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The Graduate Professional Student Agenda is adopted at the beginning of each academic year by UCSA’s Graduate Professional Student Committee.


Dignified graduate/professional standard of living

Problem: Many graduate and professional students are responsible for supporting families or have returned to pursue postgraduate education after spending time in the professional workforce. In addition to pursuing an education, many graduate students also perform necessary functions for the university including research and teaching. All students deserve a dignified standard of living. Graduate students needs for affordable housing, food, transportation, and healthcare manifest differently than the needs of undergraduates.


Diverse campus climate, genuine recruitment, and active retention

Problem: Many departments struggle to foster a sense of inclusion and community among students of color, LGBTQIA students, international students, and nontraditional students. Implicit biases affect how these students are treated within institutions. In the absence of supporting actions that genuinely include their perspectives and experiences, many feel that they fulfill arbitrary “diversity quotas”. The associated stress disproportionately affects the mental and physiological health of these students, placing additional burdens on the performance and wellbeing of those from marginalized backgrounds.


Best practices for graduate student–advisor relationships

Problem: Graduate students works closely with a faculty advisor who offers academic guidance, and who decides when the student may advance in certain stages of degree completion. Best practices have yet to be implemented to ensure fair, respectful, and equitable working relationships, leading to students being mistreated by advisors in ways that affect mental health and successful degree completion.


Transparency and diversity of funding opportunities

Problem: Allocation of graduate student funding is biased, non-transparent, and insufficient to meet the needs of graduate and professional students.


Building strong community partnerships

Problem: Insulation within the campus community disconnects graduate/professional students from external opportunities with the potential to address graduate student needs, improve social networks and support, and advance professional development.


PDST: affordability, accessibility, and accountability

Problem: Professional Degree Supplemental Tuition (PDST) is levied without transparency which burdens graduate and professional students with debt, disproportionately affects students of lower socioeconomic status, and leaves many students unable to pay for housing and fulfill basic needs.


Creating a sustainable university culture

Problem: Management of resources that sustain UC campuses has important economic, ecological, and social consequences. Improving environmental sustainability within the campus culture requires measured action that has the potential to dovetail with improvements in graduate student health, housing, food, and transportation.


Bridging graduate/professional and undergraduate students

Problem: Lack of communication between graduate/professional students and undergraduate students limits the potential of these student bodies to achieve more by working collectively at the intersections of mutual goals.