Skip to main content
Science › Molecular Biology and Biochemistry
SFU Student

Student working in a lab
I enjoy helping people achieve their goals and this experience has allowed me to follow and achieve my passion of improving services available to Indigenous students and potentially their overall academic success.

My name is Lindsay Wainwright and I am a 4th year Cree/Metis student studying Cell and Molecular Biology at SFU. After high school I obtained a Diploma form Kwantlen University College in Horticulture Production and I later decided to return to school as a mature student and pursue a BSc. I am currently planning on pursuing a career in medicine either as a family physician or behind the scenes within medical research.

I have volunteered with SFU’s Peer Programs as a Learning and Writing Peer Educator for two consecutive semesters. As a Learning and Writing Peer Educator I had the opportunity to work with SFU’s diverse student population and help students increase their individual academic success. This position also gave me an opportunity to shape a new connection between the Indigenous student population at SFU and SFU’s Peer Programs, with the intent of making these services more friendly and accessible to the Indigenous student population. I enjoy helping people achieve their goals and this experience has allowed me to follow and achieve my passion of improving services available to Indigenous students and potentially their overall academic success.

I have volunteered in the lab of Dr. Nicolas Harden, in SFU’s faculty of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, for three years. In his lab my exceptional research resulted in receiving a SFU Undergraduate Student Research Award allowing me to work in Dr. Harden’s lab for a semester full time as a paid employee. This experience provided me with the basic scientific research skills and references I needed to pursue further scientific work experience.

In order to determine which career path was right for me I chose to take part in two science related SFU Co-op work placements. My first work placement was for 8 months with Amgen, the world’s largest biotechnology company which generates biomolecules for therapeutic use. While at Amgen my research abilities resulted in me receiving a National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada Award. This experience provided me with valuable work related skills and my own personal scientific research skills. This experience also offered me the chance to experience scientific research in an industrial setting.

My second Co-op work placement was for 8 months with the Vancouver Prostate Centre at Vancouver General Hospital. They are a world leader in prostate cancer research and work incorporation with the Faculty of Medicine at UBC. During this work term I was able to take on my own research project and experience research within a highly competitive academic setting.

Outside SFU I volunteer as mentor with Urban Native Youth Association’s Kinnections Program which serves to provide support to at risk inner-city Indigenous youth. I am also a volunteer at Royal Columbian Hospital in their Emergency Triage which has provided me with the opportunity to experience BC’s public healthcare system. At SFU I have received two consecutive Aboriginal Community Involvement Awards for my extracurricular activities within SFU and within my community.

SFU Student
visibility  144
Jun 13, 2012

You Might Like These... Indigenous Co-op, Indigenous Career Journey Stories, SFU Alumni

Mike
Mike, SFU Alumni

"I have no solid plans for the future and I love it...I know that every experience that I have had, every failed plan, was really an excellent mistake that gave me the skills I need to handle any situation that gets thrown my way in the future."

Ryan Schmidt
Treaty Negotiations with INAC

Being an arts and social sciences student means having a vast variety of career options open to us. One of them being a treaty negotiator at Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC)! Read Ryan's blog to find out more about what this position entails. 

Gregory
My Eye-Opening Experience

Even before the first month of my one year co-op contract with Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada (AANDC) was over, I knew that my co-op experience was going to be different from what I had ever suspected I was getting myself into.

You Might Like These... Indigenous Co-op

Chris
Student Success Story: Chris Macklin

I’ve always had a passion for helping people. For the longest time, I wasn’t sure how to apply this passion.

Image of the author
Invest in the Unexpected: Why You Should Join Co-op and Share Your Story with the OLC

Taylor joined SFU’s Aboriginal Co-op Coordinator, Trina Setah, as a Work-Study student to help promote co-op to SFU’s Indigenous community. Read about Taylor’s personal experience with co-op, and why she thinks you should join too.

Audrey standing in front of Simon Fraser University, with her dog
Mobilizing Indigenous Knowledge Systems in my Work

I strive to make SFU a safer place for our Indigenous community to grow and flourish.