Prator presided over tremendous growth while president at both Bakersfield College and San Fernando Valley State College. He supervised the construction of more than a dozen buildings at Bakersfield College and nine buildings at San Fernando Valley State College. Faculty increased from 100 to 600 during Prator's tenure, and student enrollment grew from 3,500 to 16,000, Prator worked toward increasing the number of faculty—and their salaries—but was frustrated in his efforts. He was one of the few presidents in the California State College system who supported a statewide faculty senate in 1962. As a former director of admissions at the University of Colorado, Prator was appointed to the
California Master Plan for Higher Education Committee on Selection and Retention of Students, and it was in this role that he opposed a "college preparatory curriculum for the state colleges." Toward the end of Prator's tenure as president, student activism greatly increased, and Prator began to find himself the target of public student protests, the most extreme of which came after his resignation. His initial response to student unrest was optimistic, but the continuing unrest in the late 1960s eventually led him to retreat to the teaching ranks. ==Personal life==