Metadata
Title
Student Representation
Category
international
UUID
7f4d561bb8cc45a99f5e6f6c51722d0b
Source URL
https://employability.uq.edu.au/student-representation
Parent URL
https://employability.uq.edu.au/
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T07:01:00+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Student Representation

Source: https://employability.uq.edu.au/student-representation Parent: https://employability.uq.edu.au/

Student representatives are the face of the student body, and advocate for student interests on and off campus

Representatives can belong to an elected body, be on a committee, or be a part of an advisory group. They have a direct say in how UQ functions, and work with staff to enhance the student experience.

Three ways to become a Student Representative

These representative positions are available to all students.  We encourage you to check the specific eligibility requirements for each position.

1. Run for election to the Senate or Academic Board

The Senate and the Academic Board\ These boards are the main decision-making bodies at UQ.

Both the Senate and the Academic Board hold regular elections for their student representatives, which are advertised via email.

2. Become a member of UQ Committee

Committees\ Committees are formal governing bodies that develop policy and consult on a particular area of interest (e.g. a specific program, teaching and learning at a faculty).

Committees are mainly staff-led but have student representative as members.

There are four types of Committees at different levels of governance.

  1. Sub-Committees to the Academic Board\ Sub-committees to the Academic Board are central committees that make decisions that affect all of UQ (e.g. the Committee for Academic Programs Policy, the Student Experience Committee). They report directly to the Academic Board.

  2. Faculty Committees\ Faculty committees belong to a specific faculty, and govern its research, teaching and learning, and student experience decisions. These committees report to the Executive Dean of the faculty.

  3. School and Program Committees\ Schools and Programs within a faculty may sometimes have committees that make academic decisions for that particular school or program. These committees report to their respective faculty committees.

  4. Independent committees\ Steering committees, working parties and project boards are independent bodies responsible for specific UQ projects (e.g. the UQ Mental Health Strategy). Such committees report either to the Academic Board, to the Student Experience Committee, or directly to an Executive staff member.

3. Become a UQ Union representative

The UQ Union is an independent student body that represents the interests of students.

Union representatives sit on all important university committees and work with other elected representatives to advocate for student interests at all levels of governance at UQ.


Become a Student Representative

Watch for new student rep positions in your email and on your school or faculty’s social media. You can also browse current openings on StudentHub below.

Browse Opportunities

Prepare for your role as a Student Representative by completing the Student Representative Training Module.  It will share further information about representation at UQ, what your role entails, and the supports available to you.

Complete Training

Student Representation - Resources for Staff

Staff Guidlines: Effective Student Representation

Student Representation Role Description

Promotional Tips

Statement of Service

Certificate of Recognition Template

Contact Us

UQ Union Secretary

Contact Us