Originally Posted by ophiura
As an undergrad I did a general biology degree, which I strongly recommend, with an emphasis in "organismal" biology...so zoology, ecology, etc. Took as many marine bio opportunities that I could find, including several summer courses (tropical marine bio, marine ecology in Maine). It was as an undergrad that I started research on brittlestars and my association with the USNM.
I began in grad school with an basic oceanography and ichthyology background courses and then switched schools to study marine invertebrate systematics. I worked for more years than I care to admit on my PhD (um,6 or 7) before deciding my husband was more important. Make no mistake, a doctorate requires a lot of sacrifice and often jumping through fiery hoops at the whim of your committee.
My specialty obviously, was brittlestars.
I never had the illusion that I would work in the field, however, as university and research positions are not easy to come by and I wasn't keen on living from grant to grant and seeking tenure somewhere once I got married. It was something my husband and I both wanted to avoid (he has a PhD in geology). One thing I noticed in most of my profs was that they had one kid, if any, and were pretty deeply committed to their research and academic side. I'm not being judgmental there....it was just not what I wanted...once family became a priority. Before that point I was ready to go, though I preferred teaching to all out research.
My husband moved to Houston to start a job and I followed several months later...started at an LFS, then as an aquarist, and now work in data management for a seismic company. Much more promising future there...though one day I would not mind ending up in a consultancy position for deep sea drilling, mining, etc as I primarily studied deep sea brittlestars.
Most of my fellow graduate students have gone on to productive research and academic careers at large museums or universities. But often after several additional years in a postdoc position.
Thank you for sharing this, I really appreciate it. My dad sorta sacrificed his relationship with my sisters and I because all throughout our childhood he was immersed in getting his doctorate. The marriage went too, eventually, which kinda threw life into a weird spin that brought quite a few bad experiences. This all led up to the fact that I never went to college when I should have, which I'm now trying to correct, but I agree that the work required for a PhD isn't for me. I don't want to put my son through that.
I know that if I eventually get to start over at Millersville (coincidentally, this is where my dad teaches comp-sci) there's a marine biology track (many grads are working over at That Fish Place in Lancaster), but I'm thinking of either double majoring (if I can afford all the extra credits), or majoring in general bio and getting in some of the marine courses as electives or something. From what I've heard from you and others here, as well as read out on other sites over the past week, I currently don't have much illusion that I'll work in the field, at least not until getting some post-grad work done, but I've got some time to figure things out since all this is going to take probably 8-10 years...haha.