Bruce Morrison recalls his schooling in Long Island, New York, followed by chemistry at MIT and law at Yale

FROM AN American perspective, my upbringing in Northport, Long Island, New York, were typically suburban and middle class

FROM AN American perspective, my upbringing in Northport, Long Island, New York, were typically suburban and middle class. I was educated in the local public school system and, while I was always aware of my Ulster Protestant roots, they were never a focus of family life.

I grew up in an environment which honoured education. When I told my mother, a teacher, that it was my ambition to study for a PhD, she was delighted.

At high school in the late 1950s and early '60s - the era of Sputnik - the educational push was on the sciences. I particularly enjoyed chemistry, physics and higher-level maths. I was also very involved in sports and played the French horn in the school orchestra. It was a rich, broad experience which prepared me well for university life.

I went on to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where I studied chemistry. I completed my degree programme in three years thanks to the enriched science education that I had received in high school.

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After I enrolled in graduate school at the University of Illinois, my whole career orientation changed. I became active in campus politics and began to find the solitary life of the chemistry researcher less attractive than that of the political activist.

I helped to found the Graduate Students' Association, which fought for graduate rights, and came to realise that a law degree would be a more appropriate tool for my new role in advocacy.

Armed with a master's degree in chemistry, I went to law school at Yale, where I became involved in providing legal services to low-income people. After graduation I took a job with the poverty law programme in the city where Yale is based, New Haven, Connecticut. I eventually became executive director, but left to run for Congress in 1982.

The constituency I represented contained a strong Irish-American group, with which I began to work. Their interests were closely associated with many of the issues I cared about in Congress, including human rights and immigration.

You could argue that most of my education has had little bearing on my subsequent career path, but the skills I gained from my education - including learning to think creatively and to solve problems analytically - have been far more important than the subject matter.