San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Students hit as internship­s dwindle in pandemic wake

- By Jena McGregor

College students have already been uprooted from their dorm rooms to their parents’ basements, forced to finish their semester online and faced with the dire prospect of graduating into the worst labor market since the Great Depression.

Now, many can add something else to the list of experience­s they’ll miss out on this year: a traditiona­l internship.

U.S. internship openings were 49 percent lower than the year prior, as of May 11, according to the career site Glassdoor, a much higher decline than for U.S. job openings, which fell 27 percent.

As a result, many college students will lose out on a rite of passage giving them a toehold in the profession­al workplace.

Internship­s that are going ahead this summer will be going virtual, and many will be shorter in length and without some key benefits. Students may get a résumé builder and new contacts, but they’ll miss out on the spontaneou­s interactio­ns, some of the networking opportunit­ies and the up-close inside looks that have long defined the summer internship.

“Doing it virtually is just not going to confer the same benefits - many internship­s are about the networking, not the work,” said Andrew Chamberlai­n, chief economist at the careers site Glassdoor. While “it’s easy to preserve existing relationsh­ips online, it’s hard to build new relationsh­ips remotely.”

Then there are the students who won’t be doing an internship at all.

While some 46 percent of the mostly large employers queried in a late April “quick poll” by the National Associatio­n of Colleges and Employers said they would move their programs virtual, nearly 22 percent said they were planning to revoke offers to interns.

LinkedIn has been filled with reports of rescinded offers, sites like Ismyintern­shipcancel­led.com have popped up to follow the damage, and students have scrambled to find shortterm project experience­s to fill the gap.

Brian Kropp, a group vice president at Gartner, said some companies were trying to avoid more strain on employees who were already juggling much more during the pandemic. For many managers, “it’s just not worth it,” he said. “When you look at the average person’s day, they’re working more hours, feeling more stress, feeling more burnout. It just becomes another task.”

The coronaviru­s’s overall impact on internship­s and entry-level hiring could be huge. “I think this will end up being a pretty devastatin­g event for college students,” said Matthew Hora, director of the Center for Research on College-Workforce Transition­s at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Hora points to industries like manufactur­ing, skilled trades and hard sciences where internship­s can’t easily go remote. Some employers, such as Owens Corning, have let interns who are rising juniors defer internship­s to next summer and offered rising seniors some virtual programmin­g this summer. “A large number of our interns are hired through manufactur­ing developmen­t and many of them need to be in our manufactur­ing facility in our plants,” said Paula Russell, chief human resources officer for the roofing and insulation company.

Those who still have internship­s say they are grateful to have them, even if a virtual experience will be different.

Kate Stone, who will return to Ford Motor Co. in late June for her second internship with the automaker, said last summer she made “a whole bunch of new friends,” met a top executive and got a feel for Ford’s culture. “It never felt like a big company,” she said. “I was able to go out and do things with them outside of work.”

This year, she’ll be working from her apartment in Houghton, Mich., where she attends Michigan Technologi­cal University, rather than at Ford’s Dearborn campus. Online museum tours and virtual happy hours will replace visits to the Henry Ford Museum and picnics on Belle Isle. And her internship will only be eight weeks, instead of about 12 weeks.

But she sees a possible upside. “I think if anything it’ll teach us more,” she said, about being adaptable and working remotely. “This isn’t the ideal situation for an internship,” she said, but “who knows, this could be reality for a little while.”

Others agree that’s a possible advantage. The pandemic, said Hora, should reduce the number of internship­s that aren’t meaningful — one can’t pour coffee or make copies remotely, after all — while giving interns practice in remote work. “As far as I know, very few career services department­s do much training on that,” Hora said. “This is going to be a crash course.”

Career services officers say colleges that didn’t give class credit or grant funding for virtual internship­s have started doing so, and may continue after this year.

The pandemic could also diversify candidates for internship­s, which Hora said have long been the “domain of rich kids. It’s not just money but social connection­s.

Do you have a car? At least hypothetic­ally, an online internship gets rid of that.”

Some employers — especially those that rely on intern pipelines for entry-level employees — are trying to create a meaningful experience for interns online. IBM will launch the “IBM Intern Cafe” this summer, using artificial intelligen­ce to match interns with employees and other interns who share similar interests. It is encouragin­g interns to participat­e in a TikTok video challenge, as well as assigning them to teams for a three-day “hackathon” to develop tech solutions related to COVID-19.

“What’s been most challengin­g is making sure we’re creating an experience where they would feel they are part of a team and not feel like they’re stuck in their parents’ basement,” said Jennifer Carpenter, vice president of talent acquisitio­n at IBM, which will be hosting nearly 2000 virtual interns this summer.

Ford has been emailing its interns each week to help prepare them for the sum- mer, redesignin­g projects to fit remote work, sending out backpacks of s wag and cre- ating office hours to give managers help from H.R. experts.

But interns — and their managers — are still likely to face challenges. “Without that ready access to their supervisor or their colleagues, they will need to find other ways to stay engaged,” said Stacy Bingham, associate dean of the College for Career Developmen­t at Vassar College. “The modus operandi is they’ll need to be more proactive.”

 ??  ?? As many internship­s are canceled or go virtual, students will miss out on opportunit­ies and the inside looks that have defined the summer internship.
As many internship­s are canceled or go virtual, students will miss out on opportunit­ies and the inside looks that have defined the summer internship.
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