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Staff
Profile:
Jana Shober
Snakes, spiders and slimy things don’t scare Jana Shober, a lab
technician that supervises the care of the biology department's animals.
Shober and her student assistants typically have their work cut out for
them, taking care of a number of creatures and setting up experiments
for students in biology labs.
Shober’s responsibilities include teaching pre-vet students to care
for a variety of the department’s animals, which include tarantulas,
geckos, an iguana and a chinchilla.
“This class allows pre-vet students to work with animals, many of
which are exotic,” Shober says. “Most students that work with
vets only get to handle dogs, cats, and maybe a turtle. Students learn
new skills while helping us care for the animals, and it’s a win-win
situation.”
Shober, a Czech immigrant who started as a graduate assistant at Sacramento
State in 1981, says she recalls when a professor’s salamander became
the biology department’s first animal.
“Now we have three rooms full of different animals,” Shober
says. “If people ask, ‘Do they bite?’ I say, ‘They
can.’”
The department keeps a number of native-Californian species, such as the
king snake, which Shober says students can encounter on local bike paths.
The department also houses invertebrates of all sorts: centipedes, walking
sticks, hissing cockroaches, and her favorite, the millipedes.
Although supervising the care of the animals is an important task, Shober’s
main responsibility is the preparation of lower division labs, growing
plants and algae, fungi and protozoa in a room adjoining her office for
student use in the classroom and labs. She works in tandem with full-time
technicians in the greenhouse, microbiology labs, physiology labs and
the invertebrate museum.
“The
whole technical staff carries out work that may not be readily apparent
to the students,” Shober says. “Students—and I used
to be one of them—do not realize the hours and hours of preparation
done by the staff and student assistants.”
Shober, who says she hasn’t thought much about retirement, likes
the variety her job provides, and the fact that there’s always something
new to learn and explore.
“I’ve
never felt bored in my position, since there’s always something
new to learn,” Shober says. “It’s ever-changing, and
you have to keep up with the changes as they happen.”
During the summer, Shober teaches classes such as zoology and “Blood
and Guts” to middle-school kids in the Academic Talent Search. “Teaching
allows me to do my regular job, better, as I see what kind of support
teachers need by doing it,” Shober says.
Shober’s hobbies include photography which she practices on her
excursions to places such as the Amazon, the Peruvian mountains, Thailand
and other countries.
“Seeing
new places, experiencing other cultures and connecting, even if briefly
and often non-verbally, with the people in these fascinating places is
what brings me the greatest joy and fulfills me,” Shober says.
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