Tag Archive for 'college'

interns urged to cut class

Oh, fashion interns. Not only does wanting to break into such a competitive industry usually mean you have to accept several unpaid or low-paid gigs in order to build up your resume, one fashion website is now pushing their free help even further. Fashionista.com, who (like many other fashion and beauty companies) relies on unpaid interns to help them cover the bases during Fashion Week, has asked their staff to go above and beyond the normal call of duty. Check out this section from a recent intern job ad they posted:

“We’ll need you at least two days a week until Fashion Week starts February 9th, during which we’ll need you more. How much more depends on your schedule, but you should be eager to skip class in favor of MILK. Our intern hours are officially 11 to 4, but again, once the week starts there’s no on/off.”

You heard that right, everybody: your unpaid job is WAY more important than your education! School is for losers! I’ll see you guys at fashion week.

no job? sue your college!

Almost every college has a career center, although whether the center is any good totally depends on the place you go. Mine was mediocre – they mostly just had books of sample resumes and cover letters that you could copy and an online database of internships in the area. When it came time to actually find and keep a job, I was on my own.

One recent graduate, New Yorker Trina Thompson, is suing her alma mater, Monroe College in the Bronx, claiming that they didn’t do enough to help her find employment when she finished school. Thompson graduated with a degree in information systems with a 2.7 GPA this April and has not been able to find a job since then. She’s suing the school for $70,000, the amount she spent on tuition.

I, for one, find Thompson’s lawsuit pretty absurd. For one thing, she’s been looking for a job for less than four months. It took me about eight to land my first full-time gig, and that was in a way better economic situation than the one we’re in now. Almost no one walks into a job the day that they graduate from college, and that’s why they should save money and plan ahead for the time they’re going to be unemployed. It amazes me that Thompson thinks she deserves to get her tuition back after such a short period of time. Even if her college career center totally sucked ass and wasn’t helpful at all, what exactly has she been doing? How many interviews has she been on? I sent out several hundred resumes before even landing my first interview – it takes patience and a lot of hard work, not giving up after a couple of months and demanding your money back. I bet her ulterior motive is to get her name in the news and hope someone offers her a job after the barrage of publicity. Ugh.

wise words from… jimmy fallon?

It’s graduation season, and that also means it’s time for celebrities to speak at college commencements around the country. Jimmy Fallon, who dropped out of the College of St. Rose in Albany, NY fourteen years ago in order to try his luck in comedy returned to his alma mater to finally pick up his degree and address his fellow graduates. I waver on whether I think the dude is actually funny (although anyone married to Nancy Junoven can’t be that bad), but I did enjoy this quote from his speech:

Have you guys seen that movie The Graduate? Well, the real world is nothing like that movie. When you leave here today, your parents’ hot friend will not try to have sex with you.

Good point. And I don’t know if any of my parents’ friends would be classified as hot anyway, so I’m not particularly saddened by this revelation.

the sta interview: ellen gordon reeves

Career advisor Ellen Gordon Reeves is the author of Can I Wear My Nose Ring to the Interview?: A Crash Course to Finding, Landing, and Keeping Your First Real Job. The book is a helpful, funny, and not-at-all-condescending guide for people just out of college who are looking for their first grownup job. The questions in the book came from actual recent grads who consulted Reeves for help. If you want to ask her a question not covered in this interview, you can email her at caniwearmynosering@gmail.com. PLUS, we have four copies of her book to give away, so check back tomorrow for more info.

What do you think today’s college grads and people entering the workforce are the most afraid of? What do you think are their best assets?

I don’t know if they’re more afraid that they won’t get a job, or that because of the economy, that they’ll have to take a job they don’t want or stay in one they don’t like for longer than they’d like. I find that most young people are afraid of their lack of experience. But you’ve got to focus on what you do know and the skills and experience you do have, not what you don’t have. I want today’s grads to feel valuable, not vulnerable. We don’t expect you to have decades of professional experience; you can’t have that at your age, and we know that – that’s why we can hire you inexpensively. Don’t tell your mother I said this, but you’re cheap! Your assets? Recent grads are perceived as creative, tech savvy, flexible, adaptable, willing to work hard, energetic and full of stamina, and stereotypically bound by fewer family commitments than older employees with spouses and children. So if you can convince an employer that you’re smart and articulate, ready to take initiative but also to defer to authority, and that you can not only be a great assistant but do some of the thinking and work left in the void created by more senior people who have been laid off, you’re golden.

Are there certain universal questions/concerns that everyone has when they start their first job? Or do these things change with time and the economy?

When you start a new job any time, you’re understandably nervous because it’s new and you’ve got to adapt to and/or create a whole new routine. You want to please people and do a good job, but you feel infantilized because you don’t know anyone and don’t know how to do anything and are totally reliant on others at the beginning. You don’t know where the bathrooms are or how to use the Xerox machine. You don’t know how to order supplies or how to lock up if you’re the last one in the office. This can do a number on your self-confidence but don’t let it. Then there’s the high school cafeteria lunch dilemma. You don’t want to eat alone but you don’t know anyone and everyone is pairing up as if Noah’s Ark had just docked in front of the building. Wait and watch.

This year, younger people are worried that they are competing with older people in a tight job market. The threat of the guillotine hangs in the air. That’s why it’s so important to present yourself as professionally and with as much maturity as possible. In this economy, the pressure is on to be really good at what you do, to make yourself as indispensable as possible so you don’t get canned if there’s another round of layoffs.

If you could only give someone one piece of advice from your book, what would it be?

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what you probably should have majored in

belushi animal houseThere’s a running joke at the University of North Carolina that when you enroll and get a list of the UNC majors that have been the most lucrative for alums, #1 is Geography. Can you believe a Geography major is now earning more than someone who did Business Administration or Computer Science? Well, if you pay close enough attention, you’ll realize that one Geography alum earns so much money he skews all the statistics–Michael Jordan.

If that’s not enough to make you feel inferior, Yahoo has “helpfully” provided a list of the most lucrative college majors. Because if there’s anything I need to get me through a boring Thursday afternoon at work, it’s a list of things I should have done a couple of years ago that might not have made my current day so boring. Thanks, Yahoo!

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why college degrees are overrated

Our parents and grandparents were raised to believe that a college education was the ticket to a life of career success. They raised us to believe the same thing, but by then college was much more accessible and common. Now it seems like everybody goes to college, and you have to do grad school or a fellowship somewhere in order to stand out. Writer Marty Nemko in The Chronicle of Higher Education argues that the college degree doesn’t mean what it used to anymore. However, he feels that part of this worthlessness has to do with the fact that college degrees are expensive and sometimes take more than the prescribed four years to get. See if you agree or disagree by reading the article here.