Uh-oh - we debated the semantics of agenda last year and some people got banned as a result. I suggest that we all just agree on the dictionary definition:
http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/agenda?view=uk
agenda
noun
• 1 a list of items of business to be discussed at a meeting.
• 2 a list of matters to be addressed.
— ORIGIN Latin, ‘things to be done’.
http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/features/dictionary/DictionaryResults.aspx?refid=1861584135
agenda
a·gen·da
noun (plural a·gen·das)
Definition:
1. list of things to do: a formal list of things to be done in a specific order, especially a list of things to be discussed at a meeting
2. matters needing attention: the various matters that somebody needs to deal with at a specific time
What's your agenda for today?
3. personal motivation: an underlying personal viewpoint or bias
Of course she's in favor, but then she has her own agenda.
Definition:
Plural of agendum
[Early 17th century. < Latin, plural of agendum "thing to be done" < agere "to do"]
set the agenda to be the major influence or force affecting something
It is the environmental lobby that is setting the agenda in this round of negotiations.
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=agenda
agenda Look up agenda at Dictionary.com
1657, from L., lit. "things to be done," from neut. pl. of agendum, gerundive of agere (see act). Originally theological (opposed to matters of belief), sense of "items of business to be done at a meeting" first attested 1882.