Quick Summary
- In his annual address, Chancellor May highlighted rankings, funding and more
- ϲϿ Davis made gains in new student diversity
- May expressed gratitude and admiration for faculty members
2023 was “a banner year” for ϲϿ Davis that included new rankings, strong research funding and more, Chancellor Gary S. May said last week during his annual State of the Campus address.
“Together, we took great strides toward the university’s mission of advancing scholarship and research,” May said in the remarks, delivered Thursday (Feb. 22) to a . “We reached new heights of impact and prestige, all while showing resilience, passion and care for each other.”
He highlighted a number of areas where ϲϿ Davis has excelled in the past year, presented here with key figures included in his talk.
FULL REMARKS
Rankings
6, 1 and 1
That’s where ϲϿ Davis falls in some recent, prominent rankings: No. 6 best public university, according to U.S. News & World Report, and No. 1 in veterinary science and agriculture and forestry, according to the QS World University Rankings. Forbes also named ϲϿ Davis to its list.
Sustainability
8 years
That’s how long ϲϿ Davis has been the most sustainable university in the nation, according to the UI GreenMetric World University rankings.
May called it “one ranking that's an especially big point of pride.”
$111 million
That’s how much ϲϿ Davis thus far has committed toward the Big Shift, a project to move from steam to hot water heating for campus buildings. The second half of that funding was approved in 2023, leading May to quip that ϲϿ Davis was “where shift happens.”
95%
That’s how much the university will reduce its use of fossil fuels by 2040, .
Research
$1 billion
For the second year, ϲϿ Davis exceeded $1 billion in external research funding, including the largest award, $32.5 million from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to Sean M. Raffuse, associate director of data and software at the ϲϿ Davis Air Quality Research Center, to operate its network of about 150 monitors nationwide that collect samples of particles from the atmosphere.
Budget
$7.1 billion
That’s ϲϿ Davis’ total revenue in 2023-24, up from $3.4 billion in 2010-11. In the same time frame, core funds, or state funding and tuition, have dropped from 19% to 16% of ϲϿ Davis’ funding sources since 2010-11.
He cited the , which brought in more than 2,000 suggestions from across campus, as one potential way to improve financial stability moving forward.
Admissions
40,848
That’s how many students enrolled in ϲϿ Davis in fall 2023 — a number that included 10% more freshmen and transfer students as well as 36% underrepresented populations, a 25-year high.
“That Super Bowl commercial for Ring must’ve worked,” May joked, referencing the ad with home security camera footage of a prospective student excitedly shouting, “I got into ϲϿ Davis!” Another bonus, according to May: The university didn’t pay for the ad.
Faculty honors
May highlighted some honors from the past year:
- Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra, professor in the Department of Evolution and Ecology, was awarded a $100,000 National Academy of Science Prize in Food and Agriculture Sciences.
- Maisha Winn, co-director and co-founder of the Transformative Justice in Education Center in the School of Education and Chancellor's Leadership Professor, was elected to the National Academy of Education.
- Three from ϲϿ Davis were elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2023:
- R. David Britt, Department of Chemistry
- Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Mary Croughan, elected to the academy’s educational and academic leadership section
- Phillip R. Shaver, distinguished professor emeritus from the Department of Psychology
Updates on Aggie Square, basic needs
May also gave progress reports on the status of construction at , which is on track to open in the first quarter of 2025, and the , which is preparing to move to a larger space in the Memorial Union.
He also reiterated his gratitude to the faculty members in attendance.
“You are the backbone of this world-class university that drives knowledge and innovation,” he said. “You are role models and mentors who transform lives. I give my utmost appreciation and wish you all the best for 2024.”
Media Resources
Cody Kitaura is the editor of Dateline ϲϿ Davis and can be reached by email or at 530-752-1932.