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Times may be tough, but that doesn't mean work can't also be play. MQ's Guide this issue gives four Miami students credit for doing what they love.
With graduation looming, many Miami University seniors are starting to worry about their futures. The reality of the current job market should be a warning for first years, but will they take the lessons of those older and wiser to heart?
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When Miami senior Monica Morse takes her diploma this May she won't need to worry about finding a job. She will not be susceptible to company cut backs or lay-offs, nor will she be gearing up for grad school in the fall. Instead, Morse feels confident when she steps into her Teach for America classroom for the first time this fall, after only weeks of educational training, she will be ready to impact her kindergarten students for the next two years.
After graduating from Miami with a zoology degree in 2007, what did you plan on doing? When I graduated, I knew I didn't want to get a job right away. I knew that life in the suburbs was not for me and that I wanted to live by the ocean. Medical school is a typical option for the major, but I was on the swim team and didn't want to study for the MCAT during the season. Then, after the season was over, I still didn't have the desire to take it.