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Tougher Admissions Requirements at 11 CUNY Schools

2007_07_cuny.jpgThe City University of New York is planning on raising math and English requirements for 2008 freshman at 11 colleges. CUNY's chancellor, Matthew Goldstein, told the NY Times, "We are very serious in taking a group of our institutions and placing them in the top segment of universities and colleges. This is the kind of profile we want for our students."

Right now, the university minimum math SAT score is 480; for students applying to start fall of 2008, they will need at least a 510 to gain entry at Baruch, Brooklyn, City, Hunter and Queens Colleges, or a 500 for John Jay, Lehman, Medgar Evers, New York City College of Technology, Staten Island and York Colleges. CUNY will also allow students to enter with satisfactory math Regents examination or placement scores. CUNY hasn't detailed the English requirements at the top colleges yet, because they focused on the math requirements ((students seemed "woefully unprepared" in math).

There is concern that the new requirements will prevent low-income and black and Hispanic students from being able to gain admission. The Times found that black students' admissions seemed to fall proportionally since 1999 (though it did not include those involved in a program for economically and educationally disadvantaged students) while Hispanic students' admissions were steady. City College psychology professor William Crain lamented, "This is turning the university into more of a middle-class university."

However, some are hopeful. York College president Marcia V. Keizs told the Times higher standards meant more prepared students who can graduate. And Lehman College president Ricardo Fernandez said, "Perhaps I have become more convinced that students are able to rise to the challenge."

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Comments [rss]

  • guest

    #4, are you really going to over generalize like that? While there are a percentage of students who "aren't bright", I'm positive they are not particular to CUNY schools. Just like real life, there are people of all kinds.

  • guest

    Wow, for a "college administrator" you sure have very poor punctuation and useage skills.

  • guest

    I used to be a college administrator. I hired plenty of students to work part time in our office, and we were not limited to just the students at our college. The CUNY kids we got were sweet, earnest but bright? I wouldn't say that. But that was nearly 15 years ago so who knows how things are now.

  • Albert Sharpton

    My people don't need school, we know enough to rob people from prestigious universities,and not from the likes of CUNY. All the Cuny kids have white earphones and cheap mp3 players, but the rich smart kids have BOSE headphones and actual IPOD'S.

  • guest

    I agree with you #1.



    Especially after instituting the CUNY Proficiency Exam, more needs to be done to raise the bar for college admissions. The other side of raising standards is proficient tutoring and free prep classes for the college admission tests.

  • guest

    Maybe now Wall St and corp. america will finally take CUNY graduates seriously and realize they are not just poor dumb immigrants and ghetto kids with barely any education.



    A CUNY degree should mean something, having spent 5 years attending Brooklyn College at night to get my BS in Business I was disgusted how little interest huge companies have in hiring hard working, intelligent and dilligent students from CUNY.



    I's a disgrace that because of affirmative action students have to suffer with the concequences of a low reputation of CUNY which makes it harder to get good jobs and compete on the job market from students from white american schools and ivy leagues.



    CUNY STUDENTS deserve better and they hard work needs to be respected not put down by lax standards.



    Maybe now CUNY graduates will find jobs along side UCLA, DUKe etc. and not just have their resumes throw into the garbage as soon as employers see the words CUNY.

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