http://www.utsouthwestern.edu/SURF

UT Southwestern Medical Center

JAMP Intern

May - June 2019 • Dallas, TX

What I liked

I liked the peer mentor relationships that were built. We volunteered and held social gatherings. We also prepared for interviews.

What I wish was different

N/A

Advice

Make the most of the resources offered. JAMP provides so many resources to enhave your pre-medical experience.
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Nurse Extern

June - August 2019 • Dallas, TX

What I liked

I liked the hands on experience in a specialty that interests me, and I liked building relationships with my preceptors and coworkers. I also liked how it helped me build more confidence in the clinical setting.

What I wish was different

None- it was great

Advice

If you’re a nursing student doing this externship, take the 2 hour elective course along with it so you can get college credits.
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Project Intern

June - August 2017 • Dallas, TX

What I liked

Completing hands-on research with some of the most incredible scientists and facilities in the world.

What I wish was different

Hours, wish the hours werent so long and so much commute to work made it very frustrating at some points

Advice

Do not take it for granted. Make sure you work as hard as you would in school.
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Patient Care Technician

June 2018 • Dallas, TX

What I liked

I love working at UTSW the work environment is great and I love what we stand for as a healthcare system!

What I wish was different

I wish I could have started working there sooner!

Advice

If you are thinking of becoming a tech so you can gain patient experience and work while in nursing school I think you should definitely go for it! I also highly recommend working at UTSW! You will gain great experience like never would have imagined!
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Nurse intern

June - August 2019 • Dallas, TX

What I liked

Helped me become more confident. Familiar with the hospital system

What I wish was different

I wish it was longer

Advice

Definitely will help you get your foot in the door with where you want to work
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Lab Technical Assistant

March 2017 • Dallas, TX

What I liked

Tons of independence and collaboration, I was given the opportunity to be just as involved as all of the post-docs and grad students. Thanks to that I have tons of skills and authorship on two big papers, maybe a third, pending. NOTE: Because of the freedom academia allows its researchers, your experience here is completely dependent on the PI you end up with. The resulting experiences could be wildly different from mine depending on how that PI likes to run his/her lab.

What I wish was different

The pay, I had an enormous amount of experience volunteering in labs on campus at UTDallas. However, human resources at UTSouthwestern only considers something a job if the individual was paid for the work done. So when I applied they told me in their eyes I had ZERO work related experience and made it clear I had ZERO ability to negotiate salary. Luckily the PI went to bat for me but still, wow the pay is bad. There are respected PhD level scientist working there for less than $50,000 a year. It seems like the only way to get paid in academia is by making a HUGE Einstein level discovery and getting your own lab as a PI to continue researching it. Also, the campus and facilities are ugly, old, and constantly leaking/breaking. I sound like I am nit-picking but really... its shockingly bad.

Advice

Do your research on the PI, his publications, and reach out to him directly via email. Be prepared to talk about it in the interview and why you want to pursue his/her work as a job. It is 100% better than applying to a job listing for his/her lab online. I had already corresponded through email, met in person, interviewed, and then after all was said and done they instructed me to apply to the online job listing... almost as though it were more of a formality. He said "By law we have to interview X amount of people before we can hire, but after our interview I already know who I want to hire, so just hang tight for a few weeks and keep in touch!" To touch on one final point I previously mentioned about pay grade. This job really opened my eyes to what not paying people properly does to an industry. When I began telling my work colleagues I was leaving for another job/career almost every single one(all PhD level scientists) said they wanted to leave academia, they were unhappy with the money and the kind of life style it forced them to live. They wanted me to keep them updated on "what is industry like?" "What were the interviews like?" "How did you do your resume versus a CV" they had lots of questions.
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