Building Skills of Inclusion and Equity Graduate Student Opportunities

Graduate students who want to diversify their networks, build skills of inclusion, or improve their equity-mindedness during their program of study will find a range of options at SIS. The curriculum offers pathways to buildÌýa deeper knowledge of diversity and equity, while networking events, leadership positions, and professional development experiences provide opportunities to learn and practice skills related to inclusion, antiracism, and intercultural communication.ÌýAs future leaders, graduate students will play a vital role in creating a field that better represents society’s diversity and includes people who understand how to create a more equitable and just world.

ALCE leadership following the South Americans in Higher Education panel discussion held in SIS.

In the Community

SIS Students Create and Launch New Latino Student Organization Focused on Graduate Students

SIS students launch the Association for Latino Career Enhancement (ALCE) to foster community and create opportunities for graduate students.

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Careers in Foreign Service

At SIS, theÌýDiplomatic Fellows Association (DFA)Ìýcreates a global network of past and present fellows dedicated to promoting peace, understanding, and effective communication in the representation of the US. These SIS students and alumni come from diverse and underrepresented backgrounds and share the experience of completing their graduate education at SIS and an interest in supporting future fellows. The fellows come from the Thomas R. Pickering, Charles B. Rangel, and Donald M. Payne Fellowship Programs and go on to foreign service careers in the US Department of State and USAID. Prospective students interested in pursuing these fellowship programs may contact any of the current SIS Fellows through their profiles.

Meet our current fellows

First-Gen Pioneers Group

Were you first in your family to graduate from college? Are you the first to pursue a career in international affairs? Are you forging a new path and looking for a community to support you along the way?

Check out SIS’s new offering for first-generation grad students to find:

  • fellow first gen pioneers
  • some tips and tricks for navigating grad school and the field
  • advice from those who were once in your shoes
  • resources that can help you maximize your grad school experience and plan your next steps

The First-Gen Pioneers Group is part social, part professional, and complete reassurance that yes, you are a vital voice in our community and our profession. Join us—as your schedule allows—for monthly meetings facilitated by SIS Dean’s Advisory Council on Diversity & Inclusion Co-Chair Rebecca Coughlin. Find out more.

25 percent

of incoming fall 2023 SIS grad students are first-generation college students

Highlights

Council on Foreign Relations: Paid summer internships

CFR is a non-partisan resource for information and ideas about foreign policy. Paid internships are filled on a rolling basis and provide opportunities to do work that matters alongside smart and dedicated staff in a diverse and inclusive environment while gaining professional development training as well.Ìý

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Livia Mueller

Alumni ·

SIS Alumna Creates Safer Workplaces for Women

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Course Spotlight: Migration, Equity, and Health

This innovative course is a community-based participatory research (CBPR) practicum in collaboration with a DC-based community partner that serves migrant youth and families. Climate change impacts andÌýincreasing health inequities faced by migrants are some of the structural and socio-political factors examined.ÌýSIS 635.

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Rangel Fellow Acts as Bridge in Internship

Cornelius Sanford, SIS/MA '24

Building trust within an embassy and community takes a lot of initial effort.

During my internship, I spent time collaborating with US law enforcement and Jamaican law enforcement to monitor lottery scamming. There were a lot of times of discomfort, but my Peace Corps experience in Madagascar taught me how to sit in that and learn. I was surprised that law enforcement agencies were so open.ÌýThey saw me as a way to facilitate conversation within the embassy.