Why
Law? Essay
My interest in the law began with
donuts. As a child, I developed early persuasive
skills during family disagreements on how to divide
boxes of the treats. My parents belonged to the
"biggest people deserve the most donuts"
school of thought; while as the youngest family
member, I was a devout believer in the "one
person, one donut" principle. The debates
were often cutthroat, but when it came to donut
distribution, I sought justice at any cost.
As my family grew older and more
health-conscious, we stopped eating donuts, and
for many years I forgot our childhood debates.
However, some recent life decisions have brought
to mind those early explorations of justice. When
I first arrived at the American International
School of Rotterdam, I quickly learned that my
colleagues were a diverse and talented group of
people. Unsure of how to establish my own place
among them, I tried phrases that had always worked
to impress college friends. "When I work
for the UN . . . ," I told the second-grade
teacher, and she answered with an erudite discussion
of the problems she faced as a consultant for
that organization. I told the kindergarten teacher,
"When I'm in law school . . . ," only
to hear about his own experiences in law school.
By the time I discovered that even many grade-school
students were better travelled than I, I learned
to keep my mouth shut!
Living alone in a new country, removed
from familiar personal and cultural clues to my
identity and faced with these extraordinary co-workers,
I started to feel meaningless. How, I wondered,
could I possibly make a difference in a place
as vast as our planet? To my own surprise, I found
that answer at church. Although I was raised in
the Bah?'? Faith, I have only recently understood
the essential place that religion plays in my
identity. Bah?'? social beliefs include the need
to work against extreme poverty, nationalism,
and prejudice; and I now realize that I cannot
hold those beliefs without doing something about
them. My identity rests on these convictions;
I cannot see the need for help and just move on.
I have to help; it's who I am.
The lessons I've learned from my
international colleagues have channeled my desire
for service into the field of international development.
I still wish to fight the "'Biggest Get the
Most' Theory of Donut Distribution," but
now on an international scale.
Uniqueness
Essay
Once in a while I am approached
by past research associates who heard that I "got
out," as several of them put it, and who
want to know how I handled the switch. Some of
them have no idea that people with science backgrounds
have options other than research and teaching,
and many are discouraged by the thought that they
would have to leave their beloved science in other
to engage in those activities. Several of them
have called me from home to ask these questions,
for fear of being overheard at the laboratory.
The first thing I tell them is that
there is far more to science than the "bench."
I myself entered the science field as an undergraduate,
when I chose to study veterinary microbial genetics.
I worked in the laboratory of Dr. William Sischo,
an epidemiologist who specialized in number-crunching
but who needed technical assistance with field
sampling and laboratory work to generate the data.
Dr. Sischo instilled in me a strong desire to
learn about and experiment in genetics. I was
fascinated by the many ways genetics can be used
to help understand how or why certain biological
functions occur, and I wondered how I could use
my knowledge of genetics to benefit society.
After I obtained my bachelor of
science degree, I went on to graduate school earning
a master of science degree part-time while working
full-time jobs in a couple of well-establish research
institutions. I enjoyed both graduate school and
working in the laboratory. I also learned the
"correct" career path-an academic position
at a respectable research university-was what
we were supposed to want out of life. More specifically,
academic laboratories were acceptable, but working
in industry, even to do research, was generally
looked upon as "selling out." I believe
this attitude has relaxed somewhat since then,
since grants and jobs have become harder to secure
and tenured positions lack the security they once
possessed.
It was during my graduate studies
that I began to question my goals and the assumptions
they were based on. I was becoming increasingly
unhappy with the direction my career was heading,
and I began to question my abilities and motivation.
Finally, when I heard myself mutter out loud "I
don't want to do bench work forever," I sat
up and took notice. I decided that in spite of
my training, and even though I still loved science,
research was not right for me.
I wanted a career, or at least a
job for starters, that valued my graduate degree
and training, and that was a better fit for my
skills and future ambitions. I decided I would
do best with a job that was externally driven
either by deadlines or by the needs of others;
in addition, I wanted to talk, write, and/or evaluate
science as a whole rather than focus on one particular
aspect of a research project.
As a molecular geneticist, I had
occasionally interacted with the patent department
at SmithKline Beecham Pharmaceuticals in support
of my supervisor's patent applications. They worked
on a variety of intellectual property issues in
a number of scientific disciplines that were of
interest to the company. I realized then that
I could make very good use of my science background
as a patent attorney.
Earlier this year, I accepted an
offer to work as a patent agent in the Corporate
Intellectual Properties Department at SmithKline
Beecham. The job involves writing and prosecuting
patent applications, which in turn requires broad
knowledge of both science and law. I soon realized
that, in order to become an effective patent practitioner,
I must become intimately acquainted with U.S.
patent law. Because SmithKline Beecham is an international
corporation, I have also learned a great deal
about international patent law so that I can assist
in foreign prosecution of SmithKline Beecham's
patents. When I first started the job, it occurred
to me that my learning curve was a cliff with
an overhang, and I was at the bottom looking up.
I was extremely lucky to find a
job almost immediately following graduation last
January. However, this opportunity was not trouble-free;
there were additional risks to consider at the
time I made the decision to change. Our company
was in the middle of negotiations to merge with
another international pharmaceutical company,
GlaxoWellcome Pharmaceuticals. As details of the
merger were released, we were informed that the
majority of the money saved in the merger was
going to be invested back into research and discovery.
In other words, because of the patent applications
that I draft and prosecute, my job as a patent
agent will play an essential role in the inventive
process in the new company. Daily interaction
with inventors keeps me up-to-date with cutting-edge
technology in the biotechnology field. As my work
progressed, I knew I had made the right decision,
and I have never looked back.
In October, I took the complex patent
bar examination. My determination to take the
examination straight away was derived from my
desire to become a registered patent agent before
entering law school, so that my academic studies
will not suffer while I attempt to balance a career
and my education. I am now hoping to complete
the career transition over the next four years
by attending law school at Villanova University
and becoming a patent attorney. A few weeks ago,
I was offered the opportunity to move to our new
research facility in North Carolina, but declined
the offer in hopes of attending Villanova's law
program, which is well respected among the various
pharmaceutical companies on the East Coast for
its intellectual property education.
Intellectual property is a crucial
asset to our company, and I take generating and
protecting these assets very seriously. A considerable
part of my job involves "translating"
science for attorneys and patent law for scientists.
I also have to be able to understand a new result
quickly enough to grasp what the specific invention
is and ask further questions which allow me to
distill the invention down to its bare essence.
Organization is also key-this is something I learned
as a matter of self-preservation, since this is
a deadline-driven, and sometimes crisis-driven,
job.
I now believe that my job as a patent
agent is not a break with the past; rather, it
is an exciting, alternative continuation of my
career as a scientist. The patent applications
that I draft and prosecute make me a critical
part of the inventive process at SmithKline Beecham.
Furthermore, my interactions with inventors on
a daily basis keep me up to date with the latest
technology. Not so long ago, when I began research
as an undergraduate, I wondered what impact I
would have on the development of new scientific
knowledge. Through my work as a patent agent,
I know that I am a key participant in the promotion
of scientific progress.
I still run into acquaintances from
my research days who ask me why I "left science."
I am quick to set them straight. I may not get
my hands wet, but I use far more of my education
and training than I ever did at the bench, and
I am very much still in science. I firmly believe
my experiences in science and patent prosecution
will allow me to be a creative and contributing
member of Villanova University, both as a student
and as a future attorney representing achievement.
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