Work-study grows in popularity
University student Ashley Bene doesn’t mind juggling school and work. Since both her parents lost their jobs, she does as much as she can to help out.
“It’s tiring, but you get used to it,” she said. “I’m a little crazy, like the Energizer Bunny, I guess.”
Bene, a junior from Woodstock, said she does her best to stay positive.
“That’s all you can do,” she said. “If you beat yourself up about it, then you just go crazy.”
She begins her day at 7:30 a.m., then bounces between classes and work until she walks home around 6:30 p.m.
Bene is a member of the University’s Federal Work-Study Program, a program that has been increasingly popular as unemployment rates have been increasingly high.
“The [work-study] jobs are dwindling now. I’d say by the end of the week we’ll be out of the jobs we offer,” Sherryl Fern, federal work-study coordinator for the University, said Wednesday.
Fern said students must apply on their Free Application for Federal Student Aid – FAFSA -to even be eligible for work-study jobs. After applications are submitted, Fern’s office determines which students receive admission to the program, then allows them to apply for jobs through a Web site similar to Monster.com.
Fern said that this semester all of the work-study program money was applied for by April 6.
“It ran out a little earlier this year than last year,” she said. “It could be a combination of more people applying and more people applying early.”
Bene has been in the program for several years, working at the University library on the Georgia Newspaper Project, which converts newspapers to microfilm.
Although the job isn’t the most exciting, Bene said she enjoys the people and is happy to be working.
“If that’s what I need to do to go to UGA, I’ll make it work,” she said.
Lucille Davis, student assistant coordinator for the libraries, works with the work-study program to hire students. Because the federal government pays 75 percent of work-study students’ wages, Davis said her department has been taking advantage of the money.
“This year we’re hiring more student workers than we ever have,” she said. “We’re right at about 31, 32 students. There are a couple more that we’re waiting on.”
The library is just one of 65 departments taking advantage of the work-study program, Fern said. Although most students work as office assistants, Fern said a few lucky ones get more interesting jobs.
“We have a couple of jobs through poultry diagnostics, and there’s one job where they feed the animals,” she said.
It’s also possible for students to work as lab assistants, and this semester there was an opening at the University Health Center in the dental lab.
Most students participating in the program are paid the minimum wage of $7.25 an hour and are eligible to earn up to $1,500 a semester. In order to earn the full amount, the average student would have to work nearly 14 hours weekly.
Bene said she finds her school work schedule almost relaxing compared to the summer, when she works two jobs for about 50 hours a week.
“I get one day off when I go home, so that’s my summer,” she said. “It hasn’t given me much room to breathe.”
Bene said she doesn’t mind the work, especially when student debt is her only alternative.
With a little brother starting college the year after she graduates, she said she does what she can to be frugal.
“It’s not a good time to be in my family,” she said, “but we always work it out and figure it out, and we’re always fine.”
