Login | Register

Search

Home

Advertising

Topics Menu

  • YPN Connect
    • » YPN Connect Home
    • » My Profile
    • » Resources
  • Commentary
    • » Business
    • » Money
    • » Politics
    • » YP Community
  • On the Go
    • » On the Go Home
    • » Blogs
    • » Resources
  • Groups
    • » My Groups
    • » Groups Directory
  • Events
    • » Find Events
  • Videos
    • » Watch Videos
  • About

YPN Daily Bulletin

  • World Population Projected to Hit 7 Billion Next Year
  • Data From 100 Million Facebook Profiles Leaked Online
  • Bill Gates Questions Traditional Education Policies
  • More People Downsizing Homes, Adding Roommates
  • Media Crusader Looks to Copyright Lawsuits to Help Save Industry
Read More

Most Liked on Facebook

This Week's Poll

How willing are you to make sacrifices to fund the wars/reduce the debt (e.g. higher taxes, buying war bonds, etc. )?:

YPN Connect

» Contribute a Link

Jesse Nankin's picture
Jesse Nankin
Teaching "Stuff" About Ecology
Jesse Nankin's picture
Jesse Nankin
Reality TV Takes on Its First Death
kelly_21's picture
kelly_21
Supreme Court Rules on gun control in Second Amendment case
Jesse Nankin's picture
Jesse Nankin
NYT: The Pessimism Bubble and the Economy
Jesse Nankin's picture
Jesse Nankin
A Call for Young Blood (Donors)
See More

Most Popular

  • Read
  • Video
  • Data From 100 Million Facebook Profiles Leaked Online
  • World Population Projected to Hit 7 Billion Next Year
  • Post-Interview Etiquette While on the Job Hunt
  • Stock Market Watch: It's Up! It's Down! But Why?
  • Is the Recovery Act Working? You Bet It Is.

Subscribe | View All

YPN Network

» Join the Network

See More

The Internship Con

Tue, 01/12/2010 - 09:03 Alexander Herte...
  • Alexander Hertel-Fernandez's blog
  • Send to a Friend
College students at the 2007 Pittsburgh University commencement

College students around the country are now anxiously awaiting the results of their applications for summer internships. Once a rare added bonus for students, internships have become a standard component of the college experience. And most college students would attest that the need to find substantive summer work each year is crucial.
 
Employers recognize their importance, too. In a representative survey, Michigan State University researchers found that 50 percent of new college graduate hires in 2007 had previously completed internship experiences at the firm at which they were hired. The increasingly competitive labor market makes previous work experience in the form of internships all the more valuable; the National Association of Colleges and Employers survey for the class of 2009 found that only 14 percent of graduates without previous internship experiences had secured employment by April, compared to 23 percent of graduates with at least one internship.
 
In spite of their value, the choice to take an internship is often restricted by a student’s financial resources. Although for-profit firms are legally required to pay their interns, non-profit firms and government agencies are not subject to this restriction (interns are technically considered to be donating their time). So, for example, a student seeking an internship in Washington, D.C., a city known for attracting high-achieving college students, will find it difficult to obtain a paying internship at the White House, with Congress, or at a policy and research organization.
 
Not only does this entail three months of forgone wages, but students must also pay for travel, housing and other living expenses. For a student of modest means, the price tag is often too great, particularly since the most rewarding internships are often in expensive cities. Moreover, students from lower income families are much more likely to have higher levels of student debt, making it even harder to afford a summer without pay. In Washington, D.C., the cost of an internship could conservatively total $4,050, excluding travel—far out of reach for any student in poverty.
 
Non-profit organizations and governmental agencies often justify having unpaid internships by assisting students to secure school credit (thereby offsetting tuition). In practice, however, this is often not an even exchange. Because students are typically not enrolled full-time during their internship, they cannot receive any financial aid. And while they may be receiving class credit, unpaid interns must still pay for their living expenses. Moreover, some universities require that students pay a fee or percentage of tuition to remain enrolled if they are not on campus and receiving academic credit. Lastly, most universities set limits to the amount of credit that students may claim from internships. A student with a semester internship may not be able to receive a full semester’s coursework, so the credit received from an internship may not actually be all that useful in replacing other coursework.
 
In short, the internship pipeline for college students is broken. These valuable opportunities for career training and advancement are available only to the students who can afford them. To make sure college continues to be a valuable investment for all students, regardless of income, the government ought to take action to either end unpaid internships, or ensure that internships are available to all qualified students.
 
(Image by kit; C.C. 2.0)
 
If you enjoyed this piece about the need to change the internship system, check out this post on deficit-funded public investment.


  • Business
  • college students
  • Education
  • internships
  • low-income
  • unpaid internships

  • Alexander Hertel-Fernandez's blog
  • Send to a Friend
Jesse Nankin's picture

internships

Submitted by Jesse Nankin on Tue, 01/12/2010 - 17:36.

Check it out:

"All internships at for-profit companies must be paid internships. This is to prevent businesses from using students as free labor. Students must be paid by either a stipend or an hourly wage, unless there is an exceptional circumstance."

http://jmcweb.sjsu.edu/internships.html

  • reply
Anonymous's picture

These problems for interns

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/12/2010 - 16:36.

These problems for interns are amplified in New York where the cost of living is much higher than average and the competition for internships is fierce. Most for-profit organizations (especially in the media industry) only offer unpaid internships, which may be not be entirely legal if this article is accurate. This also means that the media industry is filling up not with the best and brightest, but those who can somehow afford to work for free while paying to live (and eat) in New York City *and* pay tuition on top of that. It's too bad. A lot of people who might help save the industry are unable to get internships within it because they don't have deep enough pockets or someone else bankrolling their internships.

  • reply

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Input format
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <table> <tbody> <thead> <th> <tr> <td> <object> <embed> <img> <div> <span>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
Are you a human?
5 + 2 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
YPN Connect
My Profile
My Connections
Resources
Add Topics
Share My Web Activity
Commentary
Business
Money
Politics
YP Community
On the Go
Blogs
Resources
Groups
My Groups
Groups Directory
Add a Group
Start a Discussion
Events
Find Events
Add an Event
Videos
Watch Videos
Add Videos
YPN Network
For Advertisers
For YP Organizations
For Publishers & Bloggers
YPNation
About
Register
Privacy
Terms of Use
Search
Help
RSS
Copyright © 2010 YPNation. All Rights Reserved.