GRADUATE TENETS - Living the Five Graduate Tenets
In the 2002/2003 academic school year,
with input from the entire university
community, the Graduate Studies
Committee spent several months crafting
a mission statement and five graduate
tenets to serve as guideposts for
achieving the mission. The word tenet is
from the Latin root, tenere, which means
to hold. A tenet is a principle, belief,
or ideal held by a person or an
organization. Individuals or
organizations hold on to certain
principles or ideals because they
believe them to represent what is good
or true about something. Tenets are like
the world of Plato's ideals; their
complete realization may be always
beyond our grasp, but by using them as
guideposts we can strive to be the best
that we can be. Relative to graduate
education at CCSU, the tenets serve as
operational statements against which we
can measure our success.
The five graduate tenets are:
Community of Scholars - To
facilitate active and ongoing
participation, communication, and
interaction of faculty and students
around a shared commitment to the
advancement of knowledge through
innovation and research.
Scholarly Inquiry - To foster a
spirit of intellectual curiosity,
reflective thinking, and the application
of rigor in the evolving formulation of
knowledge.
Intellectual and Personal Integrity
- To live according to personal and
professional values and standards and to
be cognizant of the consequences that
decisions and actions have on others and
on the environment.
Excellence - To strive for
ongoing quality improvement through
careful planning, innovation, and
program evaluation.
Leadership - To take initiative
for shaping the direction of one's
discipline by modeling high standards of
professional behavior and inspiring and
motivating others to do the same.
One of the primary goals of the Graduate
Studies Committee is to explore ways in
which we can breathe life into the
graduate tenets. We will be discussing
specific initiatives that can be
implemented to help us to keep our eye
on the tenets and to ensure that they
guide our daily practice. We invite the
GSA and all graduate students to join
with us in this important venture.
The Graduate School is made up of many
relatively autonomous academic
departments with a host of different
majors and diverse agendas. The five
graduate tenets will serve as the
unifying link that connects all faculty
and students with a common sense of
purpose. By vigilantly following the
tenets we can be sure that we will
continue to build a strong and vibrant
graduate community.