Anonymous wrote:I’m the poster whose bio kid didn’t like benchwork, but who has been happy in ecological and evolutionary biology labs/internships. Ec and ev’s fieldwork is often in literally in a field, so it seems to attract lots of outdoorsy types (DC has kayaked, gone spelunking, and done lots of hiking and a fair amount of wading in fieldwork classes). But DC has also done lots of quantitative work, working on modeling in a very sociable lab that mostly stays indoors (except for the twice daily lab espresso breaks).
NP. This sounds like something my kid (in HS) would like. How does one get started with volunteering or eventually interning in this kind of field? Which employers do this kind of thing? (I am obviously not in a science-related field!)
I’m the poster whose bio kid didn’t like benchwork, but who has been happy in ecological and evolutionary biology labs/internships. Ec and ev’s fieldwork is often in literally in a field, so it seems to attract lots of outdoorsy types (DC has kayaked, gone spelunking, and done lots of hiking and a fair amount of wading in fieldwork classes). But DC has also done lots of quantitative work, working on modeling in a very sociable lab that mostly stays indoors (except for the twice daily lab espresso breaks).
Anonymous wrote:OP here. DC was really excited about the experiment and its goals, but quickly realized that the work itself was pretty tedious. Measure this, mix with that, and if you make a mistake, you need to discard everything and start over. DC is also very social but found the lab isolating. As I said, science is not my area, so I wasn’t able to advise, but it did seem likely to me that this environment might be pretty typical for lab work. If you disagree, please share. No one was pushing DC at all, except for always suggesting that research is a likely path for those interested in science.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the part of the STEM frenzy that no one ever explains to striving parents and kids. The S science part of stem pays crap, unless your kid gets into medical school. And the quality of life for most of the jobs is pretty miserable too.
This is what I haven’t told my kid who is OK in math and physics, not so great in chem where there’d be more jobs. Likes bio, but does not realize there’s probably not much of a job market for him with just a BS in bio. Who knows where he’ll wind up.
Why on earth would you not tell your kid this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the part of the STEM frenzy that no one ever explains to striving parents and kids. The S science part of stem pays crap, unless your kid gets into medical school. And the quality of life for most of the jobs is pretty miserable too.
This is what I haven’t told my kid who is OK in math and physics, not so great in chem where there’d be more jobs. Likes bio, but does not realize there’s probably not much of a job market for him with just a BS in bio. Who knows where he’ll wind up.