What happens to graduates of high school biotech programs?

Some of them work for Bayer.

technorati tags: , , ,

The San Francisco Chronicle has a nice article on a 15 year old education program in Berkeley that serves students from Berkeley High and Life Academy. Over 1500 students have participated in this program, with 862 placed in internships.

I really liked reading about some of the kids who started in the Bayer Biotech partners program and finding out what they're doing now. One of those interviewed started the program in 1992, as a 15 year old. He liked it so much, his four younger siblings signed up for biotechnology courses, too.

Another student was a high-school teenage mother. Now, she's an assistant supervisor at Bayer.

Part of this program's success most likely comes from the staff's ability to help out with the little things.

Quoted from the article:

The small staff of Biotech Partners tries to clear obstacles for students the way middle-class parents smooth the career path for their youngsters. The program provides tutoring, mentors, class aides, field trips, coaching on workplace behavior and attire, career guidance and help with college applications. No student has to pass up a summer internship for lack of bus money.

"If they don't have appropriate clothes, we take them shopping," Bellush said. The companies offering summer internships include Bayer, the Emeryville site of Swiss drugmaker Novartis, and Libby Laboratories.

Academic snags are often the least of the participants' worries, Bellush said. "This summer, we've dealt with a student's alcoholic parents, two students who were homeless, and students with emotional problems," she said. The staff arranges counseling or other help. With an annual budget of about $400,000, the program serves as many as 120 students a year.

Thanks Genome Technology!

More like this

Every year students in the Puget Sound area gather together at the Biotech Expo to celebrate the life sciences and compete for prizes. Although their projects are diverse in nature, they compete in categories like research, art, journalism, drama, music, and others, all the students learn about…
What roles should community colleges play in training the bioeconomy workforce of the future? Send your answers to bioeconomy@ostp.gov by Dec. 6th. One night towards the end of October, we happened to meet with someone who could tell us more. We asked him about a request for information (RFI)…
Blogging from Bio-Link, part III High school teachers have different techniques for selling their students on the benefits of science and math. When some high school instructors step in front of a class, the quiet demeanor gets put away and another persona steps out - the USED-CAR SALESMAN SCIENCE…
High school education makes a difference, but not quite in the way I'd hoped or expected. A recent correlational study looked at the effects of more discipline-specific education at the high school level on grades in college. That is, if a student took heaps of physics as a high school student, how…

I was a part of a similar program (in college though, not high school) and ended up interning at Procter and Gamble Pharmaceuticals. It was a great experience for me, as i imagine it would be for a high school student too. I figure the younger someone becomes interested in science, the more likely they are to stay and have a fruitful career.