[includes video] Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – Two Boston University student interns, one at the World Health Organization, the other at the World Trade Organization, were interviewed by their university’s BU Today, on video, about their experience working in international organizations in Geneva.
The accompanying article and video are reproduced with permission from BU.
By Devin Hahn. Text by Benjamin Hall.
“I’d be lying if I said I didn’t feel like I had a bit of an edge, having studied under the bright minds at the World Health Organization,” says Tara Vaughn.
Vaughn spent last fall in the Geneva Internship Program, taking courses and working at the WHO in the strategic information unit, focusing on prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV/AIDS. Her courses featured daily speakers from different realms of public health, and topics included abortion rights, public health issues that arise from natural disasters, and climate change.
“My amazing internship has swayed me to rethink my entire career path,” Vaughn says. “I have made a major change in the course of my higher education career.” She’s slowing down, planning to take four full years to complete her undergraduate studies instead of accelerating through a six-year program that would result in a graduate degree as well. This allows her to take more courses outside of a physical therapy focus, and gives her another year to consider whether, after Geneva, she should shift and pursue a doctorate in public health.
It’s not just the “big picture” perspective that transformed after Vaughn’s Swiss sojourn. “Now that I’ve worked at the WHO, navigated my way through Budapest, and haggled in various languages, a little calculus class is nothing,” she says.
Additional editing by Joe Chan and Bob Heim.
This work by genevalunch.com is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported.
News story, GenevaLunch, 24 September 2009.
Filed under: Featured story, International organizations
Tags: Education, Geneva, interns, internships, WHO, World Health Organization, World Trade Organization, WTO
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