| An internship is a learning 
					experience. It is as much a part of your major as any 
					required course. However, an internship allows you to take 
					control of your learning more than any other course you may 
					take. In return, becoming an intern requires you to become 
					more personally and professionally responsible for you 
					performance than ever before. While obtaining professional, 
					career-related work experiences at any stage in your college 
					career can be valuable and multiple experiences are becoming 
					more common, this page concerns the major internship that 
					COMM and PUBR majors use to meet their graduation 
					requirement.  That internship experience should take 
					place after you have completed a significant part of your 
					major and college course work.  The further along you 
					are in your studies the more skills you bring to the 
					internship site and the more advance your experience can be.  
					If you are closer to graduation your internship may serve as 
					a launching pad for that first job.  COMM and PUBR 
					requirement internships usually occur during the summer 
					before the senior year or during the senior year itself. 1.  The way to start planning your 
					internship is to begin by determining your goals.  What 
					do you want to learn through your internship?  
					Do not 
					start by trying to determine a place to do the internship.  
					That comes after goal setting.  Here are some questions 
					that may help you establish your learning goals for the 
					internship. 
						
						Do you have a particular kind of 
						career in mind (News Reporter, Social Media Writer, 
						Corporate Public Relations, Event Planner, Marketing 
						Agent, Writer, Media Producer, etc.)?  Could an 
						internship allow you to "test-drive" the work in the 
						career you are considering?
						Are there skills you would like 
						to develop or improve on that you think would improve 
						your career potential.  Our
						
						
						List 
						of Skills Often Developed by COMM/PUBR Majors" 
						may be helpful in giving you ideas for skills an 
						internship can help you with.
						Are there things you've studied 
						in your major that you enjoyed?  Would you like an 
						internship to learn how your interests can be applied to 
						dealing with real-world issues?
						Would you like to experience 
						particular kinds of work-places before you enter the job 
						market?  Are there kinds of experiences you would 
						like to have (e.g. working for a non-profit or service 
						organization, being in a newsroom, seeing how marketers 
						create and exsecute a strategy, having a chance to 
						network with people in your chosen field)?
						Would you like to build a 
						"portfolio" of professional materials that will impress 
						potential employers while working with a communication 
						professional? As you reflect on these planning 
					questions generate a list of potential goals for your 
					internship.  Intially, a long list is fine even if they 
					don't all work out in the end.  If your list is short, 
					no problem.  It's time to get some advice. 2.  Once you have some goals in 
					mind, meet with your COMM adviser or the COMM Internship 
					Coordinator or both.  As you talk, your adviser should 
					be able to help clarify and refine your goals and you two 
					can begin to think of various sorts of places that might be 
					good options for your internship.  Remember, an 
					internship is not a place for you to do (free) work.  
					It should be a place to learn.  A good internship is 
					one where you can experience the workplace and be under the 
					direction of a professional who can teach you how 
					communication skills can be applied in his/her workplace.  
					Be wary of experiences that involve you doing work the 
					organization does not have the expertise to do for 
					itself.  (Legally, those sorts of work arrangements 
					require that you be paid.)  At this internship advising 
					meeting, be sure you understand the COMM department's 
					expectations for acceptable internships that meet the 
					graduation requirements of the COMM or PUBR major. 3.  Be 
					sure you have your resume up-to-date.  You will 
					need a solid, quality resume to send or give to potential 
					internship sites.  In developing your 
					internship resume COMM majors can use the web-based resume 
					they created in COMM 321, Junior Colloquium.  If you 
					are starting from scratch, there are multiple internet sites 
					that can provide guidance.  Some are linked on the 
					search pages of the COMM department.  The Wackerle 
					Center also provides assistance in constructing a resume.  
					In any case, before starting to send out resumes (for 
					internships or jobs) show your current version of the resume 
					to your COMM advisor or the Internship Coordinator for 
					feedback. 4.  Only now should you begin to 
					develop a strategy for  
					Finding an Internship Site.   
					And print out a copy of the
					Internship 
					Check Sheet to use as a ready reference. Return to 
					main internship page |