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She is a senior project manager for a biotechnology organisation, and was awarded a master of science degree in systems thinking in practice, which she said she used every day in her work. "We found the OU a great experience and it enabled us to work, be at home, further our education and increase our employability," she said. "With the rising costs of brick universities this gave both my girls a chance to stay at home, work and complete their studies. They have significantly less debt that many of their peers." Her daughter Megan achieved a first class environmental studies degree while working in business continuity at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Trust. She now she has a job as a business support assistant for a sustainable urban planning company and said the family's "weekend study sessions together kept us motivated". "We pushed each other through tough days so it never felt lonely with the long days and nights at the books." Her non-identical twin Abbey, passed a law degree at the OU and has now been accepted on a postgraduate solicitor apprenticeship at Mills & Reeve in Cambridge, where she was already working as a paralegal. "During Covid-19 I went away to a brick university and struggled with the isolation," she said. "Therefore coming home to study at the Open University provided me with an opportunity to study flexibly whilst gaining work experience in a legal environment. "It helped me prepare to balance study and a career," Abbey said.