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CSUs graduate more than ever

By: Ronnie Meehan

Issue date: 10/26/06 Section: News
The CSU system as a whole has graduated 2.5 million students since 1961 and is now graduating more students per year than ever before.
The CSU system as a whole has graduated 2.5 million students since 1961 and is now graduating more students per year than ever before.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger was busier than ever last school year signing bachelor's and master's degrees for students in the California State University system.

A total of 87,680 students were awarded degrees from CSU campuses in 2005-06, a new report says. This is 3,692 more degrees awarded than in the 2004-05 school year.

"The increasing number of graduates is a reflection of rather dramatic influx of new students four to five years ago," said Jim Blackburn, CSU associate director for enrollment management services. "Starting in the late 1990s we saw the beginning trend of more students entering the educational system in general-now these people are graduating."

Bachelor's degrees saw the largest boost, going from 66,768 to 69,350, a four percent increase. Women were awarded nearly 60 percent of all bachelor's degrees, or 41,152, and made up nearly 63 percent of all master's degrees awarded.

"It is a reflection of the CSU student bodies-all but three CSU campuses (Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, Cal Poly Pomona and Cal Maritime) have a female majority. It has to do with the choices students make after graduating from high school," Blackburn said.

Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, Cal Poly Pomona, and Cal Maritime have degrees that focus heavily in engineering, which attracts male students more than females, Blackburn said. The Cal Poly San Luis Obispo student body is 56 percent male and 44 percent female.

The CSU system produces 65 percent of California's graduates in business and professional services each year. The most popular bachelor's degree in 2005-06 was business and management, with more than one out of five graduating students earning a degree in the field. At the master's level, nearly a third of all degrees were focused in education. Business and management remained second, with one out of eight students earning a master's degree in the field.

"Having people well trained in business and management is important for California's economy," Blackburn said. "All 23 CSU campuses offer business degrees. The demand is so high with accounting majors some programs almost cannot turn them out fast enough."
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