Friday, July 31, 2020

She works hard for the money

She works hard for the money Its so nice to be graduated I can make lists of things that Ive done and call them blog entries! Hooray! I know a lot of people are thinking about their fall schedules right now (I mean, a lot of freshmen most upperclassmen are probably still trying to erase memories of their spring schedules), and Ive heard several people wonder whether they will be able to hold a job and successfully complete their schoolwork, so I thought Id talk a little about the jobs Ive had at MIT. Ive had a job of some sort since Registration Day of my first term at MIT, and Im glad that I did. In an obvious sense, money is good, and Ive always felt that the less money I had to beg from my parents, the better. They paid a lot of money for my education, and the least I could do was try to pay for makeup at Sephora and nights out at the movies, yeah? I never felt that having a job impaired my ability to do my homework in fact, Ive found that having a job and participating in an extracurricular activity have helped me acquire my ninja-like time management skills. When you know you have to go to work, you have to think twice about turning off your alarm and sleeping through an entire school day, unless you are exceptionally good at faking sick to your boss. I think that first-term freshmen should be careful not to overcommit themselves, but working two or three hours a day is almost certainly not going to overcommit you to anything. As a first-term freshman, youll probably be in class only four or five hours a day. Youre probably used to being in class seven or eight hours a day; you could use those extra hours to watch Cartoon Network and eat Cheetos, or you could use them to earn some money. Your choice. Librarian August 2002 May 2003 My job as a student librarian at the LLARC (Language Learning and Resource Center) was actually the first job Id ever held I was way too absurdly busy in high school to work. I heard about the job during cheerleading tryouts, when Maritza 03, the captain that year, told everybody that the LLARC was hiring and that we should all go apply. I worked seven hours a week during fall term and eight hours a week during spring term; I usually worked two hours a day. I got paid campus minimum wage, which is $8.75 an hour, and I was responsible for checking out books and other media to patrons, keeping library materials in order, and doing weekly chores like dusting the bookshelves. It was a very good job for a freshman, because theres a lot of downtime, so I was pretty much stuck at work with my homework for a few hours on end. I got a lot of homework done that year while getting paid to do it. Pretty good deal, if I do say so myself. Lab Monkey June 2003 August 2003 Like I said the other day, I got a ten-week internship at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism the summer after my freshman year. (My postdoc told me at one point that hed picked my resume from the pile of applicants because he was curious to see what an MIT cheerleader was like. For those of you keeping score at home, thats two jobs so far which are directly attributable to the cheerleading squad.) I spent the first few weeks of the summer getting all my safety training and learning how to do things like PCR and gel electrophoresis; I helped a little with a project to find candidate genes for alcoholism. My major project that summer was to genotype 300 rhesus macaque monkeys at six genomic loci using PCR and a big expensive capillary gel electrophoresis machine worth approximately as much as my life. It was time to breed the macaque colony (which was a test population for studies on genetic and environmental contributions to alcoholism), and in order to set up breeding pairs, the postdocs needed to know which macaques were closely related to others. I dont think I got paid much hourly (the NIH is the federal government, after all), but my stipend checks came monthly, and Id never seen checks for so much money made out to me. I loved my NIH job, and I happily worked overtime with no compensation so I could finish the project before I had to leave. Lab Rodent August 2003 July 2006 During my summer at the NIH, I decided it would be a good idea to look for a UROP. I emailed about ten professors whose work sounded interesting to me, sending my (admittedly skinny) resume and a short cover letter explaining why I would make a good little worker bee in their laboratories. I got two responses, one from the professor I work with now (Morgan), and one from the professor next door (Yasunori). I interviewed with Morgan, and he offered me the job on the spot, so I never even interviewed with Yasunori I dont think he even remembers, though. At any rate, Yasunori always talks to me in the hallway, so if he remembers, it didnt hurt his feelings. (Note here that I got the UROP because of my previous experience at the NIH so mark this one as an indirect instance of the cheerleading squad getting me a job.) I am not so much inclined to talk about what I do in my UROP, as Ive talked about it five majillion times on this blog and its starting to bore me. At any rate, I work full-time during summers and IAP, and about 15-18 hours a week on average during term (although working 20+ hours wasnt terribly unusual for me). I get paid through Morgans research funds (not by the UROP office) Im actually funded by a grant from the Japanese research institute RIKEN. Ive been at the lab longer than most of the postdocs and grad students who are there now. Been there forever, yep yep. Blog Queen July 2005 August 2006 Im sure I dont need to say anything about this job (duh), but check this out. Ben offered me the blog job because hed seen me posting on College Confidential and I started posting on CC because there was a thread about MIT cheerleaders and I was defending my kind. So apparently if you want a job, the best thing to do is join the MIT cheerleading squad. Questions 1. Jason said I plan to take course 16.50 Introduction to Propulsion this fall, and I want to prepare in advance. I would like to know is there anyway I could get information about what textbook would be used in this course? Well, two things. First, the textbooks required for MIT classes arent listed anywhere online, and the only way to find out which books you need is to physically go to The Coop in Kendall Square and look. This is the Coops evil way of trying to discourage you from buying textbooks online. Still, even though the Coop opens the book section criminally late, there will still be plenty of time to order the book online after finding out what it is. Second, you could check out the community book trading sites BookX has a listing for two 16.50 books, and generally speaking the books stay the same from year to year. I dont know the URLs of the other two sites we used to have one site for the whole community, but it shut down last year, and since then things have become rather randomly chaotic. APO also does a book exchange every semester. I should mention that some course 16 classes dont have textbooks 16.05, which Adam took this spring and which is the prereq for 16.50, didnt have a book, just a course reader available at CopyTech. 2. Jon said, I dont know if youve ever been there, but Pirates Cove has seriously got to be one of THE BEST minigolf courses in America. If you havent been, check it out! We were actually going to go to Pirates Cove (because whats cooler than pirates? nothing), but a) it was hot, so we wanted a water park, and b) Adam was nervous about driving that far. :)

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