From the Cornell Assemblies

GPSA: About

The GPSA brings together Cornell’s 7,000 graduate and professional (M.B.A., J.D., D.V.M.) students to address non-academic issues of common concern. Drawing upon the strengths of our diverse constituencies, we work with the university administration to improve the quality of life at the University.

Cornell has developed a system of campus governance that involves all the members of the campus community in making decisions that impact life at the University. This system includes the Faculty Senate, Student Assembly (undergraduate), the Employee Assembly, the University Assembly and the Graduate and Professional Student Assembly. Like the other assemblies, the GPSA engages the needs and concerns of its constituents, communicating these directly to the University administration. We also appoint graduate and professional students to university committees, where they have a direct voice in decision-making processes.

In addition to addressing concerns of everyone at Cornell, the GPSA takes up a number of issues and concerns of particular interest to graduate and professional students.

Depending on its size, each field selects either one or two representatives to the GPSA in the fall (see Members page). Professional schools each elect three field representatives. The GPSA meets once a month; members raise the concerns of their constituents and discuss issues under consideration.

In the spring, the graduate GPSA members caucus by area (Humanities, Social Sciences, Biological Sciences, Physical Sciences) to elect a total of fourteen voting members for the following academic year; the three Ithaca-campus professional schools directly elect one voting member each. At the first GPSA meeting in the Fall semester, two Masters-degree seats are elected to that year’s body of voting members. The voting members vote on any issues that require such action at the monthly GPSA business meetings.

The voting members elect the officers, who meet regularly with the Graduate School deans and central university administration, as well as committee chairs and graduate and professional student representatives to the University Assembly.

The assembly system can only be effective if graduate and professional students become involved either directly or through the GPSA or other University committees. See here [2] for a guide on how to get involved or raise issues that are concerning you.

On a national level, the GPSA is affiliated with the National Association of Graduate and Professional Students, which is particularly active in lobbying Congress on behalf of graduate and professional students.

We also attend the Ivy Summit, where we discuss graduate and professional student issues with our counterparts from Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvard, U. of Pennsylvania, Princeton and Yale. This conference allows us to compare notes and strategies with our peer institutions. Past hosts of the Summit were Yale, Dartmouth, and Brown. The 2010 Ivy Summit will be held at Princeton University.

Affiliate websites, where appropriate:

Copyright © 2005–2019, Cornell University.

Links

  1. assembly.cornell.edu/GPSA/Documents
  2. assembly.cornell.edu/GPSA/Committees

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Page last modified on February 21, 2013, at 04:20 PM