Yra toks dalykas, kad panašios pareigos reikalauja skirtingų dalykų. Vienas analitikas turi mokėti naudotis MS Office įrankiais ir to visiškai užteks, o kitas turi mokėti SQL, MySQL, VB, trečiam gali prireikti .Net, UML, ketvirtam dar ko nors ir taip be galo (nesakau, kad mane domina analitiko darbai, bet idėja ta, kad ar analitikas, ar marketingo specialistas, ar rinkodaros specialistas, ar duomenų vadybininkas, ar net tas pats testuotojas yra reikalaujamas turėti specifinių žinių, o mokėti viską yra tiesiog fiziškai neįmanoma ... ).
Alanna Shaikh, International Public Health practitioner
So tell me about that process – what did you do at undergrad, and how did your job-search go?
Alanna: I graduated from Georgetown with a bachelor’s degree in Middle East Studies, and realized there was nothing I wanted to do that I was qualified for. I applied for a lot of administrative assistant jobs and then found an overseas internship program at the American University in Cairo for recently graduated seniors. I applied and was accepted – so I went to Cairo to work for AUC there as the “head intern” in the Office of the University President. It was for one academic year, and I was paid $300/month and given a great apartment in downtown Cairo.
I spent the year learning to live in the Middle East, learning about university administration, and wondering what I would do next, since I already knew there were no jobs I wanted that I could get with my bachelor’s degree. I realized all the stuff I did want to do required an MPH, so I ended up in an MPH program at Boston University. I LOVED it. As an undergraduate I really studied and fought and bled to hold a GPA of 3.0, and then grad school was just where my passion was – I got straight As. I had to work, but the work was so interesting, it didn’t feel oppressive. I took loans to get through grad school, and I am still paying them now. My aim is to clear them by the time my 4-year-old son goes to university!
I didn’t have the usual post-school job search. After I had finished my coursework, while I was writing up my MPH paper, a classmate got in touch with me. His dad worked for UNFPA (the United Nations Population Fund), and since I was interested in reproductive and maternal health I had been in email correspondence with his dad (he had mentored me a little). His dad was at a reception in New York and met the Central Asia UNFPA director and told him that he knew a girl who might want to be an intern with UNFPA. He gave me the email address for the guy in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. I basically just emailed a million times until he said I could be their intern. I was an intern for a year, and then got a job with a USAID-funded health project, since I was already there in Tashkent and knew the situation. At this point my only previous field experience was the year in Cairo aside from a summer in Kuwait City in high school and some family visits to Karachi.
I didn’t have any funding for the internship – I just estimated how much it would cost me every month to live in Tashkent, figured out how long I wanted to stay (six months), then I got a job, saved up the money, and got on a plane to Tashkent. There is funding for overseas internships, but most of it seems to be for graduate students. I actually ended staying at my internship for a full year, funding the extra six months with a US government fellowship that no longer seems to exist and a stipend that UNFPA found for me (they also reclassified me as a consultant at that point). I think I was on the budget as their English teacher! It was not a large stipend, and for six months my little brother actually paid my student loans for me (he’s a great guy!), but then his financial situation changed, and I deferred them.
But I got to Tashkent on my own, and I don’t think I could have gotten that fellowship if I wasn’t already there.
The internship pretty much launched my global health career – it led to the job that led to my next job and so forth. My first real job after the internship was as a program manager with a USAID-funded health project. It was a great job for me at that point – I did a lot of writing, which teaches you about the inner workings of development work very quickly. It also had more actual work than expat jobs usually do; I was involved in designing educational campaigns on health topics and writing focus group guides. I even did some training.
Well, this is inspiring.
Alanna: I graduated from Georgetown with a bachelor’s degree in Middle East Studies, and realized there was nothing I wanted to do that I was qualified for. I applied for a lot of administrative assistant jobs and then found an overseas internship program at the American University in Cairo for recently graduated seniors. I applied and was accepted – so I went to Cairo to work for AUC there as the “head intern” in the Office of the University President. It was for one academic year, and I was paid $300/month and given a great apartment in downtown Cairo.
I spent the year learning to live in the Middle East, learning about university administration, and wondering what I would do next, since I already knew there were no jobs I wanted that I could get with my bachelor’s degree. I realized all the stuff I did want to do required an MPH, so I ended up in an MPH program at Boston University. I LOVED it. As an undergraduate I really studied and fought and bled to hold a GPA of 3.0, and then grad school was just where my passion was – I got straight As. I had to work, but the work was so interesting, it didn’t feel oppressive. I took loans to get through grad school, and I am still paying them now. My aim is to clear them by the time my 4-year-old son goes to university!
I didn’t have the usual post-school job search. After I had finished my coursework, while I was writing up my MPH paper, a classmate got in touch with me. His dad worked for UNFPA (the United Nations Population Fund), and since I was interested in reproductive and maternal health I had been in email correspondence with his dad (he had mentored me a little). His dad was at a reception in New York and met the Central Asia UNFPA director and told him that he knew a girl who might want to be an intern with UNFPA. He gave me the email address for the guy in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. I basically just emailed a million times until he said I could be their intern. I was an intern for a year, and then got a job with a USAID-funded health project, since I was already there in Tashkent and knew the situation. At this point my only previous field experience was the year in Cairo aside from a summer in Kuwait City in high school and some family visits to Karachi.
I didn’t have any funding for the internship – I just estimated how much it would cost me every month to live in Tashkent, figured out how long I wanted to stay (six months), then I got a job, saved up the money, and got on a plane to Tashkent. There is funding for overseas internships, but most of it seems to be for graduate students. I actually ended staying at my internship for a full year, funding the extra six months with a US government fellowship that no longer seems to exist and a stipend that UNFPA found for me (they also reclassified me as a consultant at that point). I think I was on the budget as their English teacher! It was not a large stipend, and for six months my little brother actually paid my student loans for me (he’s a great guy!), but then his financial situation changed, and I deferred them.
But I got to Tashkent on my own, and I don’t think I could have gotten that fellowship if I wasn’t already there.
The internship pretty much launched my global health career – it led to the job that led to my next job and so forth. My first real job after the internship was as a program manager with a USAID-funded health project. It was a great job for me at that point – I did a lot of writing, which teaches you about the inner workings of development work very quickly. It also had more actual work than expat jobs usually do; I was involved in designing educational campaigns on health topics and writing focus group guides. I even did some training.
Well, this is inspiring.
Joy of tastes.
It's been a long time since I posted something. Publicly. Having in mind that I need to write at least few hundred words per day to practice English writing, I will do this post completely in this language. There may be mistakes and I may feel self-conscious, but I need and I want to write articles somewhere where this whole world can understand them. Not just our shrinking population of Lithuanians.
So today I am proud of my food. The more I sit at my laptop, the more I cook. Why? I need to do something that does not involve sitting and staring at the screen. There are so many things to do - writing, reading, photography, designing, development, learning. And for some reason most of time you spend at the computer while doing all those things. So cooking helps to escape.
Some time ago I couldn't even think about fried carrots. Today I made them. I shredded couple of them, fried, mixed in some corn and rice. Then add all kinds of spice (ginger, sage, salt, curry, coriander and turmeric), just a tiny bit of cheese and you have this amazing filling vegetarian dish.
And for dinner it was beat salad with a bit of apple and cabbage. It turned out perfectly!
So today I am proud of my food. The more I sit at my laptop, the more I cook. Why? I need to do something that does not involve sitting and staring at the screen. There are so many things to do - writing, reading, photography, designing, development, learning. And for some reason most of time you spend at the computer while doing all those things. So cooking helps to escape.
Some time ago I couldn't even think about fried carrots. Today I made them. I shredded couple of them, fried, mixed in some corn and rice. Then add all kinds of spice (ginger, sage, salt, curry, coriander and turmeric), just a tiny bit of cheese and you have this amazing filling vegetarian dish.
And for dinner it was beat salad with a bit of apple and cabbage. It turned out perfectly!