Date: Fri 14-Nov-1997
Date: Fri 14-Nov-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: MICHEL
Quick Words:
schools-career-shadowing
Full Text:
Career Shadowing: Bring Realism To The Search For A Career
(with cuts)
BY MICHELE HOGAN
Juniors and seniors at Newtown High School are exploring career options as
part of a newly expanded career shadowing program.
Some participating students have spent a day learning about medicine
one-on-one from a doctor. Others have tried their hand at graphic design
within a publishing firm, or experienced first-hand how autistic children can
be helped by contact with dolphins. These are a few of the many career
experiences open to students in the program.
The community has been very open and supportive of the program. Jane McEvoy,
career coordinator at the Newtown High School, has compiled a list of about
250 people in the area who are willing to show a student what their job is all
about.
Many people in financial services, teaching and real estate have offered to
help, but students keep coming up with new career ideas, which send Mrs McEvoy
searching for an appropriate placement.
"I have been known to drive into the woods, and leave a girl with a man with
tattoos all over him!" said Mrs McEvoy. "She was interested in film
production, and he was shooting an avant-garde production, Pink Pumpkins at
Dawn . She had a fabulous day, getting to see these people and talk to them."
Mrs McEvoy also mentioned finding "a woman in Bridgewater who works with
autistic children and dolphins. She takes kids for the day. She was a teacher
and is wonderful to hook kids up with."
The bulk of Mrs McEvoy's requests are for placements in medicine, law,
engineering, graphic art, psychology, social work and teaching.
"Teachers are easy, and you know they are great with kids," says Mrs McEvoy,
and most other interests can be met, but psychology is somewhat more
difficult.
Mrs McEvoy commented that "so many students want to help people, but it is
hard to find experiences that are meaningful because of confidentiality."
She went on to explain that students can talk with psychologists and see
videos, but people seeking psychological help often decide not to speak in
front of anyone but the psychologist, so the student often cannot get a
complete picture of the job.
Nonetheless, Alyson Robichaud, a student who shadowed a local school
psychologist last week, learned a lot. Alyson said that the career shadowing
got her more interested in the field, and she had a chance to learn about the
tests used on kids. Yet the prospect of dealing with real situations of abuse
made her question whether she would be suited for such a career.
So Many Options
Mrs McEvoy said that "Students are sometimes surprised by how many career
options they really have. One student who was placed with a New York theater
group was surprised at the diversity of positions available -- there was even
a full-time wig maker!"
Another student, senior Marisa Burnham Bestor, who is interested in both large
animal and small animal veterinary medicine, hopes to get a close look at both
in the career shadowing program.
Although she said that witnessing a dog having rotten teeth removed under
anesthetic was "pretty gross," she said that the experience made her career
plans "more real."
Marisa was particularly interested when Dr Rita Power spayed the office's own
cat at the Bethel Village Square Animal Hospital. Marisa said that Dr Power
"made the incision and searched around, pulling out things and pointing it out
to me. Here's the bladder. See the liver."
Besides the actual experience, students are also expected to take a list of
questions with them when they go career shadowing. The questions help the
students to probe into the career field, from specifics of how to train for
the position, to more general questions.
Full Of Enthusiasm
Students are expected to inquire about the most satisfying things about the
job and the hardest thing about the job. This helps them get a feel for what
the job might mean for them.
Some students come back full of enthusiasm. Newtown High School senior Reid
Warner's placement with Dr Malloy, an intervention radiologist at Danbury
Hospital, strengthened his interest in medicine.
Reid said that the career shadowing "made me more aware of what medicine has
to offer." He said that everyone, patients and doctors, had a great attitude.
He said that they were open and that they explained everything.
Reid also commented on the immediacy of the career shadowing experience. He
said, "It's really happening. It's real life. It's not just a fictional play.
You never know what it's going to turn out to be."
Reid is thinking seriously about pre-med, but keeping his options open.
Mrs McEvoy said that the people students have shadowed with have offered to
help students in many ways. One young man was hired at Taunton Press part-time
after school and in the summer, in graphic design, the career field that
interested him the most.
Shadowing also brings home to students the importance of education and
relevant work experience. Mrs McEvoy says that "when someone out there says
`go to college,' it means more" than when we encourage them.
"Some students think they should be coming out of college and getting tons of
money, but there is a reality here," Mrs McEvoy commented.
Students learn what the real starting salaries are from people working in the
field. The career center also has detailed information, including salaries, on
file for innumerable career options. The center also has career interest
inventories that help students identify careers they might like.
Through synthesizing the real life experience of one person in the field, with
general information available in the guidance office, students get a broader
perspective on what a specific career would mean to them.
Alyson Robichaud would recommend career shadowing highly. She said, "If you
want to learn more about what you want to be in the future, career shadowing
will get you started."
Interested students can fill out the request form that is available in the
guidance department.
