSC, and the psychology program is excellent. Lot's of opportunities for undergrads, and they definitely push students towards higher education, which I think is great. All my professors in psychology have been excellent, however, some are lacking in other departments (ie - sociology), but overall I can't complain. As a transfer student, social opportunities were a bit limited and difficult to get involved in, so I felt lucky to have known several people prior to transfering. Otherwise, most people I know have a fairly easy time meeting people and getting involved. They only downfall is that the campus is really spread out, so it can be a bit difficult to branch out beyond your designated college residence. Down town is alright, not too happening (a few bars) but thats ok, the beaches and surrounding landscape are phenomenal. Overall, UCSC is great and I definitely don't regret my decision to come here. Great education.
By Pamela B. (Dec, 2009) | Reply

They grill you. Students help each other learn. Professors are very knowledgeable. More power electronics would be appreciated. This place is heavy on all aspects theoretical and practical related to optics and networks. In other words, more electronics than electrical engineering.
By Matteo F. (Oct, 2009) | Reply

Incredible school. I could create my own classes and find very supportive teachers to coach me; only wish I had made more use of it. Great small town, very warm people, but you need to be self-motivated here. It's a fabulous community in which to live. Yes, very liberal, very concerned about environment, and very sensitive to racial/ethnic issues. This college is as academically sound as UCLA or Berkeley, but the small classes allow you to interact with the teachers. Visit it if you can; most beautiful campus in the country.
By Enrico J (Mar, 2007) | Reply

UCSC is a perfect school; for the right person. I enjoyed taking classes without a mass of students only concerned about their grade. There is genuine feeling of community in many of the residential colleges, and to this day I still think "FIRST RAIN!" when the first fall rain comes. I was blessed with having a faculty advisor that not only cared about my UCSC career, but my entire future. I consider her a personal friend, and it was amazing to take classes from someone I admired so greatly. The faculty in the history department is, with few exceptions, extremely intelligent and entirely focused on teaching students, and teaching them well.My main advice: leave yourself open. Your opinions will be questioned, and you'll need to get used to that. You may think you want to be someone or something when you are 18, and then experience will lead you in a new direction. There are MANY MANY opportunities at UCSC, if you choose to avail yourself of them.
By Bethany Jameson (Jun, 2006) | Reply

I really love Santa Cruz. I wanted the experience of a public university, but one that wasn't too big. I think the college system is ingenius. I am a proud member of Porter College which is more than just a dorm to me, but a community I am proud to be a part of. I wish the student government was more together and I'm saddened by the budget cuts that we're going through. Removing the journalism department is also one of the biggest mistakes they could have made.
By Raven G, (Aug, 2004) | Reply