Transfer students struggle to acclimate to UCLA
By Daily Bruin Staff
June 14, 1998 9:00 p.m.
Monday, June 15, 1998
Transfer students struggle to acclimate to UCLA
GRADUATES: Many must juggle responsibilities, adjust to high
standards, pace of being Bruins
By Audrey Beck
Daily Bruin Contributor
The fatigue and stress of finals and the anonymity of a large
university leave few students untouched, but transfer students have
the added difficulty of competing with students who have been at
UCLA since their freshman year.
Transfer students have to transition into a new school, while
simultaneously maintaining their GPA and often juggling family and
work obligations.
Everardo Rivera, a fourth-year history and chicano studies
student, spent endless hours at Powell trying to master UCLA’s
library system. He said this was only one of the many challenges he
faced as a transfer student.
While coming to UCLA can be an intimidating experience for any
student, transfer students such as Rivera do not let their
difficulties stop them from graduating.
Statistics show retention and graduation rates for transfer
students have steadily increased over the past decade.
According to the Office of Academic Planning and Budget, 93
percent of transfer students admitted in the fall of 1996 returned
for their second year.
In contrast, of freshman admitted in the fall of ’94, only 86
percent returned for their fourth year.
According to Bruce Barbee, a counselor with the College of
Letters and Sciences, transfer students make up one of the most
diverse populations on campus according.
"It depends on how much they challenged themselves (and) what
types of junior colleges they came from," Barbee said, regarding
the different educational backgrounds of transfer students.
Plus, many have added responsibilities such as commuting,
married life and children.
Jante Palacios said her transition to UCLA would have been
easier if her high school and junior college had been more
challenging.
She said her junior college lacked adequate resources and had a
high school level curriculum.
"Ideally, the classes that transfer should be more difficult,
with a pace similar to a UC class," Rivera said.
Both Rivera and Irene Alquila, a fourth-year political science
student, said one of the greatest challenges is remaining confident
of their academic abilities.
According to Rivera, many high schools try to convince students
to enter trade school or junior college as opposed to going
straight to a university. As a result, transfers are often
under-prepared and are easily discouraged, he added.
Alquila agreed with Rivera, adding that she spent a lot of her
time in junior college feeling frustrated because she waited to
come to UCLA.
The transition from a semester system to the quick pace of the
quarter system is one of the most difficult challenges transfer
students face, Barbee said.
Alvila said she initially had a hard time keeping up with the
additional reading.
"I had to realize that unlike the semester system, I couldn’t
take a break" with classes only a quarter long, she said.
For many transfer students, getting to UCLA is the culmination
of many years of hard work at both high school and two years at a
junior college.
"I think school work is taken more seriously (by transfer
students) because you only have two years to establish your GPA,"
Alvila said.
Barbee said the expectations and standards of transfer students
are often based on lower academic standards than those at UCLA.
"Transfers have to dump previous expectations," Barbee said.
"For many years, (the transfer student’s) goal has been to get
into UCLA," Barbee said. He also said transfer students are often
unsure of their next step.
Barbee encourages transfers in this situation to adopt new goals
for their continuing academic success.
Like most transfer students, Rivera sacrificed much of his free
time learning how to take advantage of campus resources.
"You have to work harder to get to the same level as the guy who
has been here two years," Rivera said.
"Transfer students tend to slip through the cracks," Barbee
said.
Barbee and the transfer students agreed that UCLA could be more
accommodating to transfer students.
"The school tends to assume transfers are all the same, when
many of their needs relate to where they came from," Barbee
said.
Rivera also expressed concern over the closing of Hershey
Hall.
"Hershey Hall was a valuable networking opportunity; it gave me
a chance to talk to older students,"Rivera said.
Rivera also viewed on-campus housing as a convenient way to keep
transfers involved and informed in campus life.
"Living in Hershey was extremely beneficial. I wouldn’t give
back that experience for anything,"he said.
Getting involved in various campus activities provides an
opportunity for transfer students to feel like a part of UCLA and
its traditions, Rivera said.
For example, Rivera spent much of his first year attending
sporting events, while Palacios said the opportunity to interact
with other transfers during orientation helped her to acclimate
herself to UCLA.
Rivera said that despite the many obstacles and problems they
face, transfers are as much a part of the school and its traditions
as those who have been here their entire collegiate career.
"Even though I wasn’t here freshman year, I have been rooting
for the Bruins since I was a little kid," Rivera said.