In 2020, the university had an enrollment of 17,763 students, comprising 15,873 undergraduates (89.4%) and 1,890 post baccalaureates (10.6%).[3] About half of all students identify as the first in their families to go to college.[6][7] CSUDH is one of the most ethnically and economically diverse universities in the western United States.[8] It enrolls the largest number and percentage of
African American students of any CSU campus.[9][10]
CSUDH offers 53
bachelor's degree programs,[11] 26 Masters programs,[12] a variety of single, multi-subject and specialized
teaching credentials,[11] and undergraduate, graduate, and post-baccalaureate certificate programs[11] within its six colleges: College of Arts and Humanities, College of Business Administration and Public Policy, College of Education, College of Extended and International Education, College of Health, Human Services and Nursing, and College of Natural and Behavioral Sciences.[13] The university is
accredited by the
WASC Senior College and University Commission (WSCUC). It is designated as a
Hispanic-Serving Institution.[14]
The campus sits on the historic
Rancho San Pedro, the oldest land grant in the Los Angeles area.[15] The land was in the continuous possession of the
Dominguez family through seven generations – from its concession to Juan Jose Domínguez in 1784 to its acquisition by the state of California for the university. The campus mascot is the Toro.[16]
History
The foundation for what would become CSU Dominguez Hills was built in 1960 when then Governor of California
Pat Brown provided state funds to begin development of the campus. It was originally to be located in
Palos Verdes,
California, and known as South Bay State College. The tentative name was changed to California State College at Palos Verdes in 1962. In 1964, architect
A. Quincy Jones designed a master plan for construction.[18][19] As the permanent campus had not yet been constructed, the first classes were held in 1965 at the California Federal Savings Bank in
Rolling Hills Estates,
California.[20] The college began with an enrollment of approximately 40 students.[21]
In 1965 the designated location for the campus was moved to the
Dominguez Hills in
Carson. The Palos Verdes site was abandoned due to high land prices in Palos Verdes, and the
Watts Riots exposing a need for a campus to serve the populations of
South Los Angeles.[22]
The university was established, in large part, as a response to the African American outcry for higher education standards and opportunities.[23] In October and November 1969, demonstrations regarding the Vietnam War were held on the campus.[24] In 1977 the
California Postsecondary Education Commission endorsed the college trustees' desire to change the name of the school from California State College, Dominguez Hills to California State University, Dominguez Hills.[25]
CSUDH was selected as the host venue for 1984 Los Angeles Summer Olympics cycling competition. Between 1981 and 1982, the
Olympic Velodrome was constructed on the campus. The US cycling team won nine gold medals on the track during the Olympics.[26] The 333.3-meter-long track was demolished in 2003 and replaced by the ADT Event Center (now known as the
VELO Sports Center) in 2004. It remains the only Olympic-standard velodrome in the United States.
In 1992, the university opened the Donald P. and Katherine B. Loker Student Union. A major expansion was completed in 2007, adding the 800-seat Dominguez Ballroom.[26] The CSUDH Extended Education Building was opened in 2000, followed by the completion of James L. Welch Hall in 2002. It was named after a long-time CSUDH faculty member.[26]
In 2021, CSUDH opened three major new on-campus buildings, designed to expand the campus' academic capabilities and help transform the campus from a commuter school to a destination institution.[27] The new Student Resident Housing complex can accommodate over 500 students. The complex includes double, triple, and quadruple bedrooms, a laundry room, study rooms, several lounges, and other amenities. It features eight 47-foot-high murals by Los Angeles artist iris yirei hu.[28] The Science and Innovation Building houses the university's chemistry, biology, and physics programs. It is also the home of the Toyota Center for Innovation in STEM Education, which includes a fabrication lab, SMART classrooms, and labs for K-12 teacher demonstrations. The campus' Innovation and Instruction Building is the home of the university's College of Business Administration and Public Policy. The building includes a 250-seat auditorium, collaborative learning classrooms, distance learning spaces, event spaces, and faculty offices.[27]
Within contemporary history, in the year 2022 Cal State Dominguez Hills had the distinction of having five of its graduates simultaneously serving as mayors of cities in LA County.[29] They are
Long Beach Mayor Rex Richardson,
Compton, California Mayor Emma Sharif,
Carson, California Mayor Lula Davis-Holmes,
Hawthorne, California Mayor Alex Vargas and
Los Angeles Mayor
Karen Bass.
Presidents
Since its establishment in 1960,[30] the university has had eight permanent presidents.[31] While eleven people have served as president, four served interim terms: John A. Brownell from 1987 to 1989, Herbert Carter from 1998 to 1999, Boice Bowman in 2007, and
Willie J. Hagan from 2012 to 2013. However, Hagan was appointed the seventh permanent president and served an additional five-year term as president from 2013 to 2018.[32][33] Thomas A. Parham is the current president of the university.[34]
CSUDH has been designated a
Hispanic-Serving Institution[37] and is a member of the Computing Alliance of Hispanic-Serving Institutions.[38][39] Its College of Education & College of Arts and Humanities offers training in Spanish for bilingual education teachers.[40] As of 2018, CSUDH had the third largest percentage of
Latino Americans that are not Mexican-American in the CSU system.[9] (Latino Americans with heritage from the
Caribbean, Central America, South America). The university ranked first in California in 2021 for the number of bachelor's degrees conferred on Black students.[41]
The campus is home to the American Indian Institute, which has the goal of increasing the number of Indigenous students who enroll and graduate from the CSU system.[42] Starting in 2011, CSUDH and the AII began hosting the "Honoring the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas"
Pow Wow.[43][44]
CSUDH students conduct research and present their findings at the campus' Annual Student Research Day. The annual event is open to undergraduate and graduate students. Outstanding research projects are selected for inclusion at the CSU Statewide Student Research Competition.[45]
CSUDH's McNair Scholars Program was established in 2004. It is named after NASA mission specialist
Ronald McNair, who died in the
1986 Space Shuttle Challenger explosion. The program's goal is to support and fund first-generation, low-income, and/or underrepresented students preparing for future doctoral studies. The program provides a variety of academic support and services. As of 2021[update], the program has achieved a 93% graduate school acceptance rate.[46]
In 2014, following its acquisition of 21 new
Steinway-designed pianos, CSUDH was named an All-Steinway School, the first public four-year university in California to receive the designation.[47] These instruments are subject to periodic inspections by Steinway factory representatives.[48]
Sixty-five percent of CSUDH students engage in service learning, both through the formal curriculum and the university's service learning hub, the Center for Service Learning, Internships & Civic Engagement (SLICE). The university was Presidential Winner of the 2014 President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll.[49] The Presidential Award is the highest federal recognition an institution can receive for its commitment to community, service-learning, and civic engagement.[50]
The university focuses on the
STEM disciplines,[51] hosting the Annual STEM in Education Conference,[52] offering the First-Year Undergraduate STEM Experience (FUSE),[53] and in 2014 hosting the Women in STEM Conference.[54] Its Center for Innovation in STEM Education was established in 2014 by a donation from the
Annenberg Foundation[55] and aims to improve local education with various STEM initiatives. CSUDH offers a
Bachelor of Science in Computer Science,[56] a
Bachelor of Arts in Computer Technology[57] with an option to concentrate in Homeland Security,[58] and a Bachelor of Science in
Information Technology.[59] In 2017, it received a $4 million grant from
Toyota to create an 87,000-square foot Science and Innovation Building to prepare students for careers in science, technology, engineering and math.[60] The Toyota Center for Innovation in STEM Education, housed inside the building, includes a fabrication lab, high-tech classrooms, collaborative workspaces, and labs for K-12 teacher training.[61]
CSUDH is nationally-ranked[64] in three main categories:
1) Quality: Ranked in the "
America's Top Colleges" by Forbes magazine,[citation needed] "Top Public Schools" by U.S. News & World Report,[65] "Best Public Colleges" by Money magazine.[66]
2) Value: Ranked in the "Best Bang for the Buck: West" by Washington Monthly,[67] "24 Colleges with the Best ROI" by Business Insider,[68] "Best Value in the West" by U.S. News & World Report.[69]
3) Social Mobility: Ranked in the 2021
Social Mobility Index by CollegeNET,[citation needed] "Top Performers of Social Mobility" by U.S. News & World Report.[70]
The 2024 USNWR Best Regional Colleges West Rankings ranked CSUDH:[71]
The Equal Opportunity Project ranked CSUDH 4 on the Overall Mobility Index,
Business Insider ranked CSUDH 14 on Colleges with the Best Return on investment (ROI), and U.S. News & World Report, LendEDU.com 5 & 11 Lowest Student
Debt.[73]
The library houses the Donald R. and Beverly Gerth Archives and Special Collections,[76] home to the CSUDH archives, digital and special collections, rare books, and the official archives of the California State University system. Among the collections maintained at the Gerth Archives are:
California State University Japanese American Digitization Project (CSUJAD): A database consisting of primary documentation from 20 California institutions related to the history and progress of Japanese Americans in their communities. CSUDH has well over 25 physical collections on Japanese Americans including the Ninomiya Photo Studio Archives, with over 100,000 images.
Holt Labor Library Collection: Focusing on radical political movements mostly in the 20th century, the collection consists of over 1,000 linear feet of books, pamphlets, periodicals, and manuscript collections focused on labor, civil rights women's rights and anti-war movements.[77]
Mayme Agnew Clayton Collection of African American History and Culture: A collection of more than 2 million rare books, films, documents, photographs, artifacts, and works of art related to the history and culture of African Americans in the United States, with a significant focus on Southern California and the American West.[78]
LA Free Press Collection: Archive of materials from
Art Kunkin, publisher and editor of the
Los Angeles Free Press, one of the first and most important underground newspapers of the late 1960s and early 1970s.[79]
Activist Collections: Materials on activism and social justice, including the
Watts Labor Community Action Committee,
Watts Rebellion Collection, Kaye Briegel Chicano Publication Collection, Feminist Resources Collection, Native American Activist Collection, Filipino Martial Law Materials, LGBTQ Periodical Collection, and other civil rights-related collections.
CSUDH's athletic teams are known as the 'Cal State Dominguez Hills Toros', and the university's colors are burgundy and gold.[80] CSUDH competes against other universities in nine varsity sports, in
Division II of the
NCAA in the
California Collegiate Athletic Association.
CSUDH fields teams in several varsity-level sports:
Basketball (men and women)
Soccer (men and women)
Baseball (men)
Softball (women)
Volleyball (women)
Golf (men)
Track and Field (women)
The men's
soccer team plays at Toro Stadium. Other sports venues include the Torodome for
basketball and
volleyball; Toro Field for
baseball; and Toro Diamond for
softball. Select home games are televised live via Internet TV.
Team accomplishments and notable alumni
The CSUDH men's soccer team has won two NCAA championships at the Division II level. In 2000, they defeated
Barry University in the final by a score of 2–1. CSUDH won their second men's soccer title in 2008, beating
Dowling College 3–0 in the final.[81]
Many CSUDH Toros have gone on to professional careers in
Major League Soccer and other leagues around the world:
The CSUDH women's soccer team won the 1991 NCAA Division II Championship, defeating
Sonoma State 2–1 in the final.[81] The CSUDH
softball team won the NCAA Division II in 2022.
The CSUDH men's golf team won the 2015, 2016, 2018, and 2019 PGA Works Collegiate Golf Championship, a tournament open to Historically Minority Colleges.
The CSUDH women's track and field 4X4 relay team won the NCAA Division II Championship in 2011. The CSUDH track and field team competes in the
CCAA as well. Its most notable alumna is
Carmelita Jeter, who won gold, silver, and bronze medals at the 2012 Olympic Games in London. Another notable alumna is
Grace Ann Dinkins, a sprinter who competed for her native Liberia in the 1984, 1996, and 2000 Olympics.
Esports
The CSUDH Esports Association was established in 2017. They have won three titles at national events sponsored by the National Esports Collegiate Conference (NECC):
Valorant (Challengers Division) in 2020 and 2021; and
Overwatch (Challengers Division) in 2021.[82]
In 2021, it was announced that CSUDH would be constructing a new Esports Incubation Lab on the second floor of the Leo F. Cain Library on campus, to open in Spring 2022. The facility will include a broadcasting booth, competition stage, and classroom with furnishings and technology provided through partnerships with electronics companies
ViewSonic and
HyperX.[83]
CSU Dominguez Hills has over 110,000 alumni, of whom 60% live and work within 25 miles (40 km) of the campus.[86] The university plays a major role in the region's economy[87] — a recent economic impact study revealed CSU Dominguez Hills generates a total impact of $519 million annually in the South Bay. This impact sustains over 5,600 jobs in the region and statewide economy. Per year, the impact generates more than $45 million in statewide tax revenue. More than $2.1 billion of the earnings by alumni from CSU Dominguez Hills are attributable to their CSU degrees.[88] The average amount of debt its students accumulate is $14,585.[89]