The Washington Student Achievement Council (WSAC) was created as a state agency in 2012. WSAC was charged to assume some of the remaining functions of its predecessor, the Higher Education Coordinating Board, and to propose higher education goals and strategic action planning. The executive director of WSAC is appointed by the Governor, who chooses from a list of names provided by WSAC.
WSAC is comprised of the following nine voting members:
Membership of WSAC is increased from nine members to ten members by increasing the number of citizen members to six. At least one of the citizen members must be an undergraduate student, and at least one of the citizen members must be a graduate student. The terms of the undergraduate and graduate student members are modified from one year to two years. The terms of the undergraduate and graduate student members must be staggered.
PRO: This measure adds a graduate student to WSAC. Typically one student represents all students on the council and it is typically an undergraduate student. The council plays a big role in administering the states financial aid programs and setting education goals. Graduate students play a major role in our institutions including as teachers, researchers, running laboratories. If they did not exist much of the research in our higher education institutions would come to a halt. We are also looking at a current and future workforce shortage among jobs that require a graduate education. If we are going to address workforce shortages and create meaningful lifelong learning opportunities we need their voices at the table. This is a workforce bill, and equity bill, and even a behavioral healthcare bill. At UW alone graduate students are more than one-third of the total student populations but graduate students lack representation on any statewide higher education board. We rank thirty-seventh nationally for advanced degree production. It is not happening because there is a lack of interest but instead because the cost of graduate education is too great of a burden for many students. Inequities will continue into the future until we address this. Despite the many important roles that graduate students fill on campuses they do not hold any important roles in planning boards. Adding a graduate student seat is an important step forward to the representation that graduate students need to ensure that graduate students are served. The primary goal that WSAC has is blind to what level of education a student reaches. We need to be looking at equity in all levels of education including advanced degrees. As a mostly undergraduate student association we recognize the benefit of having both undergraduate and graduate students represented and would ultimately benefit all students.