When we began our first year of medical school at a US MD-granting institution, we were elected as head Course Representatives (Course Reps) in a longstanding, Feedback-Driven representation model. In this reflection, we explore how serving in this role shaped students' engagement and sense of belonging in our institution through the lived experience of representation. Drawing on Student Engagement Theory as an organizing lens, we analyze our experience and those of our peers across behavioral, emotional, and cognitive dimensions of engagement. Behaviorally, engagement was reinforced when student feedback led to visible and timely changes, demonstrating the legitimacy of the student voice and validating institutional responsiveness. Emotionally, representation functioned as a belonging cue as peers reported greater trust and psychological safety when concerns were voiced by fellow students rather than faculty. Cognitively, opacity (what students described as the "black box" of decision-making) provoked curiosity about institutional constraints and trade-offs, fostering systems-level thinking about curriculum design. Equally meaningful were the lessons we learned about ourselves. Serving as Course Reps required emotional labor we had not anticipated, including navigating the weight of peers' frustrations and advocating for diverse viewpoints we personally did not hold. Through this work, we discovered that representation can transform the representatives as much as those they represent, deepening our own sense of belonging, purpose, and agency. Our understanding evolved through sustained dialogue with classmates and our faculty mentor. By situating our lived experiences within the literature on student governance and belonging, we argue that Feedback-Driven representation systems do not just fix student concerns: they shape how students perceive their legitimacy and connection to their institution. Learners are important stakeholders whose insights and engagement meaningfully shape their educational experiences. When students are invited into authentic collaboration with faculty, they gain a sense of ownership in their education. For us, that sense of agency and belonging has been one of the most enduring lessons of medical school.
Sethi et al. (Mon,) studied this question.