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At Otterbein University, in Westerville, Ohio, "5 Cardinal Experiences" was launched three years ago to connect students with internships, research and other opportunities. This fall, a job shadow program will match students with local alumni. At Davidson College in Davidson, N.C., the Davidson Internship Challenge began three years ago, asking alumni to help students find and secure internships; it surpassed its goal of 100 internships in its first year by 17. McDaniel College in Westminster, Md., started its Center for Experience and Opportunity in 2012 to "help prepare students for life after college," according to spokeswoman Cheryl Knauer, by helping them find internships, volunteering and service projects. York College of Pennsylvania in 2009 opened the Center for Professional Excellence, where, according to a video shown on tours, students can learn everything from social skills to public speaking. Many colleges also now offer funding for unpaid internships so that students of limited means can afford to take them. And career-building is now a topic in freshmen seminars. "Gone are the days when a second-semester senior can come into a career center for career assistance and expect to find a job immediately," said Kathy Williams, director of Gettysburg College's Center for Career Development in Gettsyburg, Pa., which encourages students to take externships and do job shadowing in freshman and sophomore year. Even schools that train students for specialized industries are stepping up their game. Haemoon Oh, who joined the Hospitality and Tourism Management department at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst in 2008, used its alumni network to create a program in which students could meet industry leaders. When hotel CEOs in New York and Boston were reluctant to travel to the campus in western Massachusetts, Oh told them, "I'll bring my students to you if you sponsor the trip.' The concept was embraced by their corporate headquarters." But Oh's goals were broader than just connecting students to potential employers. "If our kids can have an opportunity to interact with a chairman or CEO or industry icon in an informal setting, and ask whatever they want, that's a worthwhile experience," he said. "I wanted to inspire students and give them hope and ambition, especially in a time of recession." He also began a mentoring program, handpicking students to match with alumni in senior positions. "I asked them to coach the students over the phone or by email, but many have taken it further," he said, offering job shadowing and sometimes jobs. The number of employers taking part in the program's career fair has more than doubled, and many seniors are getting multiple job offers. Andrew Speno of Edmond, Okla., who's looking at colleges with his teenage son, says the expanded emphasis on jobs is "a practicality. I was a political science major in college, my wife has a piano performance degree. We had absolutely no practical workplace skills when we graduated. And we struggled." He added: "Education for education's sake is a luxury that middle-class families like us don't have any more." But Louise Duncan of Brunswick, Maine, would have preferred less talk about careers on the college tours she took with her daughter. "At some schools it was so flagrant and persistent that a few times I had to hold myself back from giving the poor little tour guides a drubbing," she said. "I wanted to ask them to talk about the fascinating courses they took or the inspiring professors, or yell that I think the whole point of education is to learn interesting things." She added: "I get why they're trying to sell it differently since liberal arts education has been attacked as poor value, but I don't think that college for most kids is supposed to be vocational training."
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