[nabs-l] Part time/campus jobs

Christina Moore christina.moore16 at houghton.edu
Wed Jul 13 12:43:41 UTC 2016


Definitely look into the phone position.
My school has a couple of different opportunities, one is calling alumni and other donors and the others call prospective students.
If you love your college and would enjoy answering incoming/prospective students questions, you can find out about any availability by contacting the admissions office or checking out their webpage if they have one on your school’s website.
I’m not sure if it is the same at your school, but mine allows people to schedule themselves in two hour slots throughout the week so that they work times that are convenient for them.
You could also get a job teaching some sort of music for an hour or two to new music students through the music school of your college. My school every so often advertises that an uperclass student is looking for students to teach.
Tutoring is a great idea too and colleges are always looking for tutors because there is always a need for someone to help struggling students.
I would not write off the dining hall right away. If you can handle a fast-paced environment and are willing to learn how the process works, you could get a part-time or even full-time job in the dining hall washing dishes. It is not the greatest job out there but it would be something if you cannot get in anywhere else.
Lastly, the tour guide idea sounds phenomenal! I cannot see why that would be challenging for you if you know the campus really well.
Don’t sell yourself short as they say. Apply for what you can with confidence and the knowledge that you can do the job that is before you.
I hope this is helpful/useful in some way.
On Jul 13, 2016, at 08:21, Justin Williams via NABS-L <nabs-l at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> I applaud your DS office, and your music department, but, that's when you
> would want to look outside of those places.  I like Tour Guide, had a good
> feeling about that, and if you can get the Telephone position, that would
> give you some work during the semester.  Could you Tutor younger college
> students in the music department; your department is familiar with you and
> might let you help. Could you work with one of the professors? Maybe
> something like a GA position, especially if you are going to attend the same
> college as a grad student?  The tour guide is good because if you know the
> root, and then the shortcuts around it, you can do the tour jus like anyone
> else.  You can tell the same stories, and give the same information if you
> time everything because  you know the campus.  My friend told me about a
> tour guide who was totally blind at a museum in New York. 
> Justin
> 
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: NABS-L [mailto:nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Kaiti Shelton
> via NABS-L
> Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2016 1:36 AM
> To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list <nabs-l at nfbnet.org>
> Cc: Kaiti Shelton <crazy4clarinet104 at gmail.com>
> Subject: [nabs-l] Part time/campus jobs
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> I'm wondering if some of you who have done work study programs at your
> universities could weigh in on this.  Being just 13 credits shy of earning
> my degree, I'll be a part time student this year.  I'd like to find a part
> time job on campus and do qualify for work study, but there are also a lot
> of businesses within walking distance or a short bus ride of campus that I
> could get to.  My issue is that I'm having difficulty finding something that
> I think I can do throughout the semester for a few hours each week that is
> accessible.  I had a somewhat disastrous experience in my sophomore year
> with work study, where I was hired to work in the computer lab for my
> department and eventually was let go because due to an inaccessible main
> work station I wasn't doing anything beyond babysitting the place (while
> that was a big part of the job and the lab needed to be superfvised and
> cleaned regularly, I wasn't able to edit and catalog the audio and video
> files which are processed in the lab as well).  A lot of the readily
> available jobs I'm seeing in the listings are in cafeteria food prep, and
> I'm slightly hesitant to apply for desk jobs because while I do have
> secretarial and receptionist experience it has only been at blindness
> agencies that made sure to supply braille extension lists and the like.  I
> know work study is practice for the real world, and since I qualify for it I
> have just as much as a claim to a work study position as a sighted student
> would, but a lot of the jobs seem to be things that present with
> accessibility barriers that staff will not be invested in sorting out for a
> short-term student employee, and I'm not sure if battling them for it is
> really worth it if I can find something that doesn't require so much effort
> just to get my foot in the door.  I'm also looking for something that goes
> all semester long; the telethon positions were an idea I was going to
> pursue, but they tend to have pique times of the semester and not do much
> else.
> 
> I will say that my university has a wonderful disability services office who
> I know would help with accessibility where they can.  In the last case there
> were legitimate reasons for the accessibility being an issue that was just
> beyond anyone's control, but both the DS office and the music department
> made a good effort to give me equal work opportunities before we saw how
> unreasonable that would be for a simple work study position.  I also know
> what my rights are and how I should be equally treated, but going into my
> last few classes and prepping for my internship to follow, I really just
> don't want to fight a long and hard battle to get into a job to make maybe
> $50 extra each week.  Maybe some would agree, but thinking ahead to my next
> steps after college, I'm just not all that invested in potentially fighting
> the good fight like I know I may have to do in the true employment arena.
> I'm wondering if anyone has experience or positive ideas of jobs that might
> be innately accessible or easily made accessible.  I'd prefer campus jobs
> but I'm willing to look out in the community as well; I just know the
> majority of things like food prep and waitressing are probably going to be
> hard for me to score, as would be working in any type of store since
> products move and I can't read the packaging.
> 
> Tutoring is something I've already considered, and if I can find a
> receptionist position that doesn't have a ton of print filing I could
> potentially do that.  I know the dorms need desk workers and have a sign in
> sheet, but I might even be able to make the students fill out paperwork more
> than usual and accommodate that way.  What worries me about that position is
> that the desk workers have to be a little vigilant for anything shady that
> goes on, and I'm worried that the potential for someone to take advantage of
> that would be very real and considered a liability.  My other idea that I'm
> still thinking of is tour guide.  I don't know if I'd get hired to do that
> one because they tend to go for the stereotypical campus pride type of kids,
> and although I don't make a bad poster child for my school I certainly am
> out of the norm.  Still, I know my campus and all its little shortcuts very
> well and as long as I could get hired, I think I could do that.
> I'm still interested in hearing what has worked for others in case none of
> these leads pan out.  Thanks in advance.
> 
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