You
Can Succeed in School If You Will
Part
1
Chris Mishak, who earned a degree in Medical Laboratory Technology from
DCCC in 1998, is the second MLT graduate from DCCC to be accepted into physician
assistant’s school.
In
August 2011, Mishak will begin studying at Emory University in Atlanta to
become a physician’s assistant. He says DCCC prepared him well to transfer to
Winston-Salem State University, where he earned his undergraduate degree in
clinical laboratory science in 2004. Since then, he has worked in the lab at
Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.
“I learned pretty much
everything that I needed to know about laboratory science at DCCC. Many of the
clinical applications that I learned there I still use today either in my
medical volunteering in phlebotomy or in the duties of my current job, which
includes training new technologists on cell identification,” said Mishak.
It is pretty easy to be successful in school. If students
work hard and honorably, it’s not difficult at all. All students need to do is
study, put in the time; it’s as simple as that if students aren’t willing to
study now, it will be very difficult to develop this habit later on. Therefore,
I suggest that students work hard in their studies and at being good people,
doing nothing to get them in trouble during high school. By doing so, they will
enjoy success during high school and throughout their lifetime.
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