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Cal State University system drops SAT/ACT admission requirement

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Cal State University system drops SAT/ACT admission requirement

In a transfer that squarely locations California’s public universities on the forefront of the nationwide pattern to drop standardized checks, the Cal State college system will get rid of SAT and ACT exams from admission necessities, officers determined Wednesday.

The California State College’s Board of Trustees unanimously authorized the change, aligning the nation’s largest four-year college system with the “check free” admissions course of already adopted by the College of California faculty system.

The California State College system has 477,000 college students at its 23 faculties across the state, whereas the College of California’s 10 faculties enroll over 280,000 college students.

The College of California Board of Regents voted final yr to get rid of the standardized check admissions requirement at its undergraduate colleges, which embrace the celebrated campuses of UC Berkeley and UCLA.

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Performing Cal State system Chancellor Steve Relyea praised the choice, saying it’s going to assist “degree the enjoying discipline and supply higher entry to a top quality faculty diploma for college kids from all backgrounds.”

Critics have lengthy argued that standardized checks put minority and low-income faculty candidates at a drawback and pose a barrier to their admission. They’ve famous that wealthier college students or their dad and mom have the cash to pay for costly standardized check preparation programs that assist increase their scores.

“In essence, we’re eliminating our reliance on a high-stress, high-stakes check that has proven negligible profit,” Relya stated in a press release.

California’s public universities, like many throughout the nation, suspended the exams through the pandemic and didn’t require them through the admissions course of for faculty entry through the 2021-22 and 2022-23 educational years.

Amid the pandemic, greater than 1,800 faculties and universities, or almost 80% of U.S. four-year campuses, adopted both test-optional or score-free insurance policies for fall 2022 candidates, stated Bob Schaeffer, govt director of FairTest, a Boston-based anti-testing group.

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The choice by the Cal State and the College of California faculty techniques to make that ban everlasting will “set a normal for public larger training across the nation,” Schaeffer stated.

“It’s not an accident that so many different public techniques, actually from Washington state to Maine, now have related insurance policies. The entire nation is watching California, and largely following the state’s lead,” he stated.

College students can nonetheless select to submit SAT or ACT scores that won’t be thought of for admissions functions however may assist in their placement for English and math programs, stated Cal State system spokeswoman Toni Molle.

The system had suspended the standardized check requirement through the pandemic, as a substitute basing admission on what it known as a “multi issue admissions rating” that allowed campuses to think about highschool grade level averages, further curricular actions and management roles in addition to whether or not candidates have been first-generation faculty pupil or got here from colleges with a excessive percentages of low-income college students.

A systemwide advisory council made up of school, college students and directors and pupil leaders was put answerable for learning whether or not to drop the checks and beneficial the change to the Cal State faculty system’s board.

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Board Trustee Diego Arambula stated it was necessary to drop the requirement as a result of “decreasing the stress and inequity that at present exists right now are big.”

Trustee Yammilette Rodriguez stated dropping standardized checks will assist college students keep away from what she went by way of at a rural highschool that she has stated “lacked faculty help.”

She had a 4.0 grade level common however missed SAT deadlines and didn’t take the check — and in consequence needed to attend a neighborhood faculty earlier than she may switch to California State College, Fresno.

“I’m a proud product of the CSU and I might have been a product even sooner if I may have gotten in as a freshman,” Rodriguez stated. “I do know that my story is similar for a lot of throughout California. It’s going to alter the lives of many.”

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Los Angeles, Ca

‘It was everything we worked for, and now it’s gone’: Family heartbroken after fire destroys home, kills 3 dogs 

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‘It was everything we worked for, and now it’s gone’: Family heartbroken after fire destroys home, kills 3 dogs 

A vegetation fire in San Bernardino burned multiple hillside homes to the ground on Monday, devastating multiple families including one who lost their three beloved dogs. 

The fast-moving blaze, dubbed the Edgehill Fire, broke out at 2:40 p.m. near the 3000 block of Beverly Drive and forced evacuations for all residents living on the south side of Ridge Line Drive, San Bernardino County Fire Department spokesperson Eric Sherwin said Monday. 

Residents living on the north side of Edgehill Road west to Beverly Drive and east to Circle Road were also ordered to evacuate, according to Cal Fire. 

  • Edgehill Fire
  • Edgehill Fire
  • Edgehill Fire
  • Edgehill Fire
  • Edge Hill Fire

The community most affected by the blaze, Little Mountain, is “not unaccustomed” to fire, Sherwin said, adding that by the time fire crews arrived on scene, many people were already evacuating. 

Sky5 video showed several homes burned down to their foundations, including the residence of the Hernandez family, whose three dogs – Arnie, Vinnie and Mookie – were home alone when the blaze broke out. 

“My husband and I bought this house almost three-and-a-half years ago,” Erika Hernandez said.  “We were first-time homebuyers, and we were so happy about this house.” 

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“It was everything we worked for, and now it’s gone,” she added. 

The Hernandez family’s three dogs that perished when a wildfire tore through their San Bernardino home on Aug. 5, 2024.

As of early Tuesday morning, the 100-acre fire was 75% contained, fire officials said. More than 200 firefighters were assigned to the blaze on Monday afternoon, and crews remained in the area overnight to extinguish the flames. 

KTLA 5’s Carlos Herrera spoke with Sherwin on Tuesday morning, who emphasized the importance of the overnight firefight.

“That was our goal last night knowing that we were going to have some recovery in the overnight hours with lower temperatures,” Sherwin said. “And the fact that we got our containment from 25 up to 75% speaks not only to the work of the firefighters but taking advantage of those low temperatures.”

Evacuation orders remained in effect for all residents Tuesday except those living on Ridge Line Drive, but in an update issued shortly before 9 p.m. Monday, the San Bernardino Police Department said that the fire was “very much under control.” 

An evacuation center for impacted residents was set up at Cajon High School. A person was detained and then released in connection to the fire, police added. 

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The cause of the blaze is under investigation.

The interview with San Bernardino County Fire Department spokesperson Eric Sherwin can be viewed below.

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Los Angeles, Ca

Car flies off 5 Freeway in Castaic, killing 3 occupants

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Car flies off 5 Freeway in Castaic, killing 3 occupants

A car flew off of I-5 on Monday afternoon, leaving three of the four occupants dead in the collision.

According to stringer service RMG News, what appeared to be a white sedan drove off of the 5 Freeway about 2 miles south of Templin Highway in Castaic at about 4:30 p.m.. It then crashed into a tree on the side of the road.

Three of the four occupants killed. Their identities were not yet released as of Monday night.

The surviving occupant was extricated from the vehicle and was transported to a local hospital. They were in critical condition as of Monday night.

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No cause of the crash has been revealed. It’s unknown if drugs or alcohol were a factor.

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Los Angeles, Ca

Southern California skydiver killed in weather-related mishap

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Southern California skydiver killed in weather-related mishap

A professional skydiving instructor died, and her student was seriously injured in a tandem skydiving accident in Southern California’s Inland Empire.

Devrey LaRiccia Chase, 28, and her student were descending toward the ground during a routine jump in Perris last Tuesday when they ran into a pair of “dust devils,” Devrey’s husband, Freddy Chase, told KTLA 5 News.

“She missed the first one, and when she maneuvered around it, she hit the second one,” said Chase, who is also a skydiver and has hundreds of thousands of social media followers. At that point, she was about 25 to 30 feet in the air… It sent her canopy in a downward spiral.”

Devrey LaRiccia Chase (Marcie LaRiccia)

With no time to react, Devrey and her student slammed into the ground. Both were rushed to a local hospital, where Devrey succumbed to her injuries.

Dust devils are small, rotating columns of air that pick up dust and debris from the ground on hot days. They resemble tornadoes but are generally harmless.

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Freddy Chase says his wife was not only a passionate skydiver but also the main videographer for his social media videos, some of which have racked up more than a million views.

“She was beautiful in the sport and in her passion for skydiving,” Freddy recalled. “It was what she talked about every day. She loved doing what she did.”

Chase says Devrey moved to California from Maine roughly eight years ago, and now her family is raising money to bring her home. Tap here to donate.

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