About
Dr. Rae Lee Siporin
Director of the
UCLA Undergraduate Admissions and Relations with Schools for 22
years; co-founder of the LGBT Faculty Staff Network; donor for
the Rae Lee Siporin Internship at the UCLA LGBT Center
The following article about Dr. Siporin appears
in the 2001 UCLA Today:
To many prospective students, she is considered the single most
important person at UCLA. During her 22-year tenure, Rae Lee Siporin,
director of Undergraduate Admissions and Relations with Schools,
admitted nearly 250,000 students to the campus and revolutionized
the way many of the nation's top colleges select students for
admission. Next month, Siporin will retire, but not before screening
40,600 applicants for the 2001 freshman class.
"UCLA has been my life," said Siporin,
who will be moving to Corrales, N.M. "This has definitely
been the most challenging and rewarding job that I've ever had.
If you're going to be in admissions, UCLA is the place to be."
After earning her B.A. in English from Wayne
State University and her M.A. and Ph.D. at UCLA, Siporin taught
English at the University of Pittsburgh and served as academic
dean at Stockton State College in New Jersey and Franklin Pierce
College in New Hampshire. She returned to UCLA in 1979 and began
the longest tenure of any admissions director at a major research
university.
"It's fair to say she runs the best-organized
selection process in the UC system and perhaps the nation,"
said Professor Emeritus Philip Curtis, who has worked alongside
her for 20 years as a member and past chair of the UCLA admissions
committee.
Employing nearly 100 readers to thoroughly examine
each application, Siporin's operation oversees an applicant pool
that is the largest of any single campus in the nation. Under
her direction, UCLA developed a selection process that has been
emulated by universities nationwide. Prior to Proposition 209,
Siporin devised a more holistic approach to admitting students
in order to get a clearer picture of each applicant. She employed
methods that looked at social and economic conditions, whether
the applicant resided in a single-parent household or would be
a first-generation college student.
Said friend Ramona Cortes Garza, executive director
of State Government Relations: "Rae Lee is not afraid to
take on challenges and positions that others may not agree with.
She has my admiration for always striving to make a difference."
Siporin also was co-founder of the UCLA Lesbian
Gay Bisexual Transgender Faculty/Staff Net-work. In honor of her
outstanding service to the university, the UCLA Alumni Association
established the Rae Lee Siporin Scholarship Fund, a fitting tribute
to someone who was a first-generation college student and alumni
scholar at Wayne State.
"While I'll always regret having to turn
down so many excellent students," Siporin said, "I take
comfort in knowing that I've also given many students a chance."
BY DIANA DE CARDENAS
UCLA Today
Copyright 2001 UC Regents
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