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Table of the Universities and Colleges in San Francisco Name Public or private Type Founded Enrollment Colors San Francisco State University: Public: 1899 [1] 27,815 University of San Francisco: Private: 1855 [1] 11,086 Golden Gate University: Private: 1901 [1] 5,120 University of California, San Francisco: Public: Medical school: 1864 [2] 5,908
Universities and colleges in San Francisco (14 C, 25 P) Universities and colleges in San Mateo County, California (5 C, 9 P) Universities and colleges in Santa Clara County, California (9 C, 22 P)
University of San Francisco (3 C, 16 P, 2 F) Pages in category "Universities and colleges in San Francisco" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total.
San Francisco San Francisco 1917 Music conservatory; bachelors and masters degree in performance, composition, recording, and technology San Francisco Institute of Architecture Berkeley: Alameda: 1990 Not classified --- --- --- Online San Joaquin College of Law: Clovis: Fresno: 1969 Special Focus Four-Year: Law Schools not-for-profit --- --- ---
Point Loma Nazarene University: San Diego: PacWest: San Francisco State Gators: San Francisco State University: San Francisco: CCAA: Sonoma State Seawolves: Sonoma State University: Rohnert Park: CCAA: Stanislaus State Warriors: California State University, Stanislaus: Turlock: CCAA: Westmont Warriors [a] Westmont College: Santa Barbara: PacWest
San Francisco Bay University, formerly Northwestern Polytechnic University, [2] is a private university in Fremont, California. Founded in 1984, the university awards bachelor's and master's degrees in computer science, engineering, technology and management programs. It was founded by Ramsey Carter and Barbara Brown in 1984.
Today, the Bay Area is the home of Silicon Valley, Wine Country, and numerous companies, universities, bridges, airports, and parks. The Bay Area consists of nine counties (Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Solano, and Sonoma) and 101 municipalities. [5] One, San Francisco, is a consolidated city–county.
By 2014, the Bay Area's wealth gap was considerable: the top ten percent of income-earners took home over eleven times as much as the bottom ten percent, [163] and a Brookings Institution study found the San Francisco metro area, which excludes four Bay Area counties, to be the third most unequal urban area in the country. [164]