Houston Chronicle

Summer internship­s scuttled by the pandemic

- By David Yaffe-Bellany

When she found out in mid-March that she had landed an internship with an education nonprofit in Washington, Lydia Burns, a senior at the University of Louisville, called her mother to celebrate. The whole world was falling apart, but here, finally, was good news.

“Mom, guess what?” she said. “Things are amazing!”

The euphoria lasted all of a week. As she was working on a paper, Burns got an email from the nonprofit: The internship was canceled because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. She burst into tears.

“I feel like I had such a strong plan,” she said. “I knew what I was going to do — I had been working for it all of college. Now I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

For millions of college students, internship­s can be a steppingst­one to fulltime work, a vital source of income and even a graduation requiremen­t.

But like so much else, summer internship­s have been upended by the pandemic, with a wide range of major companies, including tech businesses such as Yelp and entertainm­ent behemoths such as the Walt Disney Co., canceling programs and rescinding offers.

Students who had locked down internship­s as early as September are now jobless. Others who had hoped to experience an office setting for the first time are instead looking for work at fast-food restaurant­s. Many low-income undergradu­ates, already saddled with student loans, are concerned that a jobless summer could put them at a disadvanta­ge in future applicatio­n cycles, making it harder to find full-time work after graduation.

Some companies are continuing to pay interns to work from home, sending corporate laptops in the mail and holding get-toknow-you sessions over Zoom. But students fear that remote internship­s will not afford the networking opportunit­ies that can make spending a summer in an office so valuable, especially for interns who have few profession­al contacts.

“You pick up a lot of subtle clues about how to behave in that profession, how to communicat­e like an engineer, how to work in teams like a nurse,” said Matthew Hora, an education professor at the University of Wisconsin who has studied internship­s. “Students are going to be missing that.”

Cassandra Dopp, a junior at the University of South Carolina, felt the effects of the pandemic earlier than most U.S. college students: She was studying abroad in Rome when the coronaviru­s swept Italy.

Dopp, a business major, returned home in March and was set to work for Geico this summer at the company’s headquarte­rs in Fredericks­burg, Va. But as she sat in her childhood bedroom last month, Dopp got a call from a human relations official at the company, informing her that the internship was canceled.

Many of her friends had already gotten similar calls. But Dopp has always prided herself on keeping organized and planning for the future. Now, she has no idea how she’ll stay occupied after final exams, let alone what she’ll do in July or August.

“I’d never put myself in this position to not have a plan for my summer and my future,” she said. “It was a big letdown. It’s disappoint­ing.”

In a statement, Geico said its summer program rotates interns through multiple department­s to expose them to different facets of the company.

“Unfortunat­ely,” the company said, “this experience was not possible in our current remote working environmen­t.”

Many of the cancellati­ons stem from those kinds of logistical challenges or from cost-cutting at companies that are reeling from the economic damage of the pandemic. In other cases, students were hired to work at sports venues and political convention­s or to help organize events that have been canceled.

Keri Johnson, a journalism student at Ohio University, landed what she described as a “dream” internship writing marketing material for the Nelsonvill­e Music Festival in Ohio. Then the festival was canceled, along with many other cultural events, such as South by Southwest in Austin.

Johnson has to intern for at least 200 hours to earn her journalism degree in the fall. With the festival canceled, she’s concerned she will have to push back her graduation, making it harder to find a job and putting financial strain on her family.

“Summer is the time I get to work as much as possible because I’m not in class,”

Johnson said. “It’s kind of scary thinking about the fact that I won’t be able to work in the summer as much as I normally would.”

The cancellati­ons have cut across virtually all industries, from media to technology to finance. But predictabl­y, the industries that have suffered the most during the pandemic — travel, retailing, hospitalit­y — have had especially large numbers of cancellati­ons.

Connor Machon, a sophomore at the University of Texas at Austin, accepted an internship at American Airlines in late September, turning down several other offers. He got his first inkling that the program might be in jeopardy when a friend who was set to work at Southwest Airlines had an offer rescinded in March.

A few days later, he learned that his internship was also being cut. Over the next weeks, Machon kept busy applying for dozens of other positions and sending more than 100 networking emails. Ultimately, he secured an internship at a startup in Austin, earning $15 an hour.

“At this point, I was really open to anything, as long as I was being paid,” he said.

Not all internship­s are canceled. A number of banks and technology companies have simply shortened their programs by a few weeks. Media organizati­ons such as the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal gave some summer interns the option of deferring until the fall or next year.

Offering perhaps the sweetest arrangemen­t is the New York law firm Cahill Gordon & Reindel, which announced in April that the incoming summer associates would not have to work but would still be paid and still receive fulltime offers after graduation in 2021.

Other companies have moved their internship­s entirely online. In early April, a recruiter at eBay, Cindy Loggins, presented a series of options to top executives, such as shortening the program or holding it remotely.

Given all the uncertaint­y, a total cancellati­on was also a serious possibilit­y. “You’d be silly not to consider that as an option,” Loggins said.

In the end, the company moved the internship­s online. But a remote program presents certain logistical difficulti­es, such as combating “screen fatigue” and devising work schedules for interns who live in different time zones.

To address any problems, Loggins said, her team plans to conduct weekly check-ins with each of the interns, rather than the midpoint and end-ofprogram meetings eBay has held in the past. But some rites of passage will be impossible to replace.

“Perhaps I’m getting up to go somewhere and the intern says: ‘Hey, where are you going? Can we grab lunch?’” Loggins said. “That’s what we’re going to miss in this summer.”

Many students will also miss the chance to spend a couple of months in the real world, away from the cloistered environmen­t of a college campus.

Irene Vázquez, a junior at Yale, is interning for a small publisher based in New York. Months ago, Vázquez had envisioned the summer as a test to “see if the whole East Coast tiny apartment thing was going to be viable down the road.” Instead, she’s going to spend the summer working remotely from her childhood home in Texas.

“I could be much worse off,” she said. “But it’s certainly not the experience I had planned.”

 ?? Luke Sharrett / New York Times ?? Lydia Burns, a senior at the University of Louisville, landed an internship with a nonprofit in Washington. Then it was canceled because of the pandemic.
Luke Sharrett / New York Times Lydia Burns, a senior at the University of Louisville, landed an internship with a nonprofit in Washington. Then it was canceled because of the pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States