|   |  |  | Preparing “Final Materials” for Completing an 
		Internship in Communication Studies.
 Once a student has completed the required number of hours for the 
		internship (at least 135 on-site hours for credit bearing internships or 
		65 hours for approved but non-credit internships), the intern should 
		prepare and submit to the internship (faculty) sponsor the following 
		materials:
 
			An Internship Portfolio. 
			The “Portfolio” should be in the form of a folder or notebook and 
			should contain the following materials:
				Hardcopy of a one paragraph 
				abstract describing the internship formatted to match 
				descriptions posted on the COMM department web site. (This 
				abstract must also be submitted electronically to the COMM 
				Internship Coordinator for use on the department’s web site.)The signed internship 
				contract approved at the start of the internship.Hardcopy of the 
				internship log listing work dates, brief daily task 
				descriptions, and hours worked by date.Any materials the intern 
				has created or worked on during the internship (or 
				descriptions of such materials where appropriate) in tangible 
				form that the intern has been able to collect and which can be 
				shared with the faculty sponsor. Such materials may be in the 
				form of hardcopy or electronic files on CD or other format and 
				should be organized, labeled and described in ways that make 
				clear what kind of work was accomplished during the internship.The performance 
				evaluation form completed at the end of the internship 
				by the student’s site supervisor.Hardcopy of a professionally 
				written “press release” concerning the internship 
				experience. (This press release must also be submitted 
				electronically to the COMM Internship Coordinator for use on the 
				department’s web site or for public distribution.)  
				
				Sample Press Release 
				- Halpin   | 
				Sample Press Release 
				- MierA “Self Reflection and 
				Evaluation Essay” written by the intern following 
				completion of the experience and containing the following 
				sections: 
				
					An overview of the 
					internship experience highlighting the most significant 
					activities during the experience.A review of the “learning 
					goals” defined in the internship contract, assessing the 
					degree to which each was accomplished (or not) and noting 
					other kinds of learning experienced during the internship 
					not included in the original learning goals.An evaluation of how COMM 
					and Monmouth College courses and other experience helped 
					prepare the student for the internship (or left the student 
					under-prepared)A reflection section 
					discussing personal outcomes from the internship. These 
					outcomes should address such questions as: * What did you learn about yourself during the internship?
 * What have you discovered you are good at? Dislike? Need to 
					improve upon?
 * How did the internship change or reinforce your career 
					goals? Personal goals?
A one paragraph Abstract 
			describing the internship, formatted to match descriptions posted on 
			the COMM department web site (see above). This abstract must also be
			submitted electronically to the COMM Internship Coordinator.A professionally written “Press 
			Release” concerning the internship experience (see above). 
			This press release must also be submitted electronically to 
			the COMM Internship Coordinator for use on the department’s web site 
			or for public distribution.A “Poster” for 
			public presentation of the internship experience must be submitted 
			to the COMM Internship Coordinator. This poster should be viewed as 
			the equivalent of the kinds of posters science majors use to present 
			the results of their senior research projects. This poster may be 
			used on Mentoring Day or Scholars day as a visual representation of 
			the student intern’s experience and should be designed to be clear 
			when it stands alone or to serve as a visual aid for conversations 
			between the intern and interested parties. 
 The poster should be submitted on a standard size poster board 
			(approximately 22” x 28” or larger) or the equivalent. While the 
			format for the poster can vary depending on the nature of the 
			experience and the student’s preferences, the following elements 
			should usually be included: a title for the internship, the intern’s 
			name, the name and location of the internship site (sponsoring 
			organization), the name and title of the internship site supervisor, 
			on-site dates, a description (paragraph) of activities performed 
			during the internship, a list of “learning outcomes,” photos of the 
			internship site, activities, or of the intern “in action.”  If 
			you prefer, you may submit your poster in the form of a PowerPoint 
			slide suitable for printing on the large format printer in the 
			Physics Department in HT.  (This is the method most commonly 
			used by science students creating posters of their senior research 
			projects.)  Instructions for creating and printing posters on 
			the large format printer are found 
			
			here.
 
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