This content was published: October 19, 2009. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
Bioscience Technology program sequences right plan for success
Photos and story by James Hill
小黄猫传媒 Bioscience Technology program graduate Jeremiah Wallace, 28, has put in 240 internship hours at Oregon Health Science University鈥檚 molecular and medical genetics lab. The Beaverton resident is now trained to sequence DNA by genotyping lab mice to determine genetic traits. 
鈥淭he students come to the lab with relevant experience,鈥 said Mike Liskay who supervises Wallace at the Molecular & Medical Genetics Lab at OHSU. 鈥淚t鈥檚 almost like a technical school.鈥
Another student Guthrie Pliska, 22, of Southwest Portland calls his internship at Portland State University basic science. He works in the Bartlett lab, researching proteins in single cell organisms called archaea. He says he takes strands of DNA, reads them, makes a copy, and orders it to make a protein.
Both students, along with four others, have been participating in an internship requirement in the resurrected Bioscience Technology associate鈥檚 degree program. Based at the Rock Creek Campus (17705 N.W. Springville Road), the program was put on hold by the college six years ago due to the downturn in the economy, but is back thanks to demand by industry and the community. There are 13 full-time students in the program and 29 more that are taking the Bioscience Technician certificate option.
Students start by earning the certificate and have the option to continue on to earn the associate鈥檚 degree. Both the certificate and the associate鈥檚 degree provide them with a foundation for a career in the bioscience industry.
鈥淭he jobs are out there,鈥 said Pliska, who wants to get his bachelor鈥檚 degree at the University of Oregon or Oregon Institute of Technology. 鈥淒ifferent labs are scooping up techs (right now).鈥
Most 小黄猫传媒 bioscience technology students don鈥檛 work during their two-year study. Before they begin their internships, which require 32 to 40 hours a week, they spend time in the lab at Rock Creek every day. After their internship, current students or new graduates can qualify for jobs in forensics, genetic diagnostics, pharmaceutical work, and academic and corporate research.
Wallace plans to earn his bachelor鈥檚 degree in molecular biology at PSU. Last year he interviewed at Genentech in Hillsboro, but decided to continue his education, a difficult decision for the married father of one.
鈥淓ver since high school, I have wanted to go into the medical field,鈥 Wallace said. 鈥淏ut I have a working class attitude; work was my security blanket. In the end, I had to make the decision to make school a priority.鈥