College Internships
Many colleges and universities offer an internship or co-op program
that not only helps you to earn money to pay for college, but also
gives you great work experience
that will help you once you graduate.
Contact your school career services directors, co-op directors or
even your professors for any programs that you might qualify for in
your particular major.
Getting A Leg Up
By
Justin Driscoll
Legging Up Your Competition
Let’s face it. When you graduate from college you need an edge
over the competition, right? Every year thousands of college
students just like you enter the job market looking for the same
thing you are, a job / career. Since that is the case you need
something other than a paper degree to get your first job.
Here are a few suggestions you can do while you are still in
school:
Project-based experience
Many schools give their students an opportunity to work with a
local organization related to your field on a project the company
needs help on. For many of these companies they are viewing this
student help in the same manner they would if a consultant were to
come in and help them with this project.
There are some regional organizations around the country like the
Pittsburgh Technology Council who organize formal programs for
students and companies to participate in a project based experience.
Some of the companies who participated in the Pittsburgh Technology
Council’s program gave students a real world project whereas other
created a fictitious one. A few of the companies who gave students
an existing problem to solve actually used the student’s results and
saved the company money.
Talk to your professors, career services directors, co-op
coordinators, or anyone on your campus that could possibly set an
opportunity up for you or for a group of students at a local
company. If you would be willing to work with a company for six or
eight weeks, unpaid, on a project like this it could give you a huge
leg up on your competition. The contacts you can make and the
experience you can put on your resume is more valuable than money.
Job Shadowing
Another great way to get a leg up on your competition is to
consider shadowing someone who already works in your field of study.
If you are a biology major it might be worth your time to contact
someone at a hospital or life sciences company who has a biology
degree and learn how they are using their degree, or how did they
landed their first job, etc... Many job shadowing experiences are
very informal and short term; one day, or at the most one week. It
would be in your best interest to talk with a professor or career
services department to try and make this initial contact. If you
work with the college the company may view it more as an educational
experience rather than an attempt to get a job at this company.
Again the networking and the experience is more valuable than money.
There are many other ways to get a leg up on the job seekers
competition but we don’t have time for them all in this article.
Here are a couple more suggestions:
Informational interviewing
Internships (spring, summer or fall)
Cooperative education (usually a two year internship with the
same company)
As we stated at the beginning of this article anything you can do
to get a leg up on your fellow job seeking competitors, do it. As
you probably guessed after reading this article one of the best ways
to get a leg up is to do as much networking as possible while you
are in college, and get as much real world experiences as possible.
This principle will hold true for every job you acquire so you may
as well start early.
Justin Driscoll is a writer and speaker to college students and
recent college grads on career development issues. Learn more about
Justin or to read more of his articles visit his web site,
http://www.justindriscoll.com
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