If there are particular areas that interest her, specific companies or universities, or especially specific people she might be interested in working with have her contact them directly expressing interest. Sometimes this works to get your foot in the door, might be low or no pay internship job, but experience and recommendations alone would be worth more than any salary. She can always take a 2nd job to supplement income if she needs it, right now she probably needs experience more though. |
not to hijack the post, was she happy with the professional rework of the resume and how did she find someone to do this? |
There will be many things expected of you that you don’t get to bill insurance for, get used to it. |
| OP: If you do not want to change diapers, then remain unemployed until you find a job that satisfies your demands. |
| Also, $40.37 dollars per hour to change diapers even for on with a PhD. |
| ^ is good even for... |
| My workplace just hired a recent phd with 2 years post grad experience at 48k so I’d say take it and build your credentials. |
| You should start with a diaper changing class. |
It was a bit of reformatting which hasn’t helped so far |
NP, thanks for confirming, I recalled reading the diaper changing issue somewhere I truly do not understand why a speech pathologist would be asked to change diapers - I guess I cannot imagine a child in speech therapy being that young. And for a child that young, I’d think a parent/caregiver should accompany them and they could change any diapers. I truly do not understand this situation. I’m with OP about the diaper changing, it seems like there would be substantial potential liability/risk in doing this because of potential for accusations of abuse unless there is another adult present. Also, any professional other than a caregiver/nanny/daycare should be doing whatever they are trained to do and speech pathologists shouldn’t be changing diapers. I agree that it is insulting. Good luck, OP. |
It sounds like the job isn't speech pathology - it's pre-school. |
| Teachers in Virginia are required to change diapers (if no other staff). https://hls.harvard.edu/jdadmissions/apply-to-harvard-law-school/jdapplicants/hls-profile-and-facts/ |
| I’m the parent of a child (now teen) who started speech at 1.5. He attended a school-based program at 2 so naturally the staff (SLPs and grad students) changed diapers if needed. Look for a job with an older age group if this is a deal-breaker or use this job as a stepping stone to something better. $40 an hour might not seem like a high salary today but you are clearly just starting out. Some fields pay less than others so you can’t compare your salary to anybody else’s but a recent grad SLP. The SLPs we had in private practice made much more than those in schools/facilities but you have to start somewhere. |
+100 Op- you've posted about this before I'm not sure how many more posts you can create about this. |
| Here is one thing you can do to build up experience and increase your monthly pay...do a side hustle like tutoring kids. You can take the job with more pay that has less benefits but tutor on the side to make up the difference. I would gladly pay $75 an hour for a speech pathologist to work with my speech delayed 9 year old for one hour, two days a week, even virtually. |