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Information center

Explore the UC story through data

Subject

UC alumni at work

The dashboard shows employment outcomes by major and discipline of UC undergraduate alumni at two, five and ten years after graduation.

UC alumni graduate degree outcomes

Graduate degree outcomes of UC graduates and the different post-UC earnings trajectories associated with the graduate degree completed.

UC undergraduate alumni outcomes in California

UC degree recipients go on to work in a wide variety of industries and experience a doubling of salary between 2 and 10 years after graduation.

Graduate admissions

Graduate student academic applications, admits, and new enrolls by degree program type, citizenship, gender, ethnicity, and discipline.

UC inventions at a glance

UC technology commercialization benefits the public by transforming UC inventions into innovative products and economic impacts.

First-generation college students

Systemwide data on first-generation undergraduates including enrollment, demographics, disaggregated race/ethnicity enrollment data, majors, first-year retention and graduation rates, and financial support information. First-generation college student is defined as a student where neither parent nor guardian have earned a four-year degree.

Undergraduate graduation rates

Freshman and transfer retention and graduation rates and time-to-degree by campus, entry cohort, demographic, and source school.

Revenue and expense data

Revenues and expenses by source/function, including or excluding DOE labs, systemwide and by campus, and option for inflation-adjusted figures.

Undergraduate representation gap analysis

Analysis of the gaps between the share of: high school graduates vs. freshman UC applicants, admits, and new enrollees and California Community College (CCC) students vs. CCC-to-UC transfer applicants, admits, and new enrollees by racial/ethnic group.

Research expenditure comparisons

Research expenditures of higher education institutions participating in the Higher Education Research and Development (HERD) survey are compared across institutions, by fund source, NSF disciplines, and subjects. UC’s percent share of expenditures is also shown by sector, fund source, and major federal fund sources.