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What Do Life Science Graduates Do? Suzanne Creeber Careers Consultant.

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Presentation on theme: "What Do Life Science Graduates Do? Suzanne Creeber Careers Consultant."— Presentation transcript:

1 What Do Life Science Graduates Do? Suzanne Creeber Careers Consultant

2 SESSION OUTLINE Life Science Graduates – who are they? Life Sciences – qualifications and skills What do Life Science Graduates do? Where do Life Sciences Graduates Work? Examples of careers What are employers looking for? Useful resources and information

3 Life Science Graduates – who are they? Life Science at Manchester includes a wide range of subject areas Anatomical Sciences, Biochemistry, Biology with Business and Management, Biology with Science and Society, Biomedical Sciences, Biotechnology (Enterprise), Cell Biology, Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology, Developmental Biology, Genetics, Life Sciences, Medical Biochemistry, Microbiology, Molecular Biology, Neuroscience, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plant Science, Zoology…. …with or without a Modern Language!

4 What do Life Science graduates do?

5 http://www.hecsu.ac.uk/current_projects_what_do_graduates_do.htm

6 Grad job or non-grad? Dental hygienist Veterinary nurse Marketing administrator Comedian Novelist Laboratory technician Office manager Personal trainer GRAD JOB  NON GRAD GRAD JOB  NON GRAD

7 What did Manchester Life Science graduates do? (2012) NHS Graduate Management Trainee Researcher, advertising agency DNA Analyst, Forensic Services firm Med Sales Rep, Abbott Quality Control Analyst, Sanofi Trainee Vascular Scientist, NHS Graduate trainee (audit), Deloitte Microbiologist, Sanofi Record Label Assistant, Independent label Project manager, ReachOut! Scientific Copy Editor, Biomedical publisher Media Manager, Shark Lab Scientific Officer, Paterson Institute

8 Where do Life Science graduates work?

9 What did Manchester Life Science graduates do? (2012) Further study PhD/Masters/MRes: Degree related, Translational Med, Nutrition, Cancer Research, Enterprise, Integrative Biology, Experimental Psychology, Biotech, Environmental Second degree: Medicine (13), Veterinary Medicine (1), Nursing/Midwifery (5) Vocational training: PGCE, Law/GDL, business, science communications, journalism, management

10 “I want to work in a lab” Academic Research & Development – An Academic Career website An Academic Career Industrial Research and/or Development – E.g. utilities, food, FMCG, energy, pharma, civil service (e.g. DSTL), environmental, pest control Clinical Science (NHS Scientist Training Programme) Placements/work experience give an advantage – Year in Industry, degrees with Industrial Experience, summer studentships Postgrad study may be desirable/essential

11 “I want to use my degree outside of the lab” Science communication Healthcare Environment Teaching Med Sales Patents

12 Science Communication Scientific journalism (newspapers, publications, learned societies, online) Medical writing (PhD often needed) Scientific publishing Public engagement Advertising, marketing and events e.g. product launches, brand strategy Relevant/work experience is important! – Societies, volunteering, blogging, “Mad Science” type jobs…

13 Medicine / healthcare support Medicine – 4 and 5 year programmes available to graduates – Work experience critical, shadowing and care experience Physiotherapy Radiography Nursing Pharmacy Dietetics Veterinary Medicine

14 Environmental work Relevant degree, sometimes postgrad too Work experience is crucial to prove commitment – Industrial experience / summer studentships – Regular volunteering, work shadowing Diverse roles/work areas – flood defence, energy, agriculture, conservation, waste management, forestry, with animals, pest control, sustainability

15 Science information Patents – Good grades, second European language Teaching – Classroom experience important/experience with kids – Student ambassador scheme, taster days, mentoring… Med sales – Shadow a rep to find out if it is for you – Summer placement in a pharma/FMCG company (sales/marketing)

16 What do employers want

17 What do employers want from graduates? Imagination and enthusiasm Customer focus 'Can do' attitude Ability to work in teams Ability to adapt Initiative Drive Analytical skills Self-management Cultural sensitivity Ability to use IT Managing learning & career Higher level problem solving skills Creativity Leadership Communication skills Commercial awareness Passion Project management

18 What do employers want? 3 most important factors considered by (employers) when recruiting graduates: – Positive attitude – Employability – Relevant work experience (Scottish Life Science Recruiters Survey 2011)

19 What Employers Want 61% of employers felt relevant work experience or an industrial placement was the most important factor to consider when recruiting graduates (COGENT, 2011)

20 Pharmaceutical careers information site 7 Useful Resources Careers Resources plus advice on Going to University Student Information Services Ltd website with useful info and stats Science Careers Pathways, including life, industry and nuclear Going to University Graduate careers site with “options with your subject” Russell Group guide to post 16 study

21 Thanks for listening www.manchester.ac.uk/careers www.ls.manchester.ac.uk/undergraduate/


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