- Financial Aid
- Who Qualifies for Financial Aid, FAFSA, IVC Financial Aid Programs, State Programs, Federal Programs, Scholarships, Satisfactory Academic Progress, Return of Title IV Funds
- Counseling Services
- Academic Counseling, Career Counseling, Drop-in Counseling, Personal Counseling, Online Counseling, Counseling for International Students, Counseling for Student Athletes, Counseling for Honors Students
- Veterans Services
- Supportive Services
- Disabled Students Programs and Services (DSPS), Learning Disabilities Program, Extended Opportunity Program and Services (EOPS), Cooperative Agencies Resources for Education (CARE), California Work Opportunities and Responsibility to Kids (CalWORKs)
- Online Services and Online Education
- Student Email, Online Educational Counseling, Online Orientation, Online Advisement, Distance Education: Online Classes, Blackboard
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- Bookstore and Centers for Students
- IVC Bookstore, AESL Center, Career and Job Placement Center, Child Development Center, Counseling Center, ELEVATE AAPI @ IVC, Health and Wellness Center, International Student Center, Language Acquisition Center, Library, Life Fitness Center and Strength Training Center, Math Center, Student Success Center, Transfer Center, Writing Center
- Office of Student Life, ASG of IVC and Equity Programs, Honors
- Student Life, Associated Student Government of IVC (ASG of IVC), Equity Programs, Honors Program, Honor Societies - Phi Theta Kappa, Psi Beta
- Intercollegiate Athletics
- IVC Athletics, Conference Play, Eligibility, Transfers, Late Registration, Counseling for Student-Athletes
- Additional Programs/Resources
- Outreach and Community Relations, Emeritus Institute: Classes for Older Adults, Community Members, and Lifelong Learners, Community Education, Economic and Workforce Development/Contract Education, Irvine Valley College Testing Center, Student Ambassador Program
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Intercollegiate Athletics
IVC Athletics: A Tradition of Excellence
Since 1990, Irvine Valley College has been committed to maintaining a strong athletic and academic tradition. Competing as a member of the nation’s toughest college conference, the Orange Empire Conference (OEC), Irvine Valley teams have collected 24 state championships and 50 conference titles from 1990 through the winter of the 2017-18 school year. IVC currently competes in 13 intercollegiate sports: baseball, women’s badminton, women’s sand volleyball, and men’s and women’s basketball, golf, soccer, tennis, and volleyball. The success of the IVC teams can be attributed largely to an outstanding coaching staff that demands excellence from students, not only on the courts and fields but also in the classroom. All head coaches for the men’s and women’s teams hold at least a master’s degree.
The last several years have been among the best athletics campaigns in school history.
Irvine Valley’s women’s volleyball team won the 2017 CCCAA State Championship after defeating San Joaquin Delta, 23-25, 25-16, 25-20, 25-16 at Solano College in Fairfield, Calif. last December. Outside hitter Olivia Aguilar led the Lasers to the title with a match-record 30 kills. She was named MVP of the tournament and IVC capped a perfect 27-0 season. All-tourney selection Taira Ka’awaloa added 15 kills, All-American Megan Ramseyer dished out 49 assists with 12 digs and libero Gabi Lau totaled 30 digs, which was the most in the event by any player since 2009. Irvine Valley became the first undefeated state champion since itself in 2014 when that team also finished 27-0.
Irvine Valley’s men’s tennis team captured its third straight CCCAA State Championship last April in Ventura with a 5-1 win over the top team from Northern California, American River. The Lasers took a 2-1 lead in doubles, then won the Nos. 5, 1 and 4 singles to secure their third straight state title with a 5-1 win over American River. It was a rematch of last year’s state final between the two No. 1 seeds and the score was the same. Irvine Valley (19-0) completed an undefeated season for the first time in school history. The Lasers ended the year having won 35 straight matches and were 58-3 in the last three years with all three losses coming to four-year schools. It was their fourth straight appearance in the California state final and now they are 3-1. Irvine Valley became the second straight men’s team to win three straight State titles. “It’s an unbelievable feeling,” said Irvine Valley’s Wyatt DeMulling, a freshman from Highline High in Washington state. “This whole entire year, we’ve become so much closer. We’re more than a team, we’re a family and this is just unbelievable.”
Men’s tennis player Javier Callejo, part of the special men’s tennis team, turned in a dominant performance individually at the state tournament. Callejo recorded a Triple Crown with a 6-2, 6-4 CCCAA Men’s Tennis doubles championship with sophomore teammate Lucas Lesoeur at Libbey Park in Ojai. A few hours earlier, Callejo won the State singles championship with a 6-3, 6-4 triumph. And just a few days before, Callejo and his teammates opened the 117th Ojai Tournament with a 5-1 win in the State Dual Team final over American River. Callejo, the No. 9 seed, won his second straight state singles title by sweeping No. 6 Vincent Reynaud of Cypress in an All-Orange Empire Conference final. He became the first repeat State champion since Dan Omaboe of Marymount in 1994-95 and only the third back-to-back winner all time. And he became the first Triple Crown winner since Adriano Biasella of Desert in 2002 and the 10th Triple Crown winner since the State Championships began in 1960.
The 2017-18 Irvine Valley women’s basketball team just finished up an Orange Empire Conference winning campaign. The Lasers shared the Orange Empire Conference title, ending the regular season with a record of 24-4 overall and 13-1 in the conference. The team earned a share of the title with Cypress after beating Riverside, 82-79, in overtime on the road. Sophomore Kasey Smit had her best game of the season at Riverside. She finished 39 points and 23 rebounds in the contest. The 39 points was a career high. Her 23 rebounds was just one off of her career-best. It was her second game this season with 30-plus points and 20-plus rebounds.
Other highlights from the past year included the Irvine Valley women’s tennis team winning the second Orange Empire Conference title in program history, being ranked No. 1 by the ITA in Southern California, making the playoffs and reaching the semifinals of the CCCAA Team Dual Playoffs last spring, the women’s golf team making the CCCAA State Championships with Araceli Esquivel placing sixth in the individual state event, the 2017-18 men’s soccer team reaching the CCCAA Regional Final for the third straight year.
The 2014-15 school year was also special one for Irvine Valley. IVC won three team state championships and recorded another five individual state titles, including earning titles in women’s volleyball, men’s tennis and women’s beach volleyball.
Irvine Valley won two state titles during the 2012-13 school year, capturing championships in women’s golf and women’s sand volleyball.
And in 2010-11, IVC won three state team championships and earned its highest ranking ever in the standings for the NATYCAA Cup. Irvine Valley placed in the top 10 for the first time ever in the National Alliance of Two-Year College Athletic Administrators (NATYCAA) Cup, finishing ninth in the state standings. It was the highest ranking for a non-football college on the list, which was made up of 105 community colleges in California.
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Conference Play
Irvine Valley College is a member of the Orange Empire Conference (OEC) and the California Community College Athletic Association (CCCAA) of the Community College League of California’s Commission on Athletics (COA). Members of the OEC are Cypress, Fullerton, Golden West, Orange Coast, Riverside, Saddleback, Santa Ana, and Santiago Canyon colleges.
Eligibility
As mandated by CCCAA rules, IVC advises student-athletes to check with coaching staffs and the CCCAA rulebook for data on initial and continuing eligibility. Please note that these rules are also helpful in establishing eligibility for transfer and competition at the four-year level, but students are advised to speak with coaches well in advance of enrollment to ensure proper course schedules and degree programs.
Generally:
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A student-athlete must be enrolled and actively attending a minimum of 12 semester units at their community college during the season of sport. Of the 12 units, at least 9 must be attempted in courses in any of the following areas: remediation, career technical education/certificate courses, associate degree requirements, transfer/general education and/or lower-division theoretical major preparation courses as defined by the college catalog and/or articulation agreements and consistent with a student’s Individual Education Plan (IEP).
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To be eligible for a second season of sport, the student-athlete shall maintain a cumulative 2.0 grade point average in accredited post-secondary coursework computed since the start of the semester/ quarter of the first participation in any sport, regardless of the college attended.
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To be eligible for a second season of a sport, the student-athlete must pass a minimum of 24 semester units before the semester of the second season of competition. Of the 24 units, at least 18 shall be in any of the following areas: remediation, career technical education/certificate courses, associate degree requirements, transfer/general education and/or lower-division theoretical major preparation courses as defined by the college catalog and/or articulation agreements and consistent with a student’s Individual Education Plan (IEP).
Transfers
Per CCCAA bylaws, a student who is transferring to IVC for athletic participation, and who has previously participated in intercollegiate athletics (and whose most recent participation was at another California community college) must complete 12 units at IVC prior to the beginning of the semester of competition for that sport. A maximum of 8 units can be applied from summer enrollment.
Late Registration
Per CCCAA bylaws, a student-athlete who registers in a community college later than four weeks after the first day of class instruction (as listed in that community college calendar) for that season of sport shall not represent that community college in athletic competition in that semester.
Important:
These requirements are very exacting. Athletes are advised to become thoroughly familiar with CCCAA bylaws in order to avoid loss of eligibility. All interested students are urged to review the bylaws at www.cccasports.org and to contact the head coach for their sport immediately to learn the requirements for eligibility at 949-451-5398.
Counseling for Student-Athletes
A specific counselor has been designated to counsel student-athletes. The athletic counselor works closely with team coaches and is familiar with athletic eligibility requirements for California Community College Athletic Association (CCCAA), National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), and National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA). Student-Athletes must have an academic plan in order to compete, and meeting with the athletic counselor is necessary to the completion of this plan. Student-athletes are encouraged to see the athletic counselor on a regular basis for career, personal, academic and athletic counseling.
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