By Lindsay Lawer Shea, MSSP 2008
When I started the MSSP program in fall of 2006, I was
unsure of where my education and my career were headed. I had 2 years of
experience in research in the field of psychology, but I was really interested
in the big picture or the “10,000 foot view” as I had heard it often described.
I was really fascinated by how systems worked and who determined how they
worked, but I wasn’t sure how to acquire the skills I needed to work this
fascination into a career. I found myself volleying between law school applications
and a research career, and given the wide range of interests and foci of the
MSSP program faculty, the MSSP program was the perfect place to start.
Soon after I started the MSSP program, I found myself
learning the answers to the questions I had started out asking. The good news
was that each answer led to more questions. In the MSSP program, it wasn’t just
about learning how programs operate or how they started, although these were
critical program issues covered. The MSSP program was more about gaining the
skills under strong faculty leadership to pursue a range of broad-based and
specifically targeted policy solutions to help improve the world. In tandem
with learning in depth about the plethora of social programs in the US and
throughout the world, I found myself debating and being challenged to think
outside the box about programs like Medicaid/Medicare, SSI and TANF. I
discovered that there was a lot more to these programs than I ever expected and
that these programs play an important role in weaving the social fiber of our
country.
I was lucky enough to work full time while completing my
MSSP degree part-time and I found this experience incredibly enriching. I would
often return from a class and find myself in a meeting or generating ideas at
work that I had been exposed to in the MSSP program. The application of the
MSSP program curriculum into the real world was immediate for me and I found it
very rewarding.
Choosing the MSSP program was one of the best decisions I’ve
made. I still find myself going back to the books we read and notes I took both
for my doctoral studies and in my professional life. I’m convinced that no
other program could have so aptly and thoroughly prepared me to continue to
pursue my goals.