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"Name" is the Name of the Game
The president of Cal State Hayward announced that she will propose changing the name of the campus to Cal State East Bay. Some argue this will enhance the campus' image while others argue it will deflect attention away from more pressing campus needs.
After a year of focus groups and discussions, the president of Cal State Hayward announced that she will propose changing the name of the campus to Cal State East Bay. She argues it has to do with community identification and broadening the geographical area to include the entire region, but many say it has more to do with the lackluster reputation of the industrial area known as Hayward.
Will a name change enhance the campus' image or instead deflect attention away from more pressing campus needs?
It may seem superficial and needlessly time-consuming to change the name of Cal State Hayward to Cal State East Bay, but perception is reality. This nominal alteration may not only attract brighter students and sizable donations to the university, but could result in benefits to the faculty and students, such as a greater number of books published and research grants awarded.
Take Los Angeles real estate as an analogy. What do Angelinos do when they want to modify attitudes towards an undistinguished or downtrodden neighborhood? They re-name. This results in prestige, local improvements, and ultimately a considerable increase in property values. Valley Village, Lake Balboa, West Hills and Valley Glen demonstrate the success of this technique.
Trendy Beverly Hills executives regularly buy real estate in neighborhoods they previously shunned. The only difference? A name change and the ensuing perception shift.
Cal State East Bay should do very well.
Will a name change enhance the campus' image or instead deflect attention away from more pressing campus needs?
It may seem superficial and needlessly time-consuming to change the name of Cal State Hayward to Cal State East Bay, but perception is reality. This nominal alteration may not only attract brighter students and sizable donations to the university, but could result in benefits to the faculty and students, such as a greater number of books published and research grants awarded.
Take Los Angeles real estate as an analogy. What do Angelinos do when they want to modify attitudes towards an undistinguished or downtrodden neighborhood? They re-name. This results in prestige, local improvements, and ultimately a considerable increase in property values. Valley Village, Lake Balboa, West Hills and Valley Glen demonstrate the success of this technique.
Trendy Beverly Hills executives regularly buy real estate in neighborhoods they previously shunned. The only difference? A name change and the ensuing perception shift.
Cal State East Bay should do very well.
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That's a good point about the politics behind changing the names of neighborhoods.
We certainly see that with the history of San Francisco: years ago, there was no "Cole Valley." That area was all part of "The Haight". More tellingly, "The Fillmore" once included everything from Waller St. up past California St. Since then, the "Lower Haight", and more recently, "Hayes Valley", have been carved out of the shrinking Fillmore (while on the northern border, wealthy Pacific Heights continues to creep southward.) The class and racial implications are clear: middle class white gentry don't want to move into a neighborhood which has been a Black ghetto since the 1940s.
We certainly see that with the history of San Francisco: years ago, there was no "Cole Valley." That area was all part of "The Haight". More tellingly, "The Fillmore" once included everything from Waller St. up past California St. Since then, the "Lower Haight", and more recently, "Hayes Valley", have been carved out of the shrinking Fillmore (while on the northern border, wealthy Pacific Heights continues to creep southward.) The class and racial implications are clear: middle class white gentry don't want to move into a neighborhood which has been a Black ghetto since the 1940s.
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