At UCLA, Young moved from student to teacher, becoming chairman of the School of Theater, Film and Television in 1965. Graduates during his tenure included
Francis Ford Coppola,
Paul Schrader,
John Milius,
Haskell Wexler,
Barry Levinson and
Lawrence Kasdan. Two of his students became famous one year later under the name of
The Doors,
Ray Manzarek and
Jim Morrison. He had a policy of employing filmmakers who were in between jobs to teach: although as David MacDougall said some of them "couldn't teach", despite that "they were infected with the virus of cinema and we caught it from them". He was particularly involved in the creation of UCLA's Ethnographic Film Program, launched in 1966 inspired by the ideas of
Harold Garfinkel, intending to bring film and anthropology together. While in California, he also wrote for the University of California Press's journal
Film Quarterly, becoming its LA editor. ==National Film and Television School==