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CAREERS & EDUCATION
From Issue #8
ODD JOBS
When Jane Alkuri thinks of her summer
job two years ago, she can’t help but laugh. “The place
was a Gong Show,” Alkhouri says of the job she landed
after graduating from high school. It was in a lab
that promised balding people a fresh crop of hair.
“You had to apply these funny-looking solutions on
their heads… and then you’d have to put a heat cap on
their heads for 15 minutes and repeat the procedure
twice.” The lab drew customers through newspaper
advertisements, but didn’t provide any guarantees on
hair growth.
Unlike working at traditional places such as concession
stands, service stations or day camps, out-of-the-ordinary jobs such as Alkhouri’s leave a lasting
impression.
LOOKING FOR A
SUMMER JOB?
HERE ARE SOME TIPS:
Getting started: Write your resume to target a
specific job. Don’t use the same resume for all jobs.
Free resume help: Try your local Human
Resources Centre for Youth. Call 1-800-935-5555
for the address.
Consider: All your past experiences including
babysitting, paper routes, volunteer work, computer
skills, participation in team sports.
Job postings: At community centres, churches,
YWCA/YMCA Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs, local Human
Resources Centre for Youth.
Likely places to look: Concession stands, video
arcades, parks, day camps, service stations, farms,
fast-food restaurants.
Where: Think about how you are going to get to
work. Is there a bus nearby?
Network: Let teachers, parents’ friends, neighbours
and other acquaintances know you’re looking
for work. |
Although she can make fun of her job now, the
experience taught her to start looking for summer
work as early as possible. She’s not alone when it
comes to quirky stories about summer jobs.
When Lyle Baker was 16, he worked as a quarry for
the Vancouver police department’s dog squad.
Baker’s job was to hide – in an abandoned building
or up a tree – before police officers let their dog-intraining
loose to find him. “I was the actual prey,”
Baker says of the summer job that he got through
friends. It lasted part time for two years while he finished
high school.
Heather Anne Brittan landed her job through a
technical college, where an instructor recommended her because of her outgoing personality.
As a park naturalist at the Okanagan Lake
Provincial Park in British Columbia, Britton
gave talks on wildlife, conducted nature
walks, caught bats and fed a rattlesnake. She
had to keep the snake food – dead mice and
rats – in her home freezer.
“I was living with somebody else and I
had to clearly mark the box, ‘Dead mice, do
not eat.’”
Britton also had to ensure a neighbouring
cat didn’t eat the mice she would thaw out on
the sidewalk.
An unusual summer job can provide benefits
besides being the source of entertaining
stories. Britton says her job helped her develop
new skills, as well as giving her the chance
to work in an environment she loved.
“It was an awesome experience; it got me
out there believing that I could actually do
something.”
ONLINE
Want to
learn more?
Check out these
Internet sites:
Site of the Student
Employment Network,
an organization that
helps students in their
job searches.
www.studentsjobs.com
If you want a job in one
of Canada’s national
parks, this is the site for
you... parkscanada.pch.gc.ca |
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