Getting paid to get ahead: A new program helps students gain career experience and earn money for college
With precious little spare time outside her schoolwork, Victoria Morales Vargas was faced with a financial dilemma as she rounded the bend to her junior year at UC San Diego. She could continue volunteering in a prestigious campus research lab or switch to a part-time job that would help pay for her living expenses and reduce the size of her college loans.
On the cusp of giving up her hard-earned research role, Vargas Morales connected with LAEP, a new program aimed at helping students in just her predicament.
Funded by the California Student Aid Commission, LAEP (the Learning-Aligned Employment Program) offers paid, career-building jobs for undergrads with financial need. The program is rolling out with research jobs at all nine undergraduate campuses and will expand to off-campus employment opportunities in future years.
Designed as an alternative to traditional work-study hours, LAEP helps low-income students connect with research jobs that advance their major or career interests. The jobs provide a professional springboard — helping students hone their skills, train with the latest technology, learn from world-renowned faculty and network in their chosen field.
Read on to hear Morales Vargas’ story and meet other undergrads making the most of LAEP.