At UCLA, inclusive excellence is an indispensable element of academic success. We offer the following programs and resources designed to foster an inclusive learning environment that complements a rigorous engineering education for anyone with the talent and the desire to succeed.
The Center for Excellence in Engineering and Diversity at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering, known as CEED, works with a community of partners to support the K-20 pathways that lead to engineering and computer science degrees.
CEED offers many programs designed to create a community of collaborative and sustainable partnerships that offer academic and professional-development support for engineering and computer science undergraduate students who are first in their families to attend college or who have experienced socioeconomic or educational disadvantages.
On the pre-college level, the program partners with middle and high schools in the greater Los Angeles area to offer academic support, exposure to the engineering and computer science role models and opportunities to learn more about engineering and computer science through hands-on projects, workshops and classes.
The UCLA Women in Engineering program, known as WE@UCLA, is an institutionalized student support program run by a full-time professional staff within the Dean’s office at UCLA Samueli. The mission is to enable the full participation, success and advancement of women in engineering and computer science. WE@UCLA does not require membership and is open to all UCLA Samueli students.
The Engineering Transfer Center is part of the new Engineering Resource Center. The mission at the Engineering Transfer Center is to provide resources and support to current Samueli Engineering transfer students, increase visibility and advocacy for the transfer community in the school, and build partnerships with local community colleges to support the engineering pipeline.
ACCESSIBILITY
Accessible Entrances and Entrance Paths
Disabilities – Center for Accessible Education (CAE)
COUNSELING
Therapy Assistance Online (TAO)
UCLA Campus Assault Resources and Education (CARE) Program
UCLA Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS)
UCLA Samueli Wellness Support/Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS)
UCLA’s Staff and Faculty Counseling Center
FINANCE & OPPORTUNITIES
UCLA Center for Scholarships & Scholar Enrichment
UCLA Economic Crisis Response Team
UCLA Financial Aid and Scholarships
Fees – Registrar Financial Distress – A Resource Guide for Students
UCLA Graduate Fellowships & Awards Search
UCLA Samueli Undergraduate Internship Program
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
Helping International Students Succeed — My Student Support Program (My SSP)
REPORTING
UCLA Equity, Diversity & Inclusion Incident Report
UCLA Incident of Bias Reporting Form
OTHER SUPPORT
Emotional Well Being and Safety
Students with Dependents Program
UC Federal Updates Resource Page
UCLA Resilience In Your Student Experience (RISE) Center
Where Do We Go From Here? Creating an Anti-Racist Climate of Support
Four UCLA Engineering Researchers Named to National Academy of Inventors
The National Academy of Inventors (NAI) announced this week its 2020 class of fellows, including four UCLA faculty members — all with appointments in the Samueli School of Engineering.
Time Magazine Names UCLA-Developed Hospital Scanner One of 2020 Top Inventions
An advanced wireless scanner developed at UCLA that can help detect bedsores in advance has been named one of Time Magazine’s Best Inventions of 2020.
UCLA Chemical Engineer Named to Forbes 30-Under-30 List
Yuzhang Li, an assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering, has been named to Forbes’ 30-Under-30 2021 list for science
Henry Samueli Receives 2021 IEEE Founders Medal
IEEE, the world’s largest technical professional organization for electrical and electronics engineers, has chosen Henry Samueli as the recipient of the 2021 IEEE Founders Medal.
UCLA Researchers Demonstrate New Way to Assemble Building-Block Materials for Flexible Electronics
Materials scientists from the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering and colleagues have established a novel way to make the building blocks for flexible organic electronics, using special nanostructured materials that were previously proven to be difficult to assemble and bind together.
UCLA Engineers Magnetize Graphene with Thin Film
While many computer scientists had long given up on the possibility of establishing indistinguishability obfuscation (iO), a master tool for encryption,





