Since 1955, California has partnered with and benefited from WICHE through regional collaboration, resource-sharing, sound public policy, and innovation.
Download the factsheet for California here.
2023-24 ACADEMIC YEAR
by California students through WICHE Student Access Programs
through WUE
through WRGP
WICHE’s Student Access Programs
WICHE operates three Student Access Programs that together saved students $613 million in 2023-24. Each program supports students at each level of postsecondary education: undergraduate, graduate, and professional healthcare studies.
- Students gain from increased choice and savings.
- Schools gain by optimizing enrollments.
- States and Pacific Island members gain by growing the skills of those they serve and strengthening their workforce.
It has always been a goal of mine to remove the financial burden of tuition from my parents’ shoulders. WUE made this possible.
ETHAN, California resident, Bachelor of Science in Forestry, Oregon State University
Improving Lives in California
WICHE works collaboratively to expand educational access and excellence for all residents of the West. By promoting innovation, cooperation, resource sharing, and sound public policy, WICHE strengthens higher education’s contributions to the region’s social, economic, and civic life. Learn more about our mission.
WICHE brings together senior academic leaders to foster dialogue about issues facing individual institutions through its leadership and professional development networks.
WESTERN ALLIANCE OF COMMUNITY COLLEGE ACADEMIC LEADERS – 2-YEAR INSTITUTIONS
- California Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office
- Cerritos College
Aisha Lowe, California Community Colleges, is a member of the Alliance executive committee.
WESTERN ACADEMIC LEADERSHIP FORUM – 4-YEAR INSTITUTIONS
- California State University, Long Beach
- California State University, Northridge
- University of California, San Diego
Karyn Scissum Gunn, California State University, Long Beach, is a member of the Forum executive committee.
WESTERN ACADEMIC LEADERSHIP ACADEMY is a year-long professional development program for academic leaders aspiring to become chief academic officers in the WICHE region. Eleven cohort members from California institutions have participated in the Academy since its inception in 2015.
NO HOLDING BACK California State University, Fullerton is one of 12 WICHE institutions that participated in a community of practice in which institutions analyzed data and revised policies related to transcript and student holds in 2022-2023.
Thanks to collaboration with the Midwestern Higher Education Compact (MHEC), one of four U.S. regional higher education compacts, WICHE-region educational institutions, nonprofits, and public education entities can benefit from three programs: MHECtech, which provides competitively bid purchasing contracts for an array of hardware, software, and technology services; MHECare, which provides a student health insurance plan and teletherapy services; and a MHEC Cyber Insurance Program, which offers risk transfer and advisory solutions. Learn more.
WICHE Behavioral Health Program (BHP) administers the Rural Communities Opioid Response Program (RCORP) and supports Ampla Health and Redwood Community Services as grantees in California.
The BHP Together With Veterans Program, focused on reducing Veteran suicides, also has one site in Mariposa County, California, and has served over 1,600 rural veterans from that area.
Knocking at the College Door is the leading U.S. resource for projections of college-ready students. Knocking, which includes a quadrennial publication with additional analysis, is essential for postsecondary policymakers, planning and workforce efforts, and economic development.
WICHE offers curated data and policy resources to support better-informed decision-making:
- Tuition and Fees in the West includes tuition, fees, and enrollment data about 350+ public institutions in the West.
- Benchmarks: WICHE Region presents information on the West’s progress in improving access to, success in, and financing of higher education.
- Data on over 35 indicators in WICHE’s Regional Fact Book for Higher Education in the West.
WICHE experts are providing support for California’s task force on open educational resources (OER). The state’s task force will guide the use of the historic investment in the development, adoption, and use of zero cost course materials to support student success.
WCET- The WICHE Cooperative for Education Technologies is the leader in practice, policy, and advocacy of technology-enhanced learning in higher education. WCET members include the California State University Office of the Chancellor, California Community College Chancellor’s Office, and 20 other California institutions and organizations.
Jory Hadsell, Foothill-De Anza Community College District, serves on the WCET Steering Committee and on the Executive Council.
Additionally, 184 institutions in California are members of the State Authorization Network (SAN), which helps guide institutions through state regulations around online courses and programs.
WICHE has convened the OERWest Network, which is part of a nationwide collaborative to scale the development and adoption of free course materials. Open educational resources (OER) have shown promise in improving student outcomes, particularly for poverty-affected students, for whom the high cost of textbooks can be a barrier to postsecondary success.
WICHE Commissioners
Christopher Cabaldon
Mayor-in-Residence, Institute for the Future
Christopher Cabaldon
Mayor-in-Residence, Institute for the Future
Christopher Cabaldon is a partner at Capitol Impact LLC, and a professor at Sacramento State University. His professional career in education policy in California spans more than two decades. He served as Mayor of West Sacramento from 1998 to December 2020, and was the first mayor elected directly by the voters of the city, after serving three terms on the city council. His local and regional leadership on school facilities, effective governance, universal preschool, research-based reform, and workforce/education alignment have resulted in both scholarly recognition and improved student outcomes. After serving as Director of the Assembly Higher Education Committee and then Chief of Staff to the Assembly Appropriations Committee chairwoman, Mr. Cabaldon served five years as Vice Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, with executive responsibility for policy, strategic initiatives, planning, technology, data systems, governmental advocacy and intersegmental relations, and public affairs.
Cabaldon’s work on transportation, land use, water, air quality and climate change, housing, and economic development at the local, regional, and statewide scales has won numerous awards, and has become the model for effective regional collaborative action. He chaired the groundbreaking Blueprint for the Future land use-transportation-air quality project of the Sacramento Area Council of Governments, and the development of all three of the region’s pioneering transportation investment plans since 1998. He chaired the region’s Partnership for Prosperity project.
Mr. Cabaldon earned his B.S. in environmental economics from UC Berkeley, where later served on the alumni association board, and a Master of Public Policy & Administration degree from CSU Sacramento, where he received the Distinguished Alumni Award.
Ellen Junn
President Emerita, California State University, Stanislaus
Ellen Junn
President Emerita, California State University, Stanislaus
Ellen Junn is the President Emerita of Stan State, as the 11th president of California State University she has established a strong reputation for displaying a focus for implementing new and innovative programs for student success, especially for non-traditional students, supporting a number of initiatives including Freshman Convocation, Freshman Year Experience seminars and Design Your Life courses, as well as building new state-of-the art technology-enhanced Active Learning Classrooms (ALCs). Other initiatives support faculty success with enhanced funding for research, scholarly and creative activity, use of high impact practices, and supporting numerous faculty learning communities. Another key area of focus has been promoting institutional inclusion.
Dr. Junn has a remarkable and extensive 35-year history with the CSU, having worked at five other CSU campuses prior to joining Stan State. She served as provost and vice president at CSU Dominguez Hills, provost and vice president at San Jose State University, associate provost at Fresno State, associate dean of the College of Health and Human Development at CSU Fullerton, and assistant professor at CSU San Bernardino. She also served as a visiting professor at Indiana University.
President Junn earned a bachelor’s degree in experimental and cognitive psychology from the University of Michigan, where she graduated cum laude and received high honors in psychology. She obtained both a master’s and Ph.D. in cognitive and developmental psychology from Princeton University. In addition, she holds a Management Development Program Certificate from Harvard University. She is widely published and has written numerous peer-reviewed research and journal articles on topics, such as supporting the success of underserved students, the importance of university-community engagement and strategies for supporting non-tenure-track faculty — especially women and minorities, as well as promoting innovative teaching strategies.
She is the first Korean-American woman president appointed in the US to a four-year public institution.
* Robert Shireman
Director of Higher Education Excellence and Senior Fellow, The Century Foundation
Robert Shireman *
Director of Higher Education Excellence and Senior Fellow, The Century Foundation
Robert Shireman is a senior fellow at The Century Foundation, working on higher education policy with a focus on affordability, quality assurance, and consumer protections. In addition to serving as a WICHE commissioner, he advises the U.S. Department of Education on accreditation issues through his appointment to the National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity (NACIQI).
Shireman served in the Obama administration as deputy undersecretary of education, having previously worked in the U.S. Senate and at the National Economic Council in the Clinton Administration. In 2004 he founded The Institute for College Access & Success, and in 2011 launched the policy organization California Competes.
In his various roles since 1989 Shireman has led successful efforts to reform student loans, streamline the financial aid process, promote campus diversity, and protect consumers from predatory colleges. He has shepherded the evolution of the nation’s income-based student loan repayment system from its initial adoption in 1992 to its expansion and improvement by President Barack Obama. He organized the federal response to emerging signs of predatory for-profit career training in 2009, leading to a widely discussed set of regulatory reforms and enforcement actions. He led an effort that, in 2010, significantly simplified the process of applying for federal college aid by establishing a link to IRS data. He pressed for and ultimately won the elimination of costly middlemen from the federal loan programs so that more grant aid could be made available to low-income students.
Shireman holds a Bachelor’s degree in Economics from the University of California at Berkeley, a Master’s in Education from Harvard, and a Master’s in Public Administration from the University of San Francisco.