Campuswide Resources
Do you need help finding UMass resources? Do you have a question and are unsure if UMass offers support in a particular area? Start here!
Do you need...
Immediate financial assistance or support for an emergency?
The Dean of Students Office provides comprehensive support for anything that impacts your ability to succeed while at UMass. They provide microgrants (do not need to be repaid), microloans (need to be repaid), can coordinate with your faculty and advisors to support you in times of emergency (personal or family), manage the student care supply closets and connect you to a variety of campus and community resources.
If you are unsure of where to start, the Dean of Students Office is a great one stop shop for all of your questions.
The Ombuds Office is an impartial and confidential resource for all campus students and employees that ensures fair and equitable treatment on campus and provides mediation and conflict resolution services.
Help with your classes?
- Attend a Student Success Toolkit Workshop on test-taking, time management, and/or study skills.
- Attend a Supplemental Instruction (SI) session or schedule one-on-one tutoring through the Learning Resource Center.
- The Math Department Tutoring Center offers drop in tutoring for pre-calculus, calculus, and statistics.
- The CNS Academic Resources Guide offers additional information about CNS advising resources and other resources for on-campus student academic support.
Additional student support services?
- Disability Services offers support and coordinates accommodations for students with disabilities. They will help you with classes, living situations, and other accommodations you may need.
- The International Programs Office provides important services for international students and scholars and coordinates international study abroad experiences.
- The English as a Second Language Program offers robust programming, tutoring, and courses to help ensure the academic success of students, staff, and faculty who are not native English speakers.
Support to manage stress, anxiety, depression, and your overall mental health?
- The Center for Counseling and Psychological Services (CCPH) provides confidential services that include crisis intervention; short-term counseling for individuals, couples, and families; support and therapy groups; behavioral medicine; medication management; and an eating disorders clinic.
- Psychological Services Center (PSC) offers low-cost mental health services for those who need psychological support for a longer time frame. This APA-accredited community mental health clinic is operated by the Division of Clinical Psychology in the Department of Psychology.
- The Center for Women and Community (CWC) is a multicultural campus-based center that sponsors different campus and community programs, including general mental health counseling, in an effort to promote educational access and equity.
Help finding community and making connections?
Connecting with Other Students
- Campus Pulse provides information about all registered student organizations at UMass. If you have an interest, there is most likely a student organization for you!
- Student Bridges is a student-run, non-profit agency at UMass Amherst that provides support to ensure the success of students from historically marginalized populations. They build partnerships with local schools and community organizations; offer college awareness, preparation, and success activities; and advocate for enhanced institutional and public policies and practices.
- The Transfer Student Alliance Program (TSAP) provides support and community for transfer students in the College of Natural Sciences.
Connecting with Offices and Cultural Centers
- The Center for Multicultural Advancement and Student Success (CMASS) provides academic coaching, cultural enrichment, and student support for our diverse UMass community. CMASS also oversees the four cultural centers on campus promoting the Indigenous, Black, Latinx, and Asian diasporic communities.
- The CNS Office of Student Success and Diversity oversees a variety of programming to ensure the academic success for our students, including the Bio-Pioneers RAP, the Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation (LSAMP), the Lee Science Impact Program (Lee SIP), the Forsythe Grange Mentoring Program, the Transfer Student Alliance Program (TSAP), the STEM Starter Academy, and CNS peer advisors.
- Stonewall Center is a lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer, intersex, and asexual (LGBTQIA) educational resource center that serves the campus, the Five Colleges, and the surrounding community. They provide cultural and educational programming; ally training sessions; a speakers bureau; a DVD, video, and book library; information and referrals; support for individuals who experience harassment and discrimination; advocacy for LGBTQIA students at UMass Amherst; and community outreach through Queer-e, their weekly listserv.
- The Office of Religious and Spiritual Life offers a range of educational programs, individual and institutional advocacy, interfaith dialogue, and other bridge-building activities designed to foster an informed, caring, and supportive campus community for students of all backgrounds and beliefs, and to promote a greater sense of meaning and purpose in students’ lives.
- The Center for Women and Community is a multicultural campus-based center that sponsors different campus and community programs, including general mental health counseling, in an effort to promote educational access and equity.
- Veterans Services is full of opportunities to get to know current student veterans and active duty students. Come meet other incoming Veterans and ask questions regarding issues ranging from housing and child care services to GI Bill® and other benefits and certification of benefits.
- The Office of Civic Engagement & Service-Learning has many opportunities for all types of service projects. Being involved in a community project can help you develop as a person while making a difference!
Connecting with Alumni
- Connect UMass links alumni with one another and with current students, creating a richer and more connected UMass community
Help finding Internships, Jobs, and Research Opportunities?
Jobs and Internships
- The Student Employment Office, a great resource for all students, posts job listings for both on- and off-campus employment, including work-study opportunities.
- The CNS Career and Professional Development Center counselors are a great resource, and can help you with resumes, interviewing, internships, and your plans post-UMass. Make an appointment through Handshake.
- Connect UMass links alumni with one another and with current students, creating a richer and more connected UMass community
Research Opportunities
- The Office of Undergraduate Research and Studies (OURS) serves as the centralized research and resource office for the campus. OURS helps students find and access undergraduate research and scholarly opportunities on and off campus, throughout the year.
- The Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation (LSAMP) seeks to increase enrollment, retention, graduation, and participation in research of undergraduate students from underrepresented groups seeking degrees in the STEM disciplines.
- The Lee Science Impact Program (Lee SIP) is a research experience for undergraduates (REU) program focused on broadening participation in research for current UMass students. Lee SIP scholars are awarded a generous stipend and spend 10 weeks over the summer connecting with faculty, engaging in research, and learning science and science communication skills.
Help funding your education?
- The CNS Scholarships and Awards page offers information about the more than 100 scholarships and awards for students majoring in CNS disciplines.
- The Financial Aid Office, in addition to helping you fund your education, the Financial Aid Office helps you understand the cost of a UMass Amherst education, eligibility requirements, how financial need is determined, your rights and responsibilities regarding your aid package, and more.
- The New England Regional Students Program (NERSP) allows students from New England who enroll in a major not offered by a public institution in their home state to pay tuition of only 50 percent above the Massachusetts resident rate. To check eligibility, contact the Registrar’s Office.
Help studying off campus?
- The Five College Consortium enables UMass Amherst students to take classes at no extra cost at Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and Smith Colleges—all linked by a free bus system. You can start taking classes at the other four colleges during your second semester and may take up to three classes per semester. UMass students can also participate in and have access to facilities, libraries, and cultural and social events on these campuses.
- The Domestic Exchange Office assists UMass students who would like to spend a semester or an academic year at another institution in the United States or its territories. With proper planning, going on a domestic exchange should not impact your expected graduation date.
- The International Programs Office offers a range of semester-long and year-long opportunities, and there are plenty of English-speaking options, even in non-English-speaking countries. Students who choose to study abroad typically go during their junior year. CNS students may take advantage of a variety international exchange programs and with proper planning are able to graduate on time.
Medical or legal assistance?
- University Health Services (UHS) serves UMass Amherst students, faculty, and staff, along with their spouses, domestic partners, and dependents. Visitors who become ill or injured can be seen at UHS on a fee-for-service basis. UHS offers appointments and walk-in care.
- The Student Legal Services Office (SLSO) provides counseling, advice, research, education, representation, and referrals concerning legal matters—including DACA issues, landlord disputes, etc.—for all fee-paying UMass Amherst students.