|
 |
 |

PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
23, No. 13, Feb. 5, 2004

On the job: Galina Cotton
By
Sharita Forrest, Assistant Editor
217-244-1072; slforres@illinois.edu
By
Sharita Forrest, Assistant Editor
217-244-1072; slforres@illinois.edu
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
<strong>Photo by L. Brian Stauffer</strong><hr /><br /> |
| Adele
Proctor, professor, speech & hearing science, with graduate
students Mary Ratliff (at left, seated) and Mary Newman (at
right, seated). With some fo the testing equipment used to
evaluate coginitive abilities of those who have suffered
from brain injuries. |
|
|
 |
| Photo
by Bill Wiegand |
| Galina
Cotton
is an animal caretaker in the psychology building. |
|
|
The walls of
Galina Cotton’s tiny office give testament to her professional
and personal interest in animals: Rats of various hues peer out from
posters and two plush guinea pigs perch on a high shelf. Nearby is a
patchwork mouse, framed in a wooden embroidery hoop, which Cotton confessed
was a gift that her daughter received “until I begged her for
it.” Cotton is one of two caretakers for the hundreds of research
animals in the psychology building.
How
long have you worked for the UI?
I have been at the university for five years, all in the same position.
I was a waitress for 15 years before I came to the university. I took
a computer class on Prairienet over the Internet and wanted to learn
more. I went to Personnel Services and began comparing salaries and
qualifications for different jobs. This was the first job I tested for,
not really thinking they’d call me on it.
What do you do every day?
I take care of the laboratory animals. We’re kind of a service
for the researchers and are there to speak for the animals, protect
their health and make sure that they are not suffering, ever. We’re
policing the researchers; we work for the department of animal resources,
which recently took us over. Each facility used to have its own animal-care
workers. Now all animal-care people work for the department of animal
resources.
There are several hundred animals in the building, mostly rodents. We
check their feed and water and monitor their health. We look each of
them over every single day. We make sure their environmental factors
are good, like the temperature and the humidity, and change their cages
every week. Because we’re an accredited research institution,
there are all kinds of guidelines that we have to follow.
We have to keep track of all the data on them, including their offspring
and dates of birth. Our animals are actually better taken care of than
pets, even my pets at home, and I love my pets.
What kinds of research are they used for?
In the psychology building, there’s a lot of learning and memory
studies as well as a study on estrogen vs. soy. There’s a researcher
studying Alzheimer’s disease and another study on mercury levels
in fish and water. Fish eat other fish and the mercury levels get concentrated.
Then people in certain places eat the fish and end up with health problems.
What kinds of skills does one need to do your
job?
Common sense. Surprisingly, that doesn’t come as easily as you’d
think. You have to have compassion but also an understanding that it’s
better that an animal not suffer. It’s also nice to be personable
because we get to know the people who work here and they trust us.
What do you like most about what you do?
The people and the freedom. I get my assignments for the week, and then
every day I just do it. I can kind of change things around somewhat.
I like that freedom. The job is kind of isolated but it gives you time
to think, so it’s nice.
What’s the most challenging part about
what you do?
Making sure that I see any injuries or disease on an animal. I have
to go into a room with over 100 animals and inspect each one. One could
be sitting on its tail, and you might overlook a sore on its tail until
the next day, and you don’t want to miss things like that. Sometimes
it’s hard because we have the animals scattered throughout the
building and my boss and I are the only full-time workers.
What kinds of pets do you own?
We have two parrots – a sun conure and a dusky conure. The sun
conure is almost a year old, and we’ve had the dusky conure about
two years. The dusky conure is green with a gray head. They are the
most docile and sweetest parrots there are. The sun conure is more colorful,
but what the dusky conure lacks in appearance she makes up for in her
cuddliness.
What other things do you like to do?
I like movies and I like to read a lot. I’m reading cognitive
works, which are related to my job. I like to spend time with my husband,
Tony; our 16-year-old son, Anthony; and our 10-year-old daughter, Mariah.
Back
to Index
Back
to Index

|