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Trends: Students Craft Internships to Fit Interests
Job Description? Some Passionate, Enterprising Applicants Manage to
Write Their Own
By ANJALI ATHAVALEY, WSJ Career Journal
Heather Day's ideal summer internship didn't exist. So she created it
herself.
A junior at Connecticut College in New London, Conn., Ms. Day wanted
to combine her love for hip-hop music with her interest in helping
children. After being unable to find a suitable program, she sent out
cover letters and résumés to eight nonprofit art-education groups in New
York, Washington and Atlanta, none of which had a formal internship
program.
Art Start, a New York nonprofit that educates disadvantaged children
about the arts, agreed to take her on as an intern this summer. In
addition to planning a fund-raiser and creating a curriculum for the
nonprofit's fall session of classes, she will be running a monthlong
hip-hop workshop for children.
"Hip hop is a great way to relate to a lot of people," says Ms. Day,
an American studies major with a minor in human development. Although
the internship is unpaid, Connecticut College is giving Ms. Day, 20
years old, a $3,000 stipend to help cover her living expenses.
Special Interests
With education growing more specialized, students are increasingly
looking for internships that allow them to focus on their specific areas
of study. When those opportunities aren't available, they are
approaching companies and nonprofits to create their own internships,
colleges and universities say.
The option "appeals to almost any liberal-arts student who isn't
interested in going the business route because gaining experience in the
field that you are interested in is challenging, often," says Beth Ricca,
associate director of career services and director of internships and
volunteer programs at Claremont McKenna College, a liberal-arts college
in Claremont, Calif.
The trend comes at a time when employers are increasingly looking for
new hires with internship experience. Often, a summer job can turn into
a full-time one. Employers hired 47% of their interns from the class of
2006, up from 36% in 2000, according to a National Association of
Colleges and Employers survey released in June. On average, 62% of
college hires have had some internship experience in the past, according
to the survey.
But convincing an employer to create an internship can be difficult
-- especially for students with focused majors and interests. Stew
Peckham, director of career development at Kenyon College in Gambier,
Ohio, says students often submit proposals to employers stating goals
and specific areas of interest. "If the student outlines that a bit, it
could get them further along," he says.
![[photo]](http://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/PJ-AL947_INTERN_20080305211413.jpg) |
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Ritika Puri interned at Adharshila, a New
Delhi-based nonprofit that offers health and education services
for residents of a local slum. |
While some students sit down with an employer and design a set of
tasks, the internship often evolves on its own. Last summer, Ritika
Puri, a 21-year-old junior and literature major at Claremont McKenna,
wanted an internship related to social and economic development in
India. She was particularly interested in exploring the relationship
between socioeconomic status and access to education and health-care
facilities. Rather than look for an established internship, "I was
really interested in designing my own," says Ms. Puri.
Ms. Puri contacted Adharshila, an organization in New Delhi that
assists about 400 residents in a local slum, through a family friend.
She was hired to assess Adharshila's existing programs and help choose
new initiatives for the organization. She went door-to-door to ask
residents what services they needed the most. People said they wanted
better access to health care and better tutoring services for children,
she says. She obtained a $500 donation, which she used to buy school
supplies for 100 children. She also helped start a health center, which
receives about 20 patients a day. "My role just sort of grew while on
the job," she says.
The process of creating an internship comes with challenges, though.
For instance, targeting employers willing to offer specialized
internships can be tough. Frannie Noble, 22, a government major at
Connecticut College, wanted to find a group that would allow her to
research children's rights in Africa. She sent out 20 cover letters and
résumés to nonprofits in Mali and Senegal. None responded. Then, she
went to Mali during the spring semester last year as part of a
study-abroad program and visited some of the groups in person, trying to
spark their interest.
Working in Mali
In April, the Coalition of African NGOs Working with Children invited
her in for an interview and offered her a position for the summer. As
part of her internship, she visited nonprofits to gather information
about the biggest challenges to children's rights in Mali, including
flaws in the education system, child trafficking and child labor. At the
end of the internship, she submitted a research paper on her findings.
Finding funding can be difficult because it is far less likely these
internships will pay. Some schools provide financial assistance, albeit
to only a handful of students. Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore,
Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and Hamilton College in Clinton,
N.Y., provide funding for select students doing unpaid internships.
Individual grants are usually about $2,000 but can range up to $6,000,
depending on the student's financial need.
Colleges that offer grants require students to submit proposals
indicating what they hope to gain out of the internship and how it
relates to their majors and career goals. The schools also help students
design their programs and locate companies and groups.
Corporate Prospects
While many of the internships involve nonprofits or small companies,
some students have pitched internships to larger employers -- even if
their interests are unrelated to the company's core business. David
Fine, who graduated last year from Northwestern University in Evanston,
Ill., with a degree in social policy, "was pretty dead-set" on creating
an internship in corporate philanthropy the summer before his senior
year. Mr. Fine, 23, proposed an internship to companies in the Bay Area
-- such as Levi Strauss & Co., Gap Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co. -- that
listed charitable initiatives on their Web sites. He told employers he
wanted to learn how the private sector could address social issues.
He was hired at San Francisco natural-gas and electric utility
company Pacific Gas & Electric Co., a subsidiary of PG&E Corp. His task
was to restructure the company's employee-volunteer program. He also
helped set up an internal site where employees could post volunteer
opportunities and worked on a company initiative to help fund the
creation of parks in the Bay Area. He submitted a research paper to his
school at the end of the summer and received course credit for the
internship.
Creating an internship tailored to his interests made him better
equipped to find a full-time job in the same field, he says. Mr. Fine
now works at the Center for Companies That Care, a Chicago nonprofit
that helps businesses become socially responsible. "It helped me realize
that this is a feasible interest to pursue and a feasible career field,"
he says."
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