The thousands of new students at the University of Virginia this fall can find support from faculty, staff and administrators. They also have another support group that knows exactly what they’re going through.
They have each other.
Students receive support and services through Student Council, investigations of violations of the University’s Honor Code through the Honor Committee, resolve conflicts among themselves through the University Judiciary Committee and learn UVA news by reading the Cavalier Daily.
Student self-governance is a time-honored tradition at UVA and a unique facet of every student’s experience on Grounds. Here are a few of this school year’s student leaders:
Allison McVey, University Judiciary Committee chair
 
Allison McVey stands in the doorway of her Lawn residence. As University Judiciary Committee chair, McVey helps find resolutions when students are accused of violating the University’s Standards of Conduct. (Photo by Matt Riley, University Communications)
When Allison McVey applied for colleges, she added UVA to her list of schools on a whim. She knew it had top-notch programs and figured she should give it a shot. Then, she was nominated for a Jefferson Scholarship. The scholarship covers the full cost of attendance at UVA for four years.
The process involved extensive interviews with alumni and current Jefferson Scholars, exposing her to the concept of student self-governance and its importance at UVA.
“The more I learned, the more I sort of fell in love,” McVey said.
McVey quickly joined the First Year Judiciary Committee, which investigates alleged violations of UVA’s Standards of Conduct and holds first-year students accountable.
“Five people can sit and listen to the same story and have five different versions of that story. I think it’s a really rich process, where we can come up with a resolution across that difference of viewpoints,” McVey said.
McVey, a political philosophy, policy and law major, now chairs the committee.
“What I hope is that through my work on the (University Judiciary Committee), I can help a student who’s nervous or very discouraged about a situation feel a little better. If I’ve done that, I can be proud,” she said.
Thomas Ackleson, Honor Committee chair
 
Thomas Ackleson hails from Chama, New Mexico. He said his upbringing instilled in him the values of honesty and integrity. (Photo by Lathan Goumas, University Communications)
Thomas Ackleson would be the first to admit that expecting college students to never lie, cheat or steal will eventually let you down. He would know. He chairs UVA’s Honor Committee.
“The idea that we can all trust each other simply because we’re students here is really beautiful,” Ackleson said. “Is it idealistic? Yes. Is that something that we could practically achieve? Probably not, but it’s what we’re striving for.”
UVA’s Honor System should allow a student to leave a laptop in the library unattended while grabbing coffee, or a professor to administer a take-home exam. The combination of responsibility and trust embedded in the Honor System is what attracted Ackleson to the organization. It was familiar to him. Ackleson grew up on a ranch in Chama, New Mexico, just south of the state’s border with Colorado.
“You have to be self-sufficient, and you have to trust other people. It’s pretty rural; it’s 20 miles to the nearest hospital,” Ackleson, a biomedical engineering major, said.
 
                                                         
 
             
          
          
         

 
 
 
                
                 
                
                