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Tag: university of colorado denver

  • CU Denver, DPS launch guaranteed admission partnership

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    DENVER — A partnership launched this week between the University of Colorado Denver and Denver Public Schools is making the path to college easier.

    All eligible DPS juniors with a GPA of 3.0 or higher will receive guaranteed admission to CU Denver.

    Current seniors graduating with a 3.0 GPA or higher will also be automatically admitted, with application fees waived.

    CU Denver integrative biology major Quan Huynh has his sights set on being a dentist.

    DPS school counselors helped him narrow down his options during his senior year at Thomas Jefferson High School.

    “They offer a lot of research opportunities, scholarships, and help a lot financially,” said Huynh.

    Now his peers at Denver public high schools will have the same opportunity guaranteed.

    As of this week, DPS students will get automatic admission to CU Denver with a 3.0 GPA or higher.

    “I think this partnership really shows that CU Denver is here to meet students where they are, to connect with students and to really elevate those students,” said Crysta Diaz, Director of Undergrad Admissions at CU Denver.

    School counselors like Emily Rivera know firsthand the stress that students are under when it comes to college admissions.

    “Once students get into their first college, it’s kind of a huge stress off,” said Rivera.

    Rivera works with students at Denver South High School, which has a sizeable newcomer population.

    Students at Denver South represent 50 countries, with 32 percent of the student body either participating in the ELA program or having exited the program.

    It has one of the most successful graduation rates for English Language Learners in the district, with over 80% of students receiving their diplomas.

    Rivera told Denver7 she’s excited to see this new pathway to college serve as a solution to make higher education more accessible to the students she works with.

    “To know that you could come as a teenager, learn your English skills while you’re in high school, and have that guaranteed admission at CU Denver is really exciting,” she added.

    According to CU Denver, the partnership reflects both institutions’ commitment to expanding opportunity, advancing social mobility, and helping Denver students and families build lasting success.

    “A lot of our students in Denver and at CU Denver are first-generation students, and so again, just how do we support these students that are navigating this experience for the first time?” said Diaz.

    Quan said he’s quickly found his place on campus with that support.

    He’s excited for others to do the same if they take advantage of the guaranteed admission.

    “I think it’s amazing,” he said, “there will be a lot of opportunities for high school students to pursue their bachelor’s degree, just like me as a first-generation student in my family.”

    CU Denver, DPS launch guaranteed admission partnership

    Denver7

    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Adria Iraheta

    Denver7’s Adria Iraheta shares stories that have an impact in all of Colorado’s communities, but specializes in reporting on education and stories in Arapahoe County. If you’d like to get in touch with Adria, fill out the form below to send her an email.

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    Adria Iraheta

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  • Opinion: Protesters came to our homes, with antisemitic chants to “globalize the intifada”

    Opinion: Protesters came to our homes, with antisemitic chants to “globalize the intifada”

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    Having sniper-trained police in our neighborhoods to protect us and our homes was not anything we thought we would see when we were elected to the University of Colorado Board of Regents – an unpaid elected position.

    Yet, this was exactly what happened to both of us this month when a group of anti-Israel protesters came to both of our homes. We are extremely grateful to law enforcement for protecting us and our families, and we continue to be grateful to the many community members from all faiths and backgrounds who supported us during the protests at our home.

    Involving our families and our neighbors in protests at our homes is unacceptable, and is a tactic that we hope every leader, Democratic, Republican, or unaffiliated, can join in denouncing, as our colleagues on the CU Board of Regents did in a 9-0 vote.

    The agitators leading these protests say that the regents have not listened to or responded to them. They have been protesting on our campus since October, sharing their demands with multiple parties. They have come to CU Board of Regents meetings to speak in public sessions. They have emailed us.

    We have listened to them just as we do with any other group or individual. There is a difference between not listening and not agreeing. On May 16, 2024, the regents put out a statement that read, in part, “No regent is offering any policy changes in response to the demands.”

    As elected officials, we know all too well that you don’t demand things in a democracy. You make your arguments and hope people agree with you. We certainly hope we can all agree the amount of suffering happening in our world right now is unbearable. It is complex. It is unjust. Violence and pain inflicted upon babies, children, the elderly, and other innocent civilians is the worst of humanity.

    Criticism of Israel and/or of Hamas is acceptable and protected speech, and as regents, we encourage deep and complex debates about difficult topics because that is the role of an American university.

    A pro-Palestine demonstration continues on the Auraria Campus in Denver on April 29, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

    The decades-old Boycott, Divest and Sanctions (BDS) movement these protesters are part of, however, aims to dismantle the Jewish state and end the right to Jewish self-determination. The movement does not encourage people-to-people exchanges, dialogue opportunities, or interactions between those with opposing viewpoints.

    What we do not condone is purposely creating a dangerous environment for any student, staff, faculty – including Israelis and Palestinians, Jews and Muslims, Christians and Arabs and atheists–  or any other member of our community.

    At both Denver Pride last week and in front of our homes, people changed racist phrases like “From the River to the Sea,” which has been used to call for Jews to be exterminated from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea. This is unacceptable.

    They were chanting “Globalize the Intifada” and “Resistance by any means necessary” – both racist calls for the murder and displacement of Jews throughout the world – in front of our homes. This is especially deplorable in front of the Spiegels’ home, an American Jewish family who are descendants of Holocaust survivors.

    Much of the commentary and sloganeering used by the protesters oversimplifies an ancient history of a land that is in no way comparable to the United States, South Africa, or any other nation. The binary story that is being told results in the spread of disinformation, incites hate, and perpetuates dangerous antisemitic tropes.

    Finally, the fact that the protestors use overt displays of support for internationally recognized terrorist groups like Hamas and Hezbollah in conjunction with anti-Israel protests is also unacceptable.

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    Ilana Spiegel, Callie Rennison

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  • Auraria student organizers reject $15,000 donation offer to remove pro-Palestine encampment

    Auraria student organizers reject $15,000 donation offer to remove pro-Palestine encampment

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    Auraria student organizers on Thursday rejected a proposal from campus officials to remove the week-old Denver encampment in exchange for a $15,000 donation to the International Committee of the Red Cross.

    In a letter posted online, campus leaders said a group of donors came forward with a “nonpartisan humanitarian solution to restore order to the Quad by removing the encampment.”

    The donation on behalf of Students for a Democratic Society was contingent on the pro-Palestine encampment being removed by 5 p.m. Thursday and for future protests to comply with campus policies, campus officials wrote.

    In posts on Instagram and X, SDS’s Denver chapter said campus administrators were trying to buy them out and students will not end the encampment until their demands are met.

    A second campus demonstration began in Colorado Springs on Thursday, where protesters set up an encampment on Colorado College’s Tava Quad.

    The encampment had at least 10 tents, student journalists at The Catalyst reported.

    An Instagram page for the encampment described it as a “community-liberated zone” in solidarity with Gaza and listed demands similar to those made by Auraria organizers, including transparency about the private college’s endowment, divestment from weapons companies and canceling summer study abroad trips in Israel.

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    Katie Langford

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