Just days before starting her final semester as an environmental science major with a geoscience option, Erin McGuire got great news: She鈥檇 been hired as a staff geologist at Nobis Group, an engineering consulting firm in Concord, New Hampshire.
鈥淕oing through all this with the pandemic for the last year, I feel really fortunate that I鈥檝e been able to get a job. It takes a lot of pressure off,鈥 the Mason, New Hampshire, native says.
McGuire was able to ease into her new job by working remotely part-time this spring while finishing her degree. But she can鈥檛 wait to dig into the field work, once she starts full time in June.
鈥淚鈥檓 excited to have the outdoors as my office. I really love being outside,鈥 says McGuire, whose work will involve a lot of soil and groundwater sampling and drilling oversight, while 鈥渁bout 30 percent of my time will be report-writing from the office or home office, which is going to be great.鈥
McGuire says she felt confident during the interview process for one reason in particular.
鈥淚鈥檝e had an internship every summer since high school, which was a strong selling point,鈥 she says. Those internships include positions with the Milford (New Hampshire) Conservation Commission, Geosyntec Consultants, the Haverhill (Massachusetts) wastewater treatment plant and, most recently, as agriculture manager at Hurricane Hill Development in her hometown of Mason.聽
Internships aren鈥檛 the only things that stand out on McGuire鈥檚 r茅sum茅. She is president of the UML chapter of , the national honor society for earth sciences, and is secretary of the , a student group. She also worked as a student coordinator for the Office of Sustainability, receiving a $1,000 S.E.E.D. Fund grant for campaigns to reduce single-use plastic straws and bags on campus.
鈥淚鈥檝e tried to be active in different ways and get a lot of real-world experience,鈥 says McGuire, who comes from a family of River Hawks: Her dad, Michael 鈥89, is an electrical engineering alum and her sister, Molly 鈥17, earned bachelor鈥檚 degrees in electrical engineering and computer science.
鈥淚 wanted to be close enough to home but far enough away,鈥 she says of her college choice. 鈥淎nd the environmental science department was a big deciding factor. It鈥檚 science- and math-based, which gives me a strong background.鈥