CCPR Testimonials

Why CCPR?

Students at the predoctoral and postdoctoral stage have benefited tremendously from the training in population at CCPR. Below you’ll find a collection of testimonials from some of our current and past students on their experiences at the CCPR.

CCPR Alumnus Testimonials

“I’m so grateful to have been a part of CCPR.  The mission of CCPR of bringing different departments and schools of thought together in service of the pursuit of truth is immensely valuable for any university, and we are very lucky to have such a resource at UCLA.  Watching the development of new interdisciplinary methods to address questions in my fields of interest gave me an immense appreciation for the diverse avenues of thought CCPR actively fosters.  The office space lends itself to a collegial and collaborative environment that served a vital purpose in directing my own research, and the weekly seminars exposed me to different approaches to answering similar questions.  This center is a wonderful place to learn and grow, and I’m eternally indebted to the fantastic staff, faculty, and students that make this organization so special.”

“I am grateful for the support I received from CCPR during my doctoral training at UCLA. CCPR provided funding that allowed me to attend my first PAA meeting. I also had the opportunity to collaborate with the Fund Manager, Steve on my AAPI Data–funded project, which gave me critical experience in carrying out an independent research study. In addition, I shared insights from my F31 proposal development process with other students, fostering a sense of collective growth. Beyond funding and collaboration, I greatly valued being part of a vibrant intellectual community—sharing office space and conversations with scholars who focus on sexual and reproductive health created an environment where ideas could thrive.”

“CCPR is an exceptional community! I have gained tremendously from the weekly seminars, workshops, and even the informal conversations in the coffee room. I especially value the interdisciplinary exchanges with scholars in economics, public health, and policy, which have broadened my perspective and enriched my research. The physical environment at CCPR is equally remarkable—supportive, vibrant, and thoughtfully designed to foster both concentration and collaboration!”

“I’m incredibly grateful to have been part of CCPR during my time at UCLA. The center provided a wide network of mentors, travel and conference funding opportunities, and interesting weekly seminars that exposed me to new perspectives, both targeted towards and outside of my research focus. Beyond the intellectual environment, I appreciated the sense of camaraderie among the research affiliates, and having the safe space to not only develop our research ideas, but also support one another throughout the ups and downs of graduate school. I learned so much during my time at CCPR, and I am thankful that it was such a wonderful home base during my time at UCLA.”

“CCPR has been an incredible place for me and an essential part of my UCLA experience. It was not only where I spent most of my time during my PhD, but also where I first met my coauthor and had the very first conversation that eventually became my job market paper. The open-space design fostered collaboration and often added tremendous value to ongoing projects. It was so easy to find someone to discuss a challenge with, and everyone was always generous with their help. On top of that, CCPR offered outstanding seminars and countless forms of support for students. I truly miss the wonderful time I had there.”

“As a student affiliate and trainee at UCLA’s California Center for Population Research, I benefit from access to an array of resources that enable me to better execute my graduate research. Through weekly seminars, I am afforded the opportunity to learn from academics across the country as well as my colleagues here at UCLA. The faculty, staff, and students at CCPR provide a network of academic support that allows me to improve as a researcher and grow as a scholar.”

“UCLA’s CCPR has been a tremendous resource to me. I have benefited from an incredible group of CCPR-affiliated mentors as a graduate student; received travel and conference funding; received grants that allowed me to focus on my research; and attended a weekly seminar series that brought together researchers from many fields, not just my own. Additionally, the CCPR provides a great research environment for all its resident affiliates, including student office spaces and fantastic IT support and computing resources. I would not have been able to be as productive as I was during my graduate school years at UCLA without this fantastic resource.”

“When I started my doctoral work in public health at UCLA, I didn’t know what demography was. The opportunity to train with CCPR faculty, and alongside other CCPR graduate students, was absolutely central to my development as a researcher and professional. I learned how to formulate questions, carry out fieldwork, conduct analyses, construct an argument, and write a paper. CCPR faculty shepherded me through my first PAA presentations, introduced me to their networks, and pointed me to rewarding postdoc positions. My first published papers were with a CCPR graduate student colleague. I value so highly the training, mentorship, fellowship, and professional development I enjoyed as a CCPR trainee.”

CCPR was my home within the campus of UCLA throughout most of my time in graduate school. Looking back, I can say without reservation that every aspect of my experience at CCPR was uniformly outstanding. The excellent office space and computing resources, fantastic staff, and especially the funding I obtained through traineeships secured by CCPR, made my time in graduate school much more productive. The welcoming and collegial atmosphere at CCPR also attract a great group of faculty and students from across disciplines and create a genuine sense of community at UCLA. My time at CCPR definitely contributed to my development as a researcher and greatly enriched my experience at UCLA.”

“CCPR played a central role in my development as a scholar.  I arrived at UCLA with interests in inequality and health–but in the course of my training at CCPR, I was able to situate those interests both within the discipline of sociology and within the broader interdisciplinary field of population health.  Moreover, I had fun at CCPR, forming personal and professional relationships that will last a lifetime.”

“CCPR was instrumental in my career development. The seminar series offered me valuable opportunities to see how theories and methods can be applied to real-world population research. I also benefited greatly from preparation talks for conference presentations and various other aspects of training in academic skills (i.e., publication, grantsmanship) beyond formal coursework.  The center brings together faculty and students across a wide range of disciplines and prepared me for interdisciplinary research.”

“CCPR was an extremely important part of my graduate training at UCLA. It was (and is) a focal point of interdisciplinary research and training on campus. It supported graduate training, hosted world-class scholars as part of the seminar series, and provided support for conference travel, grant writing, computing, and so much more. It connected me with scholars and mentors with whom my relationships continue today. CCPR exposed me to an incredible breadth of ideas and perspectives and was truly exemplary in the multi-disciplinary community it formed and nurtured around research on demography.”

“In addition to supporting my research interests, the CCPR offered a premier environment for learning how to be a competent, rigorous and attentive researcher. The faculty were accessible and committed to my professional development; the seminars spanned several disciplines within the population sciences and were conceptually and methodologically informative; and the postdocs and students I engaged with were talented and collaborative. In the end, my affiliation with the CCPR was a hallmark of my success as a graduate student and contributed to the completion of my dissertation and achievement of my academic and professional goals.”

“My graduate studies were largely organized within the CCPR. Because of the Center, I was able to train in subjects (e.g., nutritional epidemiology and population economics) outside of my primary discipline and develop long-lasting research collaborations with scholars from several fields. My career was profoundly shaped by the quality of the mentorship I received from faculty affiliated with CCPR at the time.”

“CCPR played a major role in who I am today as a scholar. Through the interdisciplinary seminar series, I was exposed to a wide variety of methods, topics, presentation styles, and ways of being a scholar. I had the opportunity to meet many preeminent demographers from around the country and in retrospect, I realize how important these meetings were for forming my professional network.  Another notable quality about CCPR’s training is the incredible dedication of its faculty to student mentoring.  At CCPR, I gave countless practice talks and received detailed and honest feedback. In more informal settings, my CCPR mentors provided critical feedback and support of my research agenda as well as guidance on my career more generally. I’m grateful for the training I received from CCPR on a daily basis!”

“CCPR is my intellectual home. The training at CCPR made me realize that I am a demographer at heart. The center provides an intellectual environment that encourages graduate students to interact with faculty, colleagues, and speakers from a diversity of research areas, engage in cutting-edge research projects, and acquire skills to communicate their research to a wider audience.”

“I began my affiliation with CCPR when I arrived at UCLA as a new graduate student, and I’m really glad I did.  CCPR gave me a place beyond my home department to work and to meet people from my field and related fields.  Attending the weekly seminar exposes me to work in a variety of disciplines; beyond being a great professional environment, this also strengthens my understanding of what is expected of my own work, now and in the future. The CCPR computing services have helped me out of several quandaries, from needing more computing power to needing help with coding.  Funding through CCPR helped me focus on my coursework and writing.  I’m definitely grateful that I’ve had access to CCPR for the past 5 years and I look forward to seeing other new students benefit from its environment and services.”

“My time at CCPR exposed me to cutting-edge demographic research from scholars across disciplines and helped me set high standards for my own research. Through CCPR I was able to connect with experts in quantitative analyses for the social sciences, who supported me in making my work more rigorous. This played a critical role in having my work published in top journals in my field and accepted for presentation at PAA, which in turn helped me land my first post-doctoral position. CCPR feels like a true academic community that is committed to its students’ training and success, and I am grateful to have been a part of that community during my doctoral training.”

“As a graduate student at UCLA, I benefited immensely from the wealth of resources at CCPR. These included professional workshops to help students learn the ropes of publishing and networking, funding opportunities to present at conferences and learn new research skills, and a weekly seminar series that showcased new research by bringing in the “who’s who” list of demographers. What I valued most about my training at CCPR were the personal and professional connections I developed with faculty and students both within and beyond my home discipline. This has led to a number of research collaborations as well as strong friendships, long after graduation. I will always call CCPR my first academic home.”

“Being involved with CCPR has been a wonderful experience for me. CCPR provides an opportunity to meet and interact with students and faculty from other disciplines. The seminars are a great place to hear about research outside of my field; the proseminars a useful platform to meet researchers outside of UCLA and hear more personal details about their research and career trajectories. The resources are great: a personal workspace I could not find in my department; excellent statistical consulting; and generous support to attend and present at PAA.”

“CCPR has provided me access to a network of researchers that I wouldn’t have normally have access to. I can interact with students and faculty from across many departments with relative ease. This has allowed me to procure entry into classes from outside of my field and has facilitated completion of my degree requirements.”

“My graduate training at CCPR has exposed me to a group of faculty and student researchers who is diverse in the field of study, methodological approaches, and personal backgrounds and who share an interest in the public good. In addition to the resident researchers, the training program exposed me to a variety of nationally (and, often, internationally!) renowned faculty presenters on a weekly basis, and the insights gained from them–especially in the small group student lunches–have substantively shaped how I present and think about my own research. More generally, the positive and collaborative environment at CCPR is immensely conducive to getting work done, due to the positive atmosphere, the work-friendly spaces, and the deep pool of faculty and fellow students willing to lend a few minutes to solving a question. Both my research and many (interdisciplinary!) friendships have grown in my time at CCPR.”

“CCPR has been a tremendous resource to me during my graduate training at UCLA. I entered the Sociology Ph.D. program with no formal training in quantitative methods or statistics, so I felt quite behind initially. Luckily for me, CCPR offered a plethora of resources, including seminars, traineeships, workspace, travel grants and helpful faculty mentors. The training and support I’ve received have been truly exceptional!”

“I am extremely grateful for the role that CCPR has played in my graduate experience. Over the years it has been my most consistent connection to current empirical social science research. The weekly seminars informed my conception of strong applied work, and afforded the opportunity to converse with guest researchers from all over the world. My job talk matured in the CCPR conference room, and travel support to PAA lead to professional growth and an expanded network that I otherwise would have forgone.  In short, CCPR has contributed to every dimension of my scholarly development.”

“As a current CCPR affiliate and a former NIA trainee, I have had the opportunity to learn about emerging population research from internationally recognized scholars. Additionally, attending CCPR-hosted mini-conferences on health and aging has reinforced my interest in working in a collaborative, interdisciplinary fashion, combining both sociological and economic perspectives to understanding the complexities (and consequences) of kinship relations across the life course in the US.”

“During my two years as a graduate student affiliate of the California Center for Population Research, I have felt that I am a member of a supportive scholarly community, one in which I learn from faculty and fellow graduate students affiliates alike. CCPR has supported my training in demography and quantitative methods with direct financial support through the NICHD-funded Traineeship program. In addition to financial support, affiliation with CCPR has furthered my methodological, academic and professional development. I have participated in training workshops in the use of statistical methods and programs, used the computing environment CCPR hosts for the analysis of restricted access data, utilized CCPR’s one-on-one computing and statistical consultation service and received financial support to attend conferences. The weekly CCPR seminar series has been invaluable to my exposure to a wide range of scholarship from top population scientists. During the pro-seminar available to graduate students following the weekly seminar, I have had the opportunity not only to question presenters about the content of their research and their experience as scholars, but also to share with them my research interests and project ideas.”