Wider horizons

2 May 2025
Spring 2025

We speak to Dr Aleksandra Mankowska MCOptom, Lecturer at the Bradford School of Optometry and Vision Science, College Treasurer and Council member, about delivering eye care services to those who need them most.

Optometry wasn’t Aleksandra’s first choice of career, but it’s one that continues to pay dividends for her – professionally and personally. “It’s allowed me to do things I never thought I would be able to do,” she says.  

After 11 years in the automotive industry, she explains, “I was at a point where I felt I had done as much as I could in the job I was doing, and I didn’t feel I could progress much further.”

It was, in fact, a routine eye exam that prompted Aleksandra to explore optometry as a second career. “One conversation led to another,” she says. “I rang the admissions tutors at the University of Bradford, went in for a chat, applied and was accepted.”

Admittedly, returning to study in her early 30s was daunting and a financial sacrifice. “I had to do an access course because I had no science background, but that was a good introduction back into studying,” she explains. 

“One of my motivations for choosing optometry was that although I didn’t know an awful lot about it, I felt it was a career where if I wanted to do a little bit more studying, I could.” 

Aleksandra graduated from Bradford in 2007 and was awarded a PhD by the same institution in 2013 for a study of blur adaptation in human vision – something she never thought she’d undertake. 

“Over two summers, I worked on undergraduate research projects members of staff were offering that were sponsored by the College,” she says. “There was a project that evolved in the second summer that allowed me to come back and work as a postgraduate student.” 

Sign in to continue

Forgotten password?
Register

Not already a member of the College?

Start enjoying the benefits of College membership today. Take a look at what the College can offer you and view our membership categories and rates.

Related further reading

The College of Optometrists and the Optical Fees Negotiating Committee (OFNC) call on the government to make a long-term commitment to primary eye care in its NHS 10-Year Health Plan as part of the shift from hospital to community.

The College of Optometrists calls for vital community minor and urgent eye care services to be universally commissioned in England

The College partners with Springer Nature to take OPO into its second century.