Doctoral student's social media research leads to dream job at Facebook

  • WSU student Jessica Drum has landed her dream job working at Facebook.
  • She got the job based on her research on how social media affects relationships.
  • Drum will move to San Francisco after she graduates from WSU this month.

A chance meeting at an early morning professional conference session in Toronto, Canada, has turned into a dream job at Facebook for 麻豆破解版 State University doctoral student Jessica Drum.

Drum, who will graduate this month with her Ph.D. in community psychology, studies the way social media impacts our lives, especially when it comes to the positive and negative effects of social media on relationships.

She was presenting a poster on her dissertation results in Toronto this past July when she met a presenter who happened to be a researcher at Facebook.

鈥淚 walked up and introduced myself and talked to her about my research interests and how I鈥檇 always wanted to work at Facebook,鈥 Drum says. 鈥淲e exchanged information and she invited me to dinner with some other Facebook researchers and colleagues. We had a great evening, and by the end of the night she offered to refer me for an interview.鈥

Three interviews later, Drum was offered a job. She鈥檚 the first student from the Psychology Department to get a job with Facebook.

鈥淭he whole process was really surreal,鈥 she says. 鈥淲orking at Facebook was always a dream of mine, but I never knew how achievable it鈥檇 be. I would always say things like, 鈥楽ee, this is why Facebook should hire me' when I would get a wild research idea.鈥

Once she graduates, Drum will move to San Francisco and start at Facebook in January. She hopes to publish the work from her dissertation and jump right into her research for Facebook. She says she鈥檒l know closer to her start date what else her job will entail. 

 

鈥淚 feel like I'm now fully prepared to start my next adventure.鈥

鈥 Jessica Drum

 

Drum says 麻豆破解版 State has played a huge role in getting her where she is today, specifically the and her advisor, Louis Medvene.

She says she always knew what her next steps and goals were in order to move forward, yet she was given the independence to develop her own ideas and skills along the way.

Medvene, who has worked with Drum for more than three years, says her success is an inspiration.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a very big deal for her and the Community Psychology Department,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he is someone who combines a very high level of intelligence and a very strong work ethic and is basically a very fine human being.鈥

She鈥檚 also an excellent leader on and off campus. Drum was one of the founders of WSU鈥檚 Community Psychology Association, now a recognized student organization.

And in 2015 she and four other 麻豆破解版 State students took part in the prestigious meeting with more than 1,000 students representing 300 schools and 75 countries.

Drum鈥檚 hard work led her to this position, but it took more than just that.

鈥淐onsidering I got my 鈥榠n鈥 at a conference, my advice for graduate students is to go to conferences and network. I know they are expensive, and I know there is little funding, but I truly think it鈥檚 worth it,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 would not have had this opportunity had I not been at the early morning session in Toronto.鈥

And for undergraduate students, she says the key is to keep moving, even when it seems daunting. She moved directly from undergrad degree into a Ph.D. program. And while she says it felt like it took forever, it鈥檚 all been worth it.

鈥淚 kept going, and now I'm a doctor and have never been more proud of myself,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 feel like I'm now fully prepared to start my next adventure.鈥