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Guaranteeing Acceptance

UConn To Accept Any Community College Graduate With 3.0 GPA

Brendan Eckert

Issue date: 11/30/07 Section: News
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UConn President Michael Hogan
Media Credit: Ryan Sayers
UConn President Michael Hogan

At a press conference held on Nov. 14 at Manchester Community College, Michael Hogan, president of UConn, and Marc Herzog, chancellor of the community college system, signed an agreement to benefit community college graduates. It guarantees acceptance into UConn for anyone who graduates from a Connecticut community college with an associate's degree, as long as they have at least a 3.0 grade point average in a liberal arts or an approved major.

Hogan calls this a "win-win situation" for the students and university, stating, "UConn's greatest gain is opening our enrollment to more young people in Connecticut who are outstanding students, especially those from disadvantaged, minority and first-generation-attending-college families.

As a public university, UConn has a responsibility to provide this access, and the new agreement - which I like to call a two-plus-two agreement - allows us to meet that responsibility with a minimum of administrative expense."

Some students are concerned that this agreement will not benefit the current student body.

"There is already a problem with overcrowding on campus and limited housing," said Katherine Bickford, a 5th-semester English major. "Won't this new wave of automatically-accepted students increase this problem?"

"Over the next 10 years, demographic projections show that UConn's recruiting base - the number of students who will be applying for admission to UConn as first-year students - will decline by 8 percent," Hogan said. "To maintain enrollment at current levels and to insure full utilization of our facilities and our resources, we need to broaden our pool of potential students. The two-plus-two agreement provides the perfect way to achieve this. Over time, the agreement will change slightly the mix but not the numbers of our student population."

Other apprehensions about this agreement stem from the possibility of an influx of unprepared students.

However, Tom Deans, an associate professor and director of the English department, said that this is a misconception in some cases.

"I personally can add that one of my flat-out best and brightest writing center tutors last year was a transfer student from Manchester CC," Deans said. "When she graduated in spring, she was in the top reaches of that class of UConn English majors."
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Don't get it

posted 11/30/07 @ 12:20 PM EST

I am somewhat disappointed with this agreement UConn signed. The word that came to mind was dilution. Simply lowering your standards to "utilize facilities fully" is not an adequate reason to accept anyone with a 3. (Continued…)

cc-uconn

posted 12/02/07 @ 12:52 PM EST

Have you ever been to a community college? They don't really just hand you A's and B's, you have to do a lot of work. 3.0 is not easy, but it gives a lot of people a chance to go to UConn that wouldn't have. (Continued…)

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