How do you become a microbiologist? Professor Valerie Stout reveals the path she has taken.
"We couldn't understand all the bigger things until we figured things out at the cellular level," Stout said. So that's is how she became involved in microbiology. Most of her day is spent teaching, preparing to teach, working one-on-one with students conducting experiments in the lab, writing grant proposals, recording research results, and talking with other scientists to tell them about her research results and exchange information. Stout obtained her Ph.D. in 1987 at Kansas State University. She conducted her post-doctoral research at National Institutes of Health in Maryland, and began teaching at ASU in 1991. Students interested in getting a job like Stout's should get a B.S. and a Ph.D. Post-doctoral training is also necessary if you want to be in charge of a lab (instead of being a basic technician). You have to get a lot of background before you can land a job. "Because it's lots of years of training, unless it's really what you want, it's not worth it."
Stout said you should feel passionate about science, curious about how things
work. She identified an "insatiable curiosity" as one of the key
qualities for a scientist to have.
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