The Office of Career and Professional Development Team:
- David Blancha, PhD, Assistant Director, Researcher Team
- Ray Care, PhD, Program Director, Researcher Team
- Shirley Ly, MEd, Program Manager, Researcher Team
- Trish McGrath, BA, Event Planner
- Anna Reeves, MS, Assistant Director, Health Team
- Naledi Saul, MPM, Director, Office of Career and Professional Development
- Sarah Tanase, MA, Program Director, Health Team
David Blancha, PhD (he/him)
Assistant Director, Researcher Team
[email protected]
David Blancha is Assistant Director for the Researcher Team at UCSF's Office of Career and Professional Development.
He comes most recently from UC Davis, where he developed and launched a system of micro-credentials for graduate student and postdoc professional development. Prior to that, David served as the Assistant Director for Graduate Career Services at the UCLA Career Center, where he worked with Master's and PhD students on all aspects of professional development, developed graduate-level career programming, and managed advanced degree industry relations. Prior to his work at UCLA, David coordinated a Teagle Foundation grant for the Teaching Center at Columbia University, where he finished a PhD in Philosophy. David is a devoted design-focused educator with a particular interest in leveraging technology and gamification to improve access to and enhance the quality of educational opportunities.
Ray Care, PhD (she/they)
Program Director, Researcher Team
[email protected] (415) 502-0239
Ray Care currently serves as Program Director for PhD Career and Professional Development. Her passions are supporting early-stage students to find the training environment that is right for them and broadening awareness of the skillsets involved in scientific training, including evidence-based teaching and research mentoring. She also leads PhD students and postdocs through preparation, application, interview, and negotiation for faculty jobs. In all of these areas she engages with trainees through one-on-one counseling, live and asynchronous programming, online resources, and tailored outreach.
Ray found her drive to do this work as a graduate student at UCSF. After switching thesis labs and learning about the challenges facing her peers, Ray worked with the graduate student government and Graduate Division leadership to develop and disseminate the results of a Mentorship Climate Survey. She served as a liaison between student, administrator, and faculty groups to use this data to effect campus-wide changes in the student experience. She has also worked as the Intern for Academic Career Development, Program Manager, and Interim Assistant Director in the OCPD.
Ray earned her PhD in Neuroscience from UCSF and holds a Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience from UCLA.
Shirley Ly, MEd, (she/her)
Program Manager, Researcher Team
[email protected]
Shirley Ly is Program Manager for the Researcher Team at UCSF’s Office of Career and Professional Development. As part of the Researcher Team, she leverages her experience managing student service programs in higher education and knowledge of the learning sciences to support master’s students, PhD students, and postdocs in achieving their professional and career aspirations.
Prior to joining UCSF, Shirley supported undergraduate students as Science Assistant Director at the UC Berkeley Student Learning Center. There, she co-managed academic support programs for students enrolled in biology, chemistry, astronomy, and physics courses. She developed learning support services and resources in a variety of formats, designed and co-facilitated peer educator training, partnered with faculty and department staff to meet emerging learner needs, and mentored students with academic interests and professional goals in the sciences. Her commitment to enhancing educational equity in the sciences informs her service-oriented and student-centered approach as an educator.
Shirley holds a Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from the University of California, Davis, and a Master of Education in Curriculum and Instruction (Science Education) from the University of Texas, Arlington. She is also a certified Core Level 1 Executive Function Coach.
Trish McGrath, BA
Event Planner
[email protected] (415) 514-4863
Trish McGrath has over 9 years experience in planning and executing events in corporate, not for profit and university settings. She has managed a wide range of events, including professional workshops and seminars, career fairs, vendor fairs, stakeholder meetings, staff orientations, receptions and company-wide holiday gatherings. She partners with senior leadership to envision, implement and closeout events, including establishing and managing timelines.
Prior to working at UCSF, Trish spent six years at the California Academy of Sciences where she planned and executed both small and keystone events, both professional and social. She earned her Bachelors Degree in English from the University of San Francisco.
Anna Reeves, MS
Assistant Director, Health Team
A[email protected] (415) 476-5772
Anna has a deep-seated commitment to the holistic career development of health professional students, having worked with them for over a decade. As the Assistant Director of the Health Careers team, she creates and implements multi-year career education strategies for four health professional schools and several related health careers programs. Drawing on her extensive career counseling expertise, Anna designed and implemented a customized Health Student Professional Development Model: PRAXIS, grounded in social cognitive career theory, which serves as the foundation for all career services delivered by the health careers team.
Her strategic initiatives are tailored to each student population's needs and aligned with faculty and school leadership teams' professional development goals and priorities. Anna designs specialized career development courses and resources, provides individual student counseling, and manages Health Careers staff while training a graduate-level career counseling intern. She co-supervises the Health Professional Career Peer Leadership Program, leads community outreach initiatives, and supports technology adoption across the broader OCPD team. Her expertise and interests encompass social cognitive career theory and holistic evidence-based career counseling—particularly assisting first-generation students in identifying internal and external barriers when navigating unfamiliar professional environments, in addition to instructional design and gamification utilizing evolving e-learning technologies.
Before joining UCSF, Anna built specialized expertise as a Pre-Health Career Counselor at UC Berkeley's Career Center, where she counseled undergraduate and graduate students, co-led campus-wide advising initiatives, developed customized programming to support transfer and first-generation students, and co-designed and co-taught career development courses. Her diverse private sector experience now provides a valuable real-world perspective, helping her guide students in strengthening their professional communication skills, assessing and adapting to workplace norms, and developing self-advocacy and teamwork skills—enabling students to thrive in academic and professional settings.
Anna holds a Bachelor of Science in Organizational Behavior from the University of San Francisco and earned a Master of Science in Counseling, specializing in career and college, from San Francisco State University.
Naledi Saul, MPM
Director, Office of Career and Professional Development
[email protected] (415) 514-3306
Naledi Saul is the Director of the UCSF Office of Career and Professional Development. She leads the university's efforts to teach clinicians- and scientists-in-training the information, skills and confidence required to navigate their careers successfully.
Her area of expertise involves teaching trainees how to skillfully assess and successfully negotiate educational and professional spaces and situations in the clinic, the lab, and the larger world. From helping trainees position and present themselves professionally, manage power differentials in professional relationships, and develop their ability to effectively mentor, teach and supervise as new managers and faculty, to communication competencies such as presentation skills and negotiation. The essential thread throughout her work is the focus on strengthening clinicians' and scientists' ability to make decisions and develop strategies informed by their own definitions of professional integrity and personal identity.
Naledi is also deeply interested in supporting institutions in establishing, building and integrating high-functioning career services at the graduate/post-graduate level, as well as teaching the professional development skills required to engender high functioning and healthy teams.
In recognition of her work, she was selected for the UCSF Chancellor's Award for University for Exceptional University Management and the Chancellor's Award for Advancement of Women Leaders. She has served as an advisor to the Career Forum at Science magazine’s online resource, Sciencecareers.org, and frequently presents career-related workshops at ABRCMS and FASEB. Naledi also is a former PI on two NSF grants focused on teaching future faculty how to effectively supervise and mentor.
Prior to UCSF, Naledi was an Assistant Dean of Students and Assistant Director of the Career Center at Amherst College, and an Assistant Director of the Career Development Center at Mount Holyoke College. She holds a Master of Public Management degree from the University of Maryland, College Park, and a Bachelor of Arts in History from Spelman College.
Sarah Tanase, MA, (she/her)
Program Director, Health Team
[email protected]
Sarah is committed to fostering student learning and empowerment, cultivating communities, and advancing educational equity. As the Program Director for the Health Careers Team, Sarah designs and facilitates career and professional development programs, counsels students, and supervises a staff member. She also co-supervises the OCPD's Career Outreach Peers as a part of the Career Peer Leadership Professional Development Program.
Sarah previously worked for Stanford Career Education, similarly developing a career development program curriculum and providing individual counseling to students and alumni. She also served on the Learning Outcomes committee in hopes of increasing the intentionality, accessibility, and effectiveness of learning opportunities provided by her department. In her roles at UCLA Residential Life, Sarah oversaw the residential building housing the Global Health, Pilipinx, and American Indian and Pacific Islander Living Learning Communities. This included supervising a student staff team, serving on an on-call emergency response rotation, advising programming efforts, and adjudicating conduct with an emphasis on restorative justice. She also played a pivotal role in developing her department’s training curriculum for both professional staff and student staff.