MINERVA VOICES

"Better Thinkers. Better Leaders. Better People.”: MDA Graduates Reflect on Community and Decision-Making at Minerva University

MDA graduate Katarzyna Buszka reflected on decision-making and community at Minerva University’s 2026 graduation ceremony.

May 28, 2026

At Minerva University’s 2026 graduation ceremony in San Francisco, graduate speaker Katarzyna Buszka reflected on the experience of pursuing a master’s degree while balancing careers, responsibilities, and life across multiple time zones.

Buszka, a member of Minerva’s Master of Decision Analysis (MDA) Class of 2026 from Poland, addressed fellow graduates during the university’s Degree Conferral Ceremony at Herbst Theatre.

“We took on the challenge of pursuing a master’s degree without putting our lives on hold,” Buszka said. “Every MDA class showed up on Forum, screens lit, minds open. We were ready to be challenged.”

Throughout her remarks, Buszka reflected on Minerva’s active learning model, emphasizing the program’s focus on participation, intellectual humility, and collaborative problem-solving.

“Minerva doesn’t let you sit in the back of a lecture hall and nod your head,” Buszka said. “There are no lectures. From day one, we were thrown into active seminars where you can’t hide behind a muted mic and a profile picture.”

She described how the program encouraged students to think critically, challenge assumptions, and engage openly with uncertainty.

“What Minerva didn’t give us was a set of answers,” Buszka said. “It’s a set of habits. The instinct to question our assumptions before we act on them.”

Buszka also reflected on the ways those habits extended beyond the classroom and into everyday life and leadership.

“These are not skills you put on a resume,” she said. “This is a reflex now. This shapes how we lead meetings, read the news, raise our children, and show up in the world.”

Across the speech, Buszka repeatedly returned to the importance of community, particularly among working professionals navigating graduate education while balancing careers and personal responsibilities.

“But if I’m honest, the thing I will carry the longest with me is not a concept or a framework,” Buszka said. “It’s the community.”

She reflected on the relationships built through late-night study sessions, discussions across time zones, and immersion experiences in Tokyo and London.

“It’s the late-night or early-morning study sessions across more time zones than I can fathom,” Buszka said. “It’s the immersion weeks in Tokyo and London where we hugged the people we’d been debating with for months.”

Buszka also closed her remarks with humor, recalling the challenge of finally meeting classmates in person after months of virtual collaboration.

“Here’s the best part about meeting everyone in person,” she said. “We could not for the life of us decide which museum to go to or where to get dinner. Turns out the hardest decisions aren’t in the classroom.”

As graduates prepared to enter the next chapter of their personal and professional lives, Buszka encouraged classmates to carry forward the habits of reflection, collaboration, and thoughtful decision-making they developed throughout the program.

“To my fellow graduates, we came here to become better decision makers,” Buszka said. “I believe we’re leaving as better thinkers. Better leaders. Better people.”

“The world is full of noise, uncertainty, and consequential choices,” she continued. “We are now more than ever equipped to navigate them, because this program taught us that the best decisions are informed by many perspectives.”

As graduates prepared to leave San Francisco and return to cities and careers around the world, Buszka’s remarks captured the spirit of the MDA experience, which is that the most meaningful learning often comes from learning how to think more openly, collaboratively, and intentionally alongside others.

Congratulations Minerva University Class of 2026. View the full degree conferral ceremony here. 

Learn more about Minerva’s Master of Decision Analysis program and how professionals around the world are building new approaches to leadership, decision-making, and collaboration.

Quick Facts

Name
Country
Class
Major

Computational Sciences

Natural Sciences

Computational Sciences

Arts & Humanities, Natural Sciences

Social Sciences & Arts and Humanities

Business

Computational Sciences

Computational Sciences

Social Sciences & Business

Computational Sciences

Social Sciences

Computational Sciences & Business

Business & Computational Sciences

Computational Sciences

Computational Sciences

Social Sciences & Business

Business

Natural Sciences

Social Sciences

Social Sciences

Social Sciences & Business

Business & Computational Sciences

Business and Social Sciences

Social Sciences and Business

Computational Sciences & Social Sciences

Computer Science & Arts and Humanities

Business and Computational Sciences

Business and Social Sciences

Natural Sciences

Arts and Humanities

Business, Social Sciences

Business & Arts and Humanities

Computational Sciences

Natural Sciences, Computer Science

Computational Sciences

Arts & Humanities

Computational Sciences, Social Sciences

Computational Sciences

Computational Sciences

Natural Sciences, Social Sciences

Social Sciences, Natural Sciences

Data Science, Statistics

Computational Sciences

Business

Computational Sciences, Data Science

Social Sciences

Natural Sciences

Business, Natural Sciences

Business, Social Sciences

Computational Sciences

Arts & Humanities, Social Sciences

Social Sciences

Computational Sciences, Natural Sciences

Natural Sciences

Computational Sciences, Social Sciences

Business, Social Sciences

Computational Sciences

Natural Sciences, Social Sciences

Social Sciences

Arts & Humanities, Social Sciences

Arts & Humanities, Social Science

Social Sciences, Business

Arts & Humanities

Computational Sciences, Social Science

Natural Sciences, Computer Science

Computational Science, Statistic Natural Sciences

Business & Social Sciences

Computational Science, Social Sciences

Minor

Sustainability

Sustainability

Natural Sciences & Sustainability

Natural Sciences

Sustainability

Computational Sciences

Computational Sciences

Computational Science & Business

Concentration

Data Science and Statistics, Digital Practices

Earth and Environmental Systems

Cognition, Brain, and Behavior & Philosophy, Ethics, and the Law

Computational Theory and Analysis

Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence

Brand Management & Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence

Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence

Economics and Society & Strategic Finance

Enterprise Management

Economics and Society

Cells and Organisms & Brain, Cognition, and Behavior

Cognitive Science and Economics & Political Science

Applied Problem Solving & Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence

Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence & Cognition, Brain, and Behavior

Designing Societies & New Ventures

Strategic Finance & Data Science and Statistics

Brand Management and Designing Societies

Data Science & Economics

Machine Learning

Cells, Organisms, Data Science, Statistics

Arts & Literature and Historical Forces

Artificial Intelligence & Computer Science

Cells and Organisms, Mind and Emotion

Economics, Physics

Managing Operational Complexity and Strategic Finance

Global Development Studies and Brain, Cognition, and Behavior

Scalable Growth, Designing Societies

Business

Drug Discovery Research, Designing and Implementing Policies

Historical Forces, Cognition, Brain, and Behavior

Artificial Intelligence, Psychology

Designing Solutions, Data Science and Statistics

Data Science and Statistic, Theoretical Foundations of Natural Science

Strategic Finance, Politics, Government, and Society

Data Analysis, Cognition

Internship
Higia Technologies
Project Development and Marketing Analyst Intern at VIVITA, a Mistletoe company
Business Development Intern, DoSomething.org
Business Analyst, Clean Energy Associates (CEA)

Conversation

At Minerva University’s 2026 graduation ceremony in San Francisco, graduate speaker Katarzyna Buszka reflected on the experience of pursuing a master’s degree while balancing careers, responsibilities, and life across multiple time zones.

Buszka, a member of Minerva’s Master of Decision Analysis (MDA) Class of 2026 from Poland, addressed fellow graduates during the university’s Degree Conferral Ceremony at Herbst Theatre.

“We took on the challenge of pursuing a master’s degree without putting our lives on hold,” Buszka said. “Every MDA class showed up on Forum, screens lit, minds open. We were ready to be challenged.”

Throughout her remarks, Buszka reflected on Minerva’s active learning model, emphasizing the program’s focus on participation, intellectual humility, and collaborative problem-solving.

“Minerva doesn’t let you sit in the back of a lecture hall and nod your head,” Buszka said. “There are no lectures. From day one, we were thrown into active seminars where you can’t hide behind a muted mic and a profile picture.”

She described how the program encouraged students to think critically, challenge assumptions, and engage openly with uncertainty.

“What Minerva didn’t give us was a set of answers,” Buszka said. “It’s a set of habits. The instinct to question our assumptions before we act on them.”

Buszka also reflected on the ways those habits extended beyond the classroom and into everyday life and leadership.

“These are not skills you put on a resume,” she said. “This is a reflex now. This shapes how we lead meetings, read the news, raise our children, and show up in the world.”

Across the speech, Buszka repeatedly returned to the importance of community, particularly among working professionals navigating graduate education while balancing careers and personal responsibilities.

“But if I’m honest, the thing I will carry the longest with me is not a concept or a framework,” Buszka said. “It’s the community.”

She reflected on the relationships built through late-night study sessions, discussions across time zones, and immersion experiences in Tokyo and London.

“It’s the late-night or early-morning study sessions across more time zones than I can fathom,” Buszka said. “It’s the immersion weeks in Tokyo and London where we hugged the people we’d been debating with for months.”

Buszka also closed her remarks with humor, recalling the challenge of finally meeting classmates in person after months of virtual collaboration.

“Here’s the best part about meeting everyone in person,” she said. “We could not for the life of us decide which museum to go to or where to get dinner. Turns out the hardest decisions aren’t in the classroom.”

As graduates prepared to enter the next chapter of their personal and professional lives, Buszka encouraged classmates to carry forward the habits of reflection, collaboration, and thoughtful decision-making they developed throughout the program.

“To my fellow graduates, we came here to become better decision makers,” Buszka said. “I believe we’re leaving as better thinkers. Better leaders. Better people.”

“The world is full of noise, uncertainty, and consequential choices,” she continued. “We are now more than ever equipped to navigate them, because this program taught us that the best decisions are informed by many perspectives.”

As graduates prepared to leave San Francisco and return to cities and careers around the world, Buszka’s remarks captured the spirit of the MDA experience, which is that the most meaningful learning often comes from learning how to think more openly, collaboratively, and intentionally alongside others.

Congratulations Minerva University Class of 2026. View the full degree conferral ceremony here. 

Learn more about Minerva’s Master of Decision Analysis program and how professionals around the world are building new approaches to leadership, decision-making, and collaboration.