School of Medicine must be transparent about raised admission thresholds

Applying to medical school is the apex of any pre-medical student’s journey.

But for some students, it’s possible their efforts may not even be considered.

The Daily Bruin reported in January that the David Geffen School of Medicine is raising its admission thresholds to a minimum 3.4 math and science GPA and a minimum 512 score on the MCAT, a score at the 88th percentile. This information about raised requirements was only made public through a leaked document written by medical students who opposed the cutoffs because they would adversely affect underrepresented minorities.

While UCLA neither confirmed nor denied if it uses cutoffs, this news is shocking considering most medical schools state they evaluate applicants holistically, considering factors such as life experiences, clinical experience and extracurricular activities. The Association of American Medical Colleges said in a statement it supports the use of holistic review in admissions to support a diverse medical workforce capable of handling the many needs of the health care industry. Similarly, medical schools like those at UC San Francisco and UC San Diego said they have no rigid numerical cutoffs.

If medical schools like David Geffen truly are using cutoffs to evaluate applicants in any form, they have an obligation to be more transparent to applicants before they apply.

Understandably, this leak caused significant concern among pre-medical students who worry that, at its most extreme interpretation, the cutoff suggests UCLA would not consider medical school applicants with academic scores below these standards. A looser interpretation suggests these numbers serve more as a guideline, with the school open to considering students who demonstrate their capacity for medicine in other areas of their applications.

Despite news about the cutoffs, the school of medicine said in a statement that its review process considers a broad set of factors.

Perhaps one reason medical schools are reluctant to disclose the use of cutoffs is that they imply there are academic scores that guarantee admission.

David Wofsy, the associate dean for admissions at UCSF’s medical school, said the reality is admitting medical school applicants is not a precise science.

“There are many strengths that individuals have that appeal to us, and there isn’t a formula or template for a successful student,” Wofsy said. “Doctors contribute to society in all sorts of successful ways and we’re looking for your particular strength and what potential you have to make a difference.”

But the uncertainty of cutoff scores makes it difficult for students to make important decisions about their futures. If medical schools believe cutoffs are justified, they shouldn’t be hesitant to reveal their standards. The lack of transparency does students a disservice and makes them suspect that these schools have a sinister reason for hiding cutoffs.

Cinthiya Chander, a fourth-year biochemistry student, said it would helpful to know if medical schools have cutoffs because students often apply with hopes of getting in even if they have a low GPA and MCAT score but have strong letters of recommendation or personal statements.

“If medical schools have a set cutoff and no other component of my application will change their mind, I’d rather save my $90 application fee and focus on applying to other medical schools,” Chander said.

Applying to medical school can be an expensive process. To submit primary applications, students pay $170 for the first medical school they apply to and $39 for each additional school. It can cost $50 to $150 for each school if students are asked to submit secondary applications. If schools are unwilling to seriously consider students’ applications because their numbers don’t meet their admissions criteria, they should them know ahead of time so they don’t waste their money.

That transparency would also help pre-medical students decide if they should attend a post-baccalaureate program to boost their GPAs, retake the MCAT or spend a gap year gaining clinical experience that would help improve their applications.

Certainly, it’s possible for students to gauge if they qualify academically for specific medical schools by paying for a $28 subscription to the AAMC’s admissions database or by finding the 25th to 75th percentile GPAs and MCAT scores listed on a medical school’s website.

But while a percentile range may help students understand if they fit into an accepted class, they give them the benefit of the doubt. Applicants to schools that rely on cutoff scores, though, don’t have that benefit and those universities should be transparent about that.

The pre-medical track takes a lot of work and students jump through many hoops to present compelling applications to universities like UCLA. The least these institutions can do is let them know if their applications will be seriously considered – or tossed out after a single read.

Around the League: Feb. 21

Men’s basketball
Sam Connon, assistant Sports editor

With three weekends left on the Pac-12 slate, one team stands above the rest.

Washington (21-5, 12-1 Pac-12) may have lost its bid at an undefeated conference season against Arizona State (18-8, 9-5) on Feb. 9, but the Huskies still have a 3.5-game hold on first place.

Arizona State pulled even with Oregon State (16-8, 8-4) to take a share of second place when it beat Stanford (14-12, 7-7) 80-62 on Wednesday night. Just 2.5 games separate the second-place Sun Devils from the ninth-place Bruins.

Colorado (16-10, 7-7) was the lone Pac-12 team to boast a winning streak longer than two games entering this week, but it saw its five-game winning streak broken at the hands of Washington State (11-15, 4-9) on Wednesday.

Two of the conference’s bottom three teams – Cal (5-20, 0-13) and Arizona (14-12, 5-8) – will face off Thursday, but the Golden Bears are a near-lock to finish in last place.

Oregon (15-10, 6-6) is half a game behind USC (14-12, 7-6) and half a game ahead of UCLA (13-13, 6-7). The Bruins will play the Ducks on Saturday and will host the Trojans on Feb. 28.

Gymnastics
Angie Forburger, assistant Sports editor

For the fourth time this season, all eight Pac-12 gymnastics teams are ranked in the top 25.

No. 2 UCLA (6-0, 5-0 Pac-12) and No. 4 Utah (7-0, 5-0) are both still undefeated – but not for long. The Bruins and Utes will face off Saturday in Salt Lake City. UCLA is coming off its highest-scoring meet of the season against No. 25 Arizona (1-5, 1-4), while Utah most recently took down No. 23 Stanford (0-5, 0-5).

Prior to their loss to the Bruins, the Wildcats suffered back-to-back losses to the Utes and No. 12 Oregon State Beavers (3-2, 3-2). Arizona will next travel to Stanford on Sunday.

The Cardinal has yet to win a Pac-12 dual meet and, after hosting the Wildcats, will only have one more meet remaining against the Bruins before the Pac-12 championships.

The Beavers took home their second straight win with a victory over the No. 15 California Golden Bears (1-4, 1-3) on Sunday. Oregon State will next travel to No. 20 Arizona State (2-2, 1-2) for its last Pac-12 dual meet of the season.

Coming off a win over Stanford on Feb. 10, Arizona State finished in third place at Friday’s Perfect 10 Challenge in Oklahoma City against No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 18 Washington (2-3, 2-2) and George Washington.

The Huskies finished in second place at the Challenge and will next head to Berkeley on Saturday in their final Pac-12 dual meet this year.

After finishing in first place at a tri-meet against Arizona State and No. 17 BYU on Feb. 2, Cal has dropped two straight meets against Utah and Oregon State.

The Pac-12 championships in West Valley City, Utah are just over a month away.

Men’s tennis
Gabriel McCarthy, assistant Sports editor

Teams across the Pac-12 competed at the ITA indoor championships this weekend.

No. 14 UCLA men’s tennis (4-3) defeated No. 12 Notre Dame 4-1 in the round of 16 before falling to No. 2 Wake Forest 3-4 in the quarterfinals. The latter match was decided by the contest between UCLA freshman Mathew Tsolakyan and Wake Forest’s Melios Efstathiou at No. 4 singles, where Tsolakyan lost. The Bruins’ highest appearance in the ITA singles rankings is freshman Govind Nanda at No. 53.

No. 24 USC (6-5) bested No. 7 Florida in its first round of tournament play before falling to No. 3 Texas 0-4 in the quarterfinal round. USC finished consolation play with a loss to No. 4 Virginia 1-4. The Trojans’ Daniel Cukierman fell to No. 11 in the most recent ITA singles rankings from his previous rank of No. 4.

No. 6 Stanford (7-2) fell to Virginia 2-4 in its first round of tournament play. However, Stanford posted two wins in consolation play over No. 30 Tulane and Florida, winning 4-0 and 4-1, respectively. Stanford’s highest-ranked singles player is Axel Geller, appearing at No. 13 in the ITA singles rankings.

The Pac-12 player ranked the highest in the ITA singles rankings is USC’s Cukierman, whereas the highest-ranked doubles pair is Brandon Holt and Riley Smith of USC – appearing at No. 21 in the ITA doubles rankings.


Men’s basketball to continue push for playoff position in upcoming homestand

If the Bruins want to clinch a bye in the first round of the Pac-12 tournament, they’ll need to pick up some wins down the stretch.

UCLA men’s basketball (13-13, 6-7 Pac-12) will begin a three-game homestand Thursday night when it hosts Oregon State (16-8, 8-4) at Pauley Pavilion. The Bruins will also welcome the Oregon Ducks (15-10, 6-6) Saturday night in their second-to-last home game of the season.

Oregon State is tied at second place in the Pac-12 standings and sits 3.5 games behind first-place Washington (21-5, 12-1), but they hold just a one-game lead over fourth-place Utah (14-11, 8-5).

UCLA lost its first meeting with Oregon State on Jan. 13 after entering the game with a perfect 3-0 conference record. The Beavers led for over 31 minutes in the game and never trailed by more than two points.

With both schools fighting for a playoff position, interim coach Murry Bartow said he knows how crucial each remaining game will be for the Bruins – especially Saturday’s.

“If you look at the first seven or eight games in league, I thought we did some good things, we had some good wins, maybe some losses that we maybe didn’t expect,” Bartow said. “So these next two at Pauley, then the game next week against (USC), these are three important games for us if we’ve got any chance at that last spot (for a bye).”

Despite plenty of meaningful basketball left to be played, the Bruins have been struggling over the past three weeks. UCLA has lost four of its last five games, with the one win coming in overtime against California (5-20, 0-13), which has yet to win a conference game this season.

Bartow admitted the team has not been seeing the results he had hoped for, but added it hasn’t been due to a lack of effort on the players’ side.

“The guys have been great,” Bartow said. “They’ve bought into what we’ve tried to do, they’ve practiced hard, their spirit’s been good but we haven’t won as much as they would have wanted to win or I would have wanted to win to this point, but hopefully we can change some of that this week.”

After watching a 9-point first-half lead turn into a 9-point halftime deficit against Stanford on Saturday, freshman guard Jules Bernard said one way UCLA could get its season back on track is by opening games with more energy and effort.

“(Stanford) hit us early and that kind of hurt us,” Bernard said. “If we can come out early and hit the other teams in the mouth first, l think that will help us a lot.”

Freshman guard David Singleton echoed Bernard when talking about the things he has learned during his first season, and said playing with a constant sense of urgency is key to success at the college level.

“I learned you have to play with confidence, you’ve got to play aggressive because teams are trying to come after you every night,” Singleton said. “You’ve got to expect the unexpected because somebody might have a hot night, somebody might have a cold night, you just gotta be on your game 24/7.”

Every game the Bruins play from this point on will have significant postseason implications. If they fail to come out with the urgency Bernard and Singleton are alluding to, their road to the NCAA tournament will only get more difficult.

UCLA and Oregon State will tip off at 8 p.m. Thursday night.

Men’s volleyball beats Concordia in straight sets to remain undefeated in MPSF

The Bruins remain undefeated in conference play.

No. 6 UCLA men’s volleyball (11-4, 3-0 MPSF) overcame unranked Concordia University Irvine (5-11, 1-3) in straight sets Wednesday night at CU Arena. The match marked the Bruins’ third straight Mountain Pacific Sports Federation win of the season.

Coach John Speraw said UCLA improved both offensively and defensively after it suffered losses against No. 5 UC Santa Barbara (13-3, 1-0 Big West) and No. 1. Long Beach State (13-0) in the last week.

“I just think in general we just played a little bit more of a sound game,” Speraw said. “We certainly passed the ball better, which allowed us to do a little bit more offensively and I think we just did a much better job of some fundamentals, in terms of shot selection and fundamental block.”

Redshirt junior opposite Brandon Rattray led UCLA in Wednesday’s game with 13 kills and four aces and said offensive aggression, especially from the service line, was a factor in the win that snapped the Bruins’ losing streak.

“I have to say the biggest thing was service pressure,” Rattray said. “We brought some heat tonight and when we can bring service pressure like that, put the pressure on other teams, get them out of system consistently, I like our chances.”

UCLA trailed by as many as three points late in the second set, but two service aces by Rattray allowed the Bruins to take the set by a score of 26-24.

“We stayed nice and poised,” Rattray said. “Every single one of us had the thought in our head that we were going to be able to come back and beat these guys even though we were down.”

The Bruins recorded seven aces, eight blocks and hit for .356 – compared to the Eagles’ four aces and six blocks. UCLA also held Concordia to a .101 hitting percentage and forced 16 attack errors.

Junior outside hitter Austin Matautia, who recorded 11 kills and two blocks in the match, said the Bruins were able to execute their game plan.

“I think tonight we did a good job at applying what we’ve been practicing into the game and executing the scouting report,” said Matautia. “Since the last two games, we’ve kind of evaluated ourselves as a serving team and these past couple practices we’ve really worked on our serving, so it’s really nice to have it pay off tonight.”

UCLA will return to Pauley Pavilion on Sunday night to face No. 14 USC (7-6, 1-2 MPSF).

UCLA men’s golf places a hard-won fourth at The Prestige

The final round was the Bruins’ downfall.

UCLA men’s golf placed fourth with a 14-over 866 at The Prestige presented by Charles Schwab, finishing 28 strokes behind No. 16 Louisiana State. Coach Derek Freeman said the combination of wind conditions and a slow start contributed to an 11-over final round.

“We got off to a poor start and we could never quite recover,” Freeman said. “The wind really picked up today, and the guys did not hit very well. The golf course is really tight and if you miss it by just a little bit, it puts you in a bad position where you have to play defensive.

The Bruins were in third place after shooting a combined two-over in round one. Senior Cole Madey paced the team, shooting one-under to finish tied for 11th on Monday.

In the second round, sophomore Eddy Lai was the low Bruin scorer at one-under, eight strokes better than his first-round output. UCLA shot one-over, but dropped to fourth place, trailing No. 14 Pepperdine by one stroke for the third spot heading in to the final round.

“Overall, I think we did a very good job of putting ourselves in position to have a chance to play very well,” Freeman said. “I feel like the team is moving in a better direction.”

While Pepperdine shot three-over to secure a top-three finish, UCLA’s combined 11-over was tied for the fifth-worst team score of the final round. At the Arizona Intercollegiate – the Bruins’ first tournament of the spring – they also shot their worst combined score of the week in the final round.

“I’m not concerned, but I’m aware of what’s happening in the final rounds,” Freeman said. “We have to be able to play a full 54 holes and be ready to play, no matter what the conditions or course are like.”

Following consecutive rounds scoring even par, sophomore Devon Bling shot three-over to place 16th. Bling was UCLA’s top golfer after finishing last on the team at the Arizona Intercollegiate.

Junior Hidetoshi Yoshihara finished one stroke behind Bling, shooting a four-over. Yoshihara shot two-over on the first and final rounds to tie for 17th, his second straight top-20 finish.

“This week, my short game was good but I wasn’t hitting my irons too well,” Yoshihara said. “I just stayed steady on the front nine today and made some clutch par puts … but a couple of shots that I hit today towards the end of the round cost me.”

After shooting seven-over in round two, Madey shot two-over Wednesday to place tied for 33rd. Freshman Sean Maruyama and Lai finished tied for 30th and 54th, respectively.

UCLA will continue its season Feb. 25 at the Southwestern Invitational in Westlake Village, California.

Softball enters Mary Nutter classic with winning records against five of six teams

The Bruins are set to face some familiar teams in a familiar site.

No. 2 UCLA softball (9-0) will head to Cathedral City, California, on Thursday for the Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic, squaring off against six opponents in four days – No. 23 Texas A&M, No. 4 Oklahoma, Missouri, Nebraska, No. 20 Kentucky and Colorado State.

“This weekend will definitely challenge us with all of the opponents we have,” said coach Kelly Inouye-Perez. “Good competition is always what we’re looking for because it’s a good opportunity to find out where we are.”

The Bruins are coming off their second consecutive perfect weekend, breaking some records in the process.

Freshman pitcher and Pac-12 Freshman of the Week Megan Faraimo threw a no-hitter in her second career start against Fresno State on Saturday. UCLA also scored a record-breaking 16 runs in the first inning against UC Riverside on Sunday.

Redshirt junior pitcher Rachel Garcia was named Pac-12 Pitcher of the Week for the second week in a row.

In her two complete games last weekend, Garcia struck out 27 batters without any walks while only allowing 10 hits and one run. She has at least 13 strikeouts in three of her four starts this season. At the plate, Garcia went 4-for-7 with one home run and two doubles and drove in three runs.

The Bruins will look to continue their success this weekend, when they go up against ranked opponents for the first time this season.

Freshman utility player Anna Vines said UCLA is ready for what is considered “the next step” in the early part of the season.

“I think we’ve prepared well and did what we needed to do this past weekend and the weekend before,” Vines said. “For me, I just have to keep doing the best I can and keep moving runners over.”

Against the Mary Nutter field, UCLA has a winning record over all but one team they will face.

The Bruins have the 12-11 edge over the Aggies in the all-time series matchup. The last time the two teams met was in the 2017 Women’s College World Series, when UCLA bested Texas A&M in the elimination bracket.

Against the Sooners, the Bruins have not found much success in their all-time series. Oklahoma has the 9-4 advantage, including victories in the last two meetings in the 2016 and 2017 College World Series.

The last time UCLA played against Kentucky was when the two teams split a doubleheader at Easton Stadium back in 2017.

The Bruins have winning streaks against of the rest of the opponents they will face this weekend. UCLA has won its last five games against Missouri, 11 games against Nebraska and nine games against Colorado State. The Bruins shut out both the Missouri Tigers and Nebraska Cornhuskers in the 2018 Mary Nutter classic 4-0 and 5-0, respectively.

This will be the 13th annual Mary Nutter classic and the Bruins have been in it since its inaugural year.

Sophomore infielder Briana Perez – who leads the team with 16 hits and has six multihit games – said that it is one of her favorite tournaments of the season because of the competition and the chance of seeing old teammates.

“All the teams that come in are amazing and there’s always so much great competition,” Perez said. “Seeing all of my old travel ball friends and girls that I’ve grown up playing with is great too.”

Students voice concerns over poor, inaccessible condition of Westwood sidewalks

Students said they think sidewalks in Westwood are not being repaired enough.

Sidewalks in Westwood are reconstructed as soon as funds are available, said Andrew Thomas, executive director of the Westwood Village Improvement Association. However, many students said they think the repairs that have been made are still insufficient.

Thomas said sidewalks in Westwood are owned and controlled by the City of Los Angeles. He added that the funding comes from assessment fees all Westwood property owners must pay to the association.

The WVIA, Thomas added, is under contract with the city, which allows the association to issue benefits in the district. Thomas said these benefits include sidewalk cleanings and repairs.

“Every year we have worked with our subcommittee and discussed which locations we would reconstruct next, but it’s all funding-dependent. To date, all the funding comes from our assessment – today it’s all about taxes,” Thomas said. “Everyone who lives in our district pays for special assessment.”

[Related: Pending Program would give portion of parking revenue back to Westwood Village]

Hovhannes Nazaryan, a second-year pre-psychobiology student, said he thinks sidewalks in Westwood are in good condition, but would benefit from minor alterations.

Nazaryan, who has spinal muscular atrophy, uses a motorized chair to commute, and said he believes sidewalks can be improved in order to facilitate navigation for people with disabilities.

“My chair isn’t too wide, but I know there are a lot that are wider. It feels very dangerous and I have to be very careful to not go off the edge,” Nazaryan said. “One thing that I’ve noticed is that a lot of the areas that you use to get onto sidewalks can be very steep, and I can see how that can be a problem.”

Shawn Schwartz, a fourth-year biology and cognitive science student, said he thinks sidewalks around his apartment in Westwood cause an inconvenience when walking to class, especially on rainy days.

“Many of the sidewalks in Westwood near the surrounding apartments are cracked, uplifted by tree roots or flooded every morning because of poor water management systems,” Schwartz said. “I have to walk in the middle of the street for a portion of my daily walk.”

Alondra Serrano, a third-year political science and Chicana and Chicano studies student, said she thinks sidewalks in Westwood are in poor condition, but shouldn’t be considering the high cost of living in the Village.

“Sidewalks are cracked and uneven and it makes it genuinely unsafe for students to walk through some areas without tripping or potentially falling,” Serrano said. “Even if it is just an inconvenience for many students living in and around the area, it is still ridiculous that the price of living in Westwood is so high when the property surrounding is so unkept.”

Thomas said sidewalks in Westwood have been reconstructed at a high rate since 2012 and that the WVIA is doing all it can to make more reconstructions in the future.

“We’ve probably reconstructed around 40,000 square feet,” Thomas said. “We’ve definitely been able to deliver, but more needs to be done to bring sidewalks to a more efficient and productive system.”