Students participating in the Collaborative Program in Women's Health may be pursuing degrees at either the master's or doctoral level. Students at both levels will meet regularly for a monthly series of research seminars and will be encouraged to build relationships with peers and with program faculty that reach across disciplinary boundaries. In addition to their home graduate unit supervisor (referred to by the program as their primary mentor), students will also be required to identify a co-mentor, a faculty member of the Collaborative Program whose own methodologies represent a different approach than that used by the student's primary mentor.
To successfully complete the Collaborative Program in Women's Health, students must also successfully complete the program requirements of their home graduate unit. Master's students who successfully complete the program will have the following notation added to their transcripts: 'Completed the Collaborative Program in Women's Health.'