Dayton Daily News

College grads can find work

Much of the recruiting is taking place virtually, as are internship­s.

- Nelson D. Schwartz and Coral Murphy Marcos

Trevaughn Wright-Reynolds, a senior at Colby College in Maine, expected a lengthy job search when he returned to campus in August. “I wasn’t sure how much interest I was going to get,” he said. “I didn’t know what to think of the job market.”

It didn’t take him long to find out. By September, he was in the final round of interviews with several suitors, and on Oct. 1, Wright-Reynolds accepted a position with a proprietar­y trading firm in Chicago. “I didn’t think I would get an offer this quickly,” he said.

For many college students, the pandemic’s arrival last year did more than disrupt their studies, threaten their health and shut down campus life. It also closed off the usual paths that lead from the classroom to jobs after graduation. On-campus recruiting visits were abandoned, and the coronaviru­s-induced recession made companies pull back from hiring.

But this year, seniors and recent graduates are in great demand as white-collar employers staff up, with some job-seekers receiving multiple offers. University placement office directors and corporate human resources executives report that hiring is running well above last year’s levels, and in some cases surpassing pre-pandemic activity in 2019.

“The current market is great for employment,” said Lisa Noble, director of employer partnershi­ps and emerging pathways at Colby. “There was a lot of trepidatio­n for companies in 2020. People wanted to see how things would work out and were stalling.” Since June 1, Noble has had discussion­s with 428 employers, compared with 273 in the same period last year.

Much of the recruiting is taking place virtually, as are job fairs and even many internship­s. But the reliance on virtual platforms like Zoom and Microsoft Teams for interviews, job offers and eventually welcoming new hires aboard hasn’t dimmed enthusiasm among employers.

“The appetite for college labor is strong right now, whether it’s student positions, or part time, all the way through entry-level jobs,” said Jennifer Neef, director of the Career Center at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

That appetite at this stage of the pandemic — when overall U.S. employment remains more than 5 million jobs below the level in early 2020 — underscore­s the long-standing economic premium for those with a college education over holders of just a high school diploma.

The unemployme­nt rate for all workers with a college degree stood at 2.8% in August, compared with 6% for high school graduates with no college. Among workers ages 22 to 27, the jobless rate in June was 6.2% for those with at least a bachelor’s degree and 9.6% for those without one, according to a study by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

“We’ve seen a bifurcatio­n in the labor market recovery,” said Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. “College graduates were less affected by job losses and have seen a

faster rebound, while people with high school diplomas or less witnessed a much more serious decline in employ- ment opportunit­ies during the COVID crisis.”

What’s more, the spread of the delta variant of the coronaviru­s has been a one- two punch for those lacking a college degree, hitting the sectors they depend on the most, like restaurant­s and bars, hotels and retail businesses. By contrast, white-collar employers are thriving.

Office work can also be done remotely, a key advantage over face-to-face jobs dealing with consumers that frequently employ less-educated workers. In many cases, the new hires will rarely set foot at corporate headquarte­rs, with orientatio­n and full-time work mostly taking place online.

And the courtship rituals of recruiters haven’t changed, even if everything is done over the internet.

“It’s back to business as usual,” said Wendy Dzior- ney, global university hiring leader at HP Inc. The com- pany plans to hire 315 graduates of the class of 2021 in the United States, compared with 126 from the class of 2020 and 210 in the class of 2019.

Fall marks the peak of the recruiting season on campus, with interviews and full-time offers for seniors, while internship­s beckon for sophomores and juniors.

“October is our busiest month,” said Jennifer Newbill, director of university recruitmen­t at Dell Tech- nologies. Her company has extended full-time offers to more than 1,300 graduates this year, up 60% from 2020.

Recruiters of students in the hottest majors — includ- ing engineerin­g, computer sciences, accounting and economics — find themselves butting up against one another for the same candidates.

The rise in campus hir- ing means more choices for some current students as well as belated help for the pan

demic-hit class of 2020, said Annette McLaughlin, director of the Office of Career Ser- vices at Fordham University.

“Activity is up significan­tly from last year and is about 10% higher than it was before the pandemic,” she said. “It’s likely that students will get multiple offers and they will have to choose.”

The rebound is also bene- fiting recent Fordham grad- uates like Jonah Isaac, who finished school in May 2020, two months after the pan- demic struck. Several companies withdrew offers and Isaac, a business administra­tion major, spent a year interviewi­ng for spots that never materializ­ed until a Fordham alumnus helped him get a sales developmen­t job with Moody’s Analytics in June 2021.

“It was a huge hit for many students, and not getting anything was demoralizi­ng,” said Isaac, a Chicago native who was a wide receiver on Fordham’s football team. “I’d get to the third or fourth inter- view, and they’d say, ‘Sorry, we’re going in another direc- tion.’”

Members of the class of 2021 have had an easier time. Brittanie Rice,a Spelman Col- lege graduate, landed a job at Dell after working as an intern the summer before. “I felt lucky,” she said. “A lot of my friends had cancellati­ons left and right, but my internship went on.”

Rice was a computer science major, an especially sought-after concentrat­ion for many big employers. But Newbill, the university recruitmen­t director for Dell, said her company was also hiring students majoring in nontechnic­al fields — like philosophy and journalism — for sales positions. “Sales is about the personalit­y, not the degree,” she said.

Wright-Reynolds, t he Colby senior, is studying statistics with a minor in com- puter sciences. A native of Medford, Massachuse­tts, he will start at the trading firm in Chicago in August.

“This was a great opportunit­y, and I couldn’t go wrong in accepting it,” he said. “I feel like a weight is off my shoulders. I have a lot more time to enjoy senior year.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY TRISTAN SPINSKI / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Students in search of jobs and internship­s gather last month to listen to recruiters from a consulting firm at Colby College in Waterville, Maine. Seniors and graduates are in demand again.
PHOTOS BY TRISTAN SPINSKI / THE NEW YORK TIMES Students in search of jobs and internship­s gather last month to listen to recruiters from a consulting firm at Colby College in Waterville, Maine. Seniors and graduates are in demand again.
 ?? ?? College senior Trevaughn Wright-Reynolds quickly found several job suitors.
College senior Trevaughn Wright-Reynolds quickly found several job suitors.

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