Indiana talent: plugging Indiana's brain drain
with stars like Butler's A.J. Graves.
by Kaelble, Steve
A.J. GRAVES HAS A WAY with numbers. Like 13.6, his senior-year
scoring average as a star basketball player for Butler University in
Indianapolis. And .889, his free-throw percentage as a Bulldog. And 46.
That's the percentage of the employed 2008 Butler graduates who
remain in Indiana pursuing a career. Graves is one of those who decided
to stay.
Yes, the two-time Academic All-America honor squad member from
Switz City could probably have built a career around his basketball
talents. "Back in April, I was teetering back and forth between
basketball and going out into the business world," he says. The
business world won out. "I decided this was a better opportunity
for me in the long run."
The opportunity that he landed was a job as a business analyst at
AIT Laboratories, an Indianapolis-based independent reference
laboratory, offering testing and research services. It fit with his
mathematics degree, but also with his goals for the future. Instead of
shooting hoops for pay, he's doing research and writing
reports--and with AIT's help, starting on his master's degree
in statistics at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.
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It's one small step in the battle to keep the best minds from
crossing state lines after graduation, says Dr. Michael Evans, CEO of
AIT. The state's colleges and universities do an excellent job
producing talented life-sciences graduates, he says, and "it is our
mission to help stop the brain drain by hiring outstanding young talent
like A.J." For Indiana companies, there are plenty more talented
graduates where Graves came from. Of those who earn an Indiana
University degree, for example, just about half leave the state to
pursue a career, though Purdue says four out of five graduates stick
around.
AIT is not Grave's first experience in Indiana business. On
his way to pursuing a math degree, he dabbled in actuarial sciences and
ended up interning at Conseco. Last February, he started looking in
earnest for jobs, and found that it wasn't easy in the current
economy. "I was open to many possibilities," he says,
including taking a job elsewhere, though Indiana is really where he
wanted to remain. "When AIT approached me to stay here in Indiana,
Indiana was an easy decision."
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.