If you just began graduate school this past August, then you’ve probably settled in by now. You’ve spent time studying and collaborating with members of your cohort. You’ve learned how far it is from your makeshift office or cramped grad lounge to each of your classes. Maybe you’ve learned enough from your professors to ask them for advice on your assignments or ongoing research efforts.
The faculty and staff members working around you comprise just one of the resources you have access to as a grad student. There are quite a few resources, if you haven’t noticed. And if you have noticed, you’ve probably fretted over this question – what resources do I need to know?
Your Own Graduate Program
All the resources we’re about to give you are general resources for the larger graduate student population. They’ll give you plenty of help, but they’ll only give you general help. And because you’ll encounter specific issues, you’ll have to look for the specific resources in your own graduate program.
National Association of Graduate-Professional Students
This organization compiles dozens of useful graduate student resources within a single website, all because its members want to help their fellow graduate students any way they can (since 1987, as a matter of fact). They’ve created a pool of resources available to both its members and non-members:
Career assistance (tips on resume-writing and access to current job postings)
This resource page will expose you to dozens of websites, articles, and guides which we don’t have the room to cover here. You might not find the exact answers to your specific problem, but this overview will put you in the best direction. The NAGPS also lobbies for legislative change on behalf of American graduate students, and their advocacy positions include employment security, campus safety and social justice.
Grad Resources
The Grad Resources website offers more personalized resources that grad students might need in their lives apart from classes and research. Its founders understood in 1998 that graduate life could take a heavy toll on grad students, and in 1998 they launched the Grad Crisis Line. In our flurry of work and academic pressures, we can ignore mounting stress to unhealthy levels. That’s why Grad Resources designed its crisis line and waiting counselors to help anyone who calls.
Grad Resources is a faith-based organization, with its own Christian Grads Fellowship. But its mission to “enable graduate students to flourish personally and professionally” means that anyone who calls the line is welcome. And beyond the crisis center, Grad Resources offers two more graduate supports:
Graduate Workshops
A graduate workshop looks just a little misleading with its word choice. There’s plenty of work, but shop suggests a clean and easy purchase. So think instead of the middle school shop class you might’ve taken, where you brought in a few skills and learned to wrangle different parts into something presentable.
That metaphor is the outline for graduate workshops, and the exact details will vary. Create a rough calendar from whatever those listserv emails, grad school fliers and advisor recommendations include. As with many graduate school resources, the variety can seem overwhelming. Here are a few topics you can expect to find:
Keep an eye out for the topics that could help your development. If you find one online, make sure to check its description, since these events often require you to RSVP, or to bring something (a resume, a copy of a thesis) to work on during the workshop. These events often crop up through career service or counseling centers, and so if you’re worried you’re missing out on grad-specific events, contact these offices on your campus.
What Now?
Remember that these resources are designed especially for you as a graduate student. The amount can seem overwhelming, but there’s always a way in. And the sooner you begin to see what’s out there, the sooner you’ll be able to find and implement what’s useful to you.
As tempting as it might be, don’t withdraw from those around you--graduate advisors, graduate staff and established graduate students will likely be happy to help you if you reach out. And you should reach out; all these supports only support you when you take the first step in using them.