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They’re Earning; They’re Learning
Los Angeles offers prominent institutions where USC College students may experience real-world learning – and make money.
“It’s a good feeling to know that we’re helping researchers and professors from all over the world develop,” said USC senior Anita Rai, who worked at the Natural History Museum.
Photo/Philip Channing
Photo/Philip Channing
When the then-USC College freshman learned she could conduct research at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, and get paid for it, she jumped at the chance.
“This is so much better than sitting in an office answering phones,” the 22-year-old senior said, climbing a ladder inside the museum’s basement vault, where she sorted collections of crustaceans, echinoderms and mollusks stored in various-sized jars.
“My work at the museum also gives me an opportunity to connect with institutions in my community in a profound way,” she said.
Rai works in the museum’s crustacea division, where her job also teaches the principles of biological systematics, giving her hands-on lessons of the evolutionary history of life on Earth that she might not receive from classes alone.
Located in Exposition Park, the museum is an igneous stone’s throw from the University Park campus.
“With this job, I can walk across the street from campus and be paid to do science-based work,” Rai said. “And since I’m a biology major, this job actually enriches my education.”
Currently the museum employs 30 USC students through the federal work-study program – a financial aid program in which employers can use federal funding to hire students.
Work-study jobs are typically on campus, but there are off-campus opportunities at many other prominent nonprofit institutions and organizations such as the California Science Center Foundation, the California African American Museum, the USC Hillel Jewish Center and the Hispanic Scholarship Fund.
Located in a major metropolitan center of culture, politics and economics, USC College can offer real-world learning experiences in a variety of world-class institutions.
For example, many College students have the opportunity to conduct research at the famous Huntington Library or Getty Center through the USC-Huntington Early Modern Studies Institute and the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West.
The Natural History Museum is a major research institution where students are paid to work and learn. Founded in 1913, the museum is a national leader in research, exhibition and education. It’s the largest museum in the western United States, with collections including 35 million specimens and artifacts, some as old as 4.5 billion years.
Research is conducted in fields from archaeology to mineralogy, and from malacology (the study of mollusks) to vertebrate paleontology. Work-study students also have jobs in other museum departments such as human resources, education or marketing.
At the museum, Rai wore rubber gloves and carefully pinched with forceps a sponge specimen from a large jar and placed it into a small plastic tube. She was handling Thieleia rubiginosa, one of 5,000 known modern species of sponges. The sample had been collected in Ensenada in Baja California during a 1936 expedition.
A researcher in Mazatlán writing a paper about marine life along the Mexican coast had asked to borrow a piece of the rare sample. Rai was extracting a small yet precious piece to be delivered by hand to Tucson then picked up and taken to Mazatlán.
“It’s a good feeling to know that we’re helping researchers and professors from all over the world develop new knowledge about marine life,” Rai said.
College alumni who participated in the museum’s work-study program credit the real-world experience for helping them to obtain work once they graduated.
Jennifer McCard, 22, worked at the museum her entire undergraduate career as an environmental studies major. Minoring in international relations, she graduated in December 2006.
After graduation she returned home to Soldotna, Alaska, and was hired by the Kenai Watershed Forum, a nonprofit organization dedicated to maintaining water quality on the Kenai Peninsula.
“The databasing skills I learned at the museum were the reason they hired me,” she said. “The hands-on experience really added to my education because it was so different from what I was doing in the classroom.”
Regina Wetzer, director of the museum’s Marine Biology Biodiversity Processing Center and research scientist in the crustacea division, said she cherishes the students and their help.
“They are wonderfully energetic and bright students,” said Wetzer, also an adjunct professor in the College. “I don’t know how we would function without them.”
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