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José Luis Santos
A Sudikoff Family Institute Fellow for 2007 – 08
jsantos@gseis.ucla.edu
310.825.7549
Personal Bio
Assistant Professor of Education José Luis Santos, a
Sudikoff Family Institute Fellow for 2007 – 08, studies the economic factors involved in higher education, placing particular
emphasis on issues affecting students from underrepresented groups, such as how
finances influence equity and access, the burden of student debt, and the
importance of linking tuition-setting policies with need-based aid policies.
The driving force behind Professor Santos' work is his
belief that federal, state, and institutional policies may not adequately
support increased educational and economic outcomes for traditionally
underrepresented students, but rather, may perpetuate inequitable outcomes
leading to further stratification. Focusing his work on higher education
finance and policy, Santos recently wrote an article for the academic journal, Review
of Higher Education, Resource Allocation within Public Research
Universities, which ran in the Winter 2007 issue. Additionally,
Professor Santos also recently served as an associate of the renowned National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education, a leading state and national policy
center.
Professor Santos was awarded a Sudikoff Fellowship for
establishing the Higher Education Finance Policy
Center, which will produce a series of policy briefs that grow out of
GSE&IS research, to help inform legislators in Sacramento and Washington of key issues in higher education. Each of the
policy briefs will address a single issue of critical importance in higher
education; the first brief provides coverage of public university funding
trends, and the subsequent public policy implications for low-income
students.
The Higher Education Finance Center will publish and
disseminate the briefs to California state legislators, and may develop
additional material to further communicate to educators and the broader public.
Prior to joining the faculty at UCLA's Graduate School of
Education & Information Studies in 2005, Santos served as a senior
institutional researcher and the founding director of the Latina/o Policy
Research Initiative (LPRI) in the College of Humanities at the University of
Arizona, where he developed expertise on a variety of issues, including
budgetary trends, cost accounting, faculty compensation, and student
enrollment. As director of the LPRI he co-authored a policy report with
the Institute of Higher Education Policy based in Washington, D.C, one of the
world's most respected higher education research and policy groups. With
support from USA Funds©, Investing in Arizonas Future: College Access, Affordability, and the Impact of Investment in
Need-Based Financial Aid was released in March 2005. He was also the
lead author on a study commissioned and released in April 2006 by the Arizona
Minority Education Policy Analysis Center, a division of the Arizona Commission
for Postsecondary Education entitled, The Road to Higher
Education: Closing the Participation Gaps for Arizona Minority Students.
These reports were instrumental in making the case to state legislators to
increase need-based aid funding and streamline P-K20 education.
Professor Santos earned his B.A. in Mexican American
Studies, M.A. in Educational Psychology: Measurement & Research Methodology
at the University of Arizona, and Ph.D. in higher education economics and
finance policy from the University of Arizonas Center for the Study of Higher
Education.
Professor Santos has appeared on local and national radio
outlets and has been quoted in numerous local and national newspapers including
USA Today and The Chronicle of Higher Education. In
addition, he was a weekly columnist for The Tucson Citizen, a major
daily newspaper in Arizona.
For further information, please visit: http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/members/jsantos
Linda J. Sax
lsax@ucla.edu
310.206.5875
A Sudikoff Family Institute for Education & New Media Fellow 2007 – 08
Associate Professor of Education Linda J.
Sax, a Sudikoff Family Institute Fellow for 2007 - 08, studies gender
differences in college student development, to determine how institutional characteristics,
peer and faculty environments, and forms of student involvement may affect
women and men college students differently.
While numerous studies on college impact
exist within the field of higher education, there has been little research examining
whether college affects women and men differently. Professor Saxs work
questions how and why gender shapes the college experience, and seeks to
determine if the factors that inform student development operate differently
for male and female students. She explores whether certain college
environments or experiences have stronger or weaker effects on women than on
men, and what implications this might have for campus programming.
Professor Sax is currently engaged in
several key research projects. Her forthcoming book, The Gender Gap in
College, to be published by Jossey Bass in 2008, examines the impact of
college experiences on a full spectrum of student outcomes in the areas of
academic achievement, self-concept, life goals, career development, physical
and emotional health, political and social attitudes, and satisfaction with
college. The book addresses the interests and needs of researchers and
practitioners developing student programs and services in higher education, and
is an outgrowth of an examination of data culled from forty years of the
renowned Freshman Survey.
The Gender Gap in
College highlights a
significant trend unfolding in higher education. While college enrollment
is on the rise for both women and men, womens enrollment – about 58%
nationally – has outpaced mens, resulting in a gender gap. The
widening of the gender gap is due largely to an influx of women from underrepresented groups, including African
Americans, Latinas, older students, and those of lower socioeconomic
status.
In a contribution to the public forum,
Professor Sax addressed some of the issues faced by
women entering college today in an essay for The
Chronicle Review, a supplement to The Chronicle of Higher Education. The
essay, College Women Still Face Many Obstacles in
Reaching Their Full Potential, appeared September
28, 2007.
Another project for Professor Sax includes
her work as the principal investigator on a nationwide study of the effects of
single-sex education, funded by the American Association of University Women
and the National Coalition of Girls Schools. With the study coming to
completion after two years, Professor Sax will issue a report—intended for
broad dissemination in the spring and summer of 2008—analyzing the effects of
attending single-sex high schools on students transition to college.
Professor Sax is also co-principal investigator on a National Science Foundation
sponsored project to increase womens pursuit of graduate degrees in the
physical sciences and engineering.
The recipient of the 2005
Scholar-in-Residence Award from the American Association of University Women,
Professor Sax was honored with the 1999 Early Career Award from the Association
for the Study of Higher Education.
As an Associate Professor of Higher
Education at UCLAs Graduate School of Education & Information Studies,
Professor Sax teaches graduate courses in research methodology, evaluation of
higher education, and gender issues in higher education. She also serves
as founding faculty director of UCLAs new Masters in Student Affairs
program. From 1994 to 2005 she oversaw the administration of nationwide
surveys of college students and faculty in her role as Director of the
Cooperative Institutional Research Program (CIRP) and Associate Director of the
Higher Education Research Institute (HERI) at UCLA.
Professor Sax has contributed frequently to
a number of distinguished academic publications including Research in Higher
Education, The Review of Higher Education, The Journal of Higher
Education, The Journal of College Student Development, and Educational
Record, and has served on Editorial Boards for The Review of Higher Education
and Research in Higher Education. She has provided expert
commentary and perspective for such national news outlets as CNN, ABC, CBS, and
Fox, and national newspapers including the New York Times, The Los
Angeles Times, and The Washington Post.
Having received her B.A. in political
economy from the University of California, Berkeley in 1990, Professor Sax
completed her M.A. in 1991 and Ph.D. in 1994 at the University of California,
Los Angeles.
For more information, please visit:
http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/members/sax
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