Loyal to ETH – before and after maternity leave
Susanne Schawalder joined the Corporate Communications team at ETH Zurich twelve years ago. She took a career break when she became pregnant, and when she returned to work she remained loyal to ETH.
When Susanne Schawalder looks back on her ten years of working at ETH Zurich, one event springs to mind above all others: the Nobel Prize in Chemistry being awarded to ETH Professor Kurt Wüthrich in 2002. Back then she was part of the university’s Corporate Communications team, responsible for organising events and finding contacts for journalists as well as for providing information and helping the ETH departments with communications activities. That particular day eclipsed everything else that had happened previously. The phone barely stopped ringing, with radio broadcasters, TV channels and newspapers eager to obtain answers to their long list of questions. “We were absolutely fired up,” she recalls, “I had never seen anything like it before.” The situation did not change much in the weeks to come, as the positive hype surrounding Kurt Wüthrich continued: “It was the dream of every university and every communications department.”
“In my job in Corporate Communications, I was in my element,” Susanne says. She would arrive at the office in the morning, deal with enquiries and gather information from the professors and departments – “I really enjoyed the variety this offered and the chance to briefly delve into all kinds of subject areas at ETH.” Then she became pregnant. The demands of her job left her very little room for manoeuvre: “I couldn’t cut down my work, so I had to give it up.”
For the next two years she stayed at home to look after her son. Her daily routine involved getting up early, feeding the baby, changing his nappy, taking a midday nap, going for a walk and going to bed in the evening – and then having to get up several times in the night. “Eventually I felt like I was going stir-crazy,” recalls Susanne, who is now a mother of three. She wanted to work again – and more specifically, she wanted to work for ETH. As she puts it, “I always found its international character and variety of subject areas interesting.”
Eight years at EducETH
Susanne found exactly what she was looking for in the Teacher Training Department of the Institute for Research on Learning and Instruction (EducETH), where she has spent the past eight or so years working part-time to provide support for the professorship in various areas. As well as being responsible for assisting work experience instructors with the students’ mandatory secondary school work placements, she is involved in the administration of a longitudinal study being conducted by EducETH. This study uses a series of tests to investigate whether children who come into contact with scientific subjects early on in their school career develop an aptitude for science and a better understanding of it later on. The primary school teachers who volunteered to take part in the study are provided with intensive training, support over several years and relevant learning resources.
Susanne’s work has also shaped her views as a private individual. In her job she has to deal with teachers who are keen to encourage their pupils and rarely shy away from hard work. “It bothers me when I see my children’s teachers making very little effort,” she remarks.
November 2014 anniversaries
40 years
 Pierrot Dekumbis, Operations Group D-PHYS
20 years
 Roland Küttel, ETH Library
 Dr. Michael Matile, ETH Library
 Ethel Oeschger, Facility Management
15 years
 Carmelo Ponti, CSCS
 Jose Rodriguez, Facility Management
10 years
 Thomas Berchtold, IT Services Group D-PHYS
 J?rg Fehr, Rodent Center
 Michel Grosjean, ITS ICT-Networks
 Susanne Schawalder Bischof, Institute of Behavioral Sciences
 Dr. Andrey Starodumov, Institute for Particle Physics
 Thierry Viant, Institute for Particle Physics
Retirements
 David Robert Hamilton Bowler, Institute of Photonics and Quantum Electronics
 Dr. Peter Oskar Brunner, ETH Alumni
 Dr. Erol Dedeoglu, Institute for Chemical and Bioengineering
 Hansruedi Eckert, EPIC laboratory animal facility
 Peter Füllemann, ITS Support for ETH Central Bodies
 Urs Horisberger, Institute for Particle Physics
 Irene Ivanov-Bucher, Institute of Geochemistry and Petrology
 Susana Keller, Facility Management
 Dr. Juraj Lipscher, Teacher Training
 Peter Müntener, Facility Management
 Peter Nyffeler, Laboratory of Physical Chemistry
 Dr. Jiri Pika, ETH Library
 Sylvia Rüegg, Department of Architecture
 Esther Schilling, Institute for Geotechnical Engineering
 Dr. Esfandiar Shafai, Institute for Dynamic Systems and Control
