Column: Head to the career office before you pick a
college
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[April 27, 2018]
By Gail MarksJarvis
CHICAGO (Reuters) - (The opinions expressed
here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)
Unlike his friends who are living at home three years after college
graduation, John Kelly has paid off his student loan balance of $60,000
and is thriving as a real estate broker. The 25-year-old is on his way
to turning his own Boston property management company into a
multi-million dollar business.
Kelly attributes his success to carefully picking the right college for
himself - Northeastern University in Boston – because it had a strong
focus on career development.
That focus on future earnings is unusual considering next year’s college
freshmen will do little to scrutinize the career help available from the
schools on their list before making a final selection by the May 1
deadline.
Not many students who go to “accepted student” weekends stop by the
career center when they are on campus. That is a mistake, said Robert
Franek, author of The Princeton Review’s “Colleges that Create Futures.”
Although college admissions offices often laud their institutions’
career help, in a Gallup Poll only 16 percent of college students said
their college career center was very helpful.
And students really need the help. Despite a sharp upturn in the
nation’s employment in the last few years, the New York Federal Reserve
reported this year that 43 percent of recent college graduates were
“underemployed” in jobs that did not require their college educations.
That is a harsh reality when four years at a public university can cost
over $100,000 and when the average student with loans has been leaving
college with over $30,000 in debt.
To improve the odds of better career outcomes, experts provide this
advice.
* Scrutinize the career center
If you find the career office tucked into a corner, manned by a single
person and a self-serve computer, that is not a good sign. Instead, look
for a school with a serious commitment to career development, such as
the University of Florida, which has 25 full-time employees to help
students think about careers and link to internships and recruiters,
said Franek.
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Graduates look at the screen during a commencement for Medgar Evers
College in the Brooklyn borough of New York City, New York, U.S.,
June 8, 2017. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
* Start early
Kelly was introduced to his first internship in technology sales as a freshman
and found it boring. After he spoke with an adviser, his next internship was
with a real estate sales company. It was a hit. After two more internships,
Kelly had confidence and a business network. “I now have clients I met at 18,”
Kelly said.
In a survey of employers, the National Association of Colleges and Employers
found that internships are the top criteria employers use when comparing job
candidates - even more important than your major and twice as important as the
college attended.
* Get the data
Pushed by government policy and parent demand, colleges are in the early phases
of gathering data on jobs obtained by their graduates. They will have rates of
employment and early career pay for the average graduate, but that may not be
relevant. You may have to go to a department head to find out about internships
and the long-term outlook for your career. If there is no data, that is a bad
sign.
* Think creatively
Although fields such as engineering or business connect easily to related
internships, students with liberal arts degrees must be more creative and get
more help spotting relevant internships.
Even with some job experience, those in majors such as English or political
science can struggle to find jobs after graduating.
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and Phil Berlowitz)
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