What kind of jobs on campus are offered at your school?

<p>Just wanting to get some ideas on what kind of college work study jobs they offer? thanks</p>

<p>the best one is the IT people. They get paid to hang out on the computer and do their homework. Their duties include pushing in the occasional chair, pressing the button on the printer when it doesn't work, and telling people to take their panda express outside.</p>

<p>I work at the rec center--swipe some IDs, sell some passes, check out equipment, it's not too tough but it's fun and the people I work with are great. Sometimes d-bags come in and get all ****y with you but you'll have that anywhere. </p>

<p>I also have a job in the athletic dept. Any job in athletic depts will probably rock, but I don't think any are work-study. You can probably work in their marketing dept, equipment, compliance, general secretary stuff, event operations (field/event setup), etc. I work in equipment and it's awesome.</p>

<p>Library workers - shelving books, checking books out for people, entering stuff into the library computer system, opening mail, stamping/documenting books, etc. (this is what I do).</p>

<p>Work in coffee shops and the cafeteria - making food, serving food, keeping things stocked, swiping cards.</p>

<p>Random offices around campus (like housing office, financial aid office, etc) - field questions, do whatever random tasks the boss tells you to do.</p>

<p>Computer lab - help people with computer issues (so you have to know about them).</p>

<p>Teacher assistants - be a kind of secretary for a professor, doing whatever tasks they need done (copying papers, running errands on campus, etc.).</p>

<p>Umm, that's all I can think of right now.</p>

<p>oldelecdude is right. while working in the library or rec center is avialiable, they usually pay just barely above the minimum wage. The IT people will get paid the most (they get the maximimum that our school allows and the library workers get teh minimium our school allows), and on top of that the IT people will work the least. i am speaking from personal experience.</p>

<p>i work in the computer lab in the Digital Media department</p>

<p>i jus basically browse the net and tell kids to sign in on Open Labs</p>