Hello again,
I think I am getting tired - I haven't been on the newsgroup for a few
days and am catching up. All the power to you and your new business - It
is definitely a great place to be right now. I think of myself and people
like me who really sort of missed the computer craze. The natural
combination of computer science and biology is very powerful; and just
beginning.
Jenn
On Tue, 19 Nov 1996, Kim Pruitt wrote:
> Deborah Merriam wrote:
> >
> > Sarah and a couple of other people have talked a little about the
> > "head-in-the-sand" attitude of academics regarding nonacademic career
> > paths and the need for more discussion of the alternatives. Since I've
> > been giving this a lot of thought recently, I thought I'd start the ball
> > rolling.
> >
> (clip)
> >I've been seriously
> > considering other potential career paths.
> >
> > Here are the options I've thought of. Perhaps they can be a starting point
> > for more discussion.
> > - medicine
> > - law school (science policy or intellectual property)
> > - industry (research)
> > - industry (management, with an M.B.A. perhaps)
> > - industy (sales rep)
> > - science writing or journalism
> >
> (clip)
> > I look forward to hearing your thoughts...
> >
> > Deborah Merriam
>> Hi,
>> Another alternative career path that is popular at the moment is
> Bioinformatics. This requires interest in computers and either direct
> experience in using the various sequence search/analysis programs or in
> writing software. Some people are retraining and obtaining a M.Sc. in
> Computer Science.
>> A bit about me.... I have a Ph.D. and postdoctoral experience in Plant
> Molecular Genetics. I realized at the end of my postdoc that a
> mainstream academic career isn't for me so I dropped out of the pipeline
> and started a *small* scientific software company out of my home. This
> has been an ideal situation for the moment. My overhead is small as I
> work from home, and I set my own hours (I work a lot at night and send
> my 2 preschool girls to the sitters on a very part-time basis). I
> realize that I was very fortunate to have had this choice - my husband
> pulls in a reasonable salary and we do not have to depend on any
> particular level of income from my software sales - which were 0 while
> software was being developed (programmed by my partner/husband who works
> on it at night too)... Anyway, I have learned enough to realize that a
> computer oriented future is the right path for me and I am currently
> looking into doing a second postdoc in bioinformatics and returning to a
> full-time re-directed career path. If I don't find a suitable postdoc
> then I will join the ranks of Ph.D.'s returning to school.
>> Kim Pruitt
>>