TechWhirl (TECHWR-L) is a resource for technical writing and technical communications professionals of all experience levels and in all industries to share their experiences and acquire information.
For two decades, technical communicators have turned to TechWhirl to ask and answer questions about the always-changing world of technical communications, such as tools, skills, career paths, methodologies, and emerging industries. The TechWhirl Archives and magazine, created for, by and about technical writers, offer a wealth of knowledge to everyone with an interest in any aspect of technical communications.
Subject:internships (long post) From:Lee Bumgarner <jlbumgar -at- VNET -dot- IBM -dot- COM> Date:Wed, 6 Dec 1995 12:57:03 EST
As corporate America downsizes, the hunt for jobs becomes increasingly
more competitive. Where once there were many jobs, there are fewer; where
once entry-level positions were filled with new grads, they are now filled
by old hands with years of experience.
As a career changer, I have found it difficult to find work as a technical
writer or technical editor--although I have nine years of nontechnical
editing and writing experience. Few recruiters or managers take those nine
years seriously.
Now that I have a little more than a year's worth of technical editing
and writing experience through co-operative education positions, they are
taking me more seriously: I am actually getting return calls and
interviews.
If it were not for my co-op experiences, I would be in *big* trouble, for I
would not be able to compete as effectively for positions.
I learned the value of volunteering, internships, and co-operative
education positions when I studied for a previous degree and when I worked
in museums as editor and manager. As a volunteer, intern, and co-op,
I gained valuable experience not possible in the classroom, learned how
theories became reality in the *real* world, picked up the jargon of my
profession, explored career opportunities, made contacts, and found
professional positions. As a manager, I was able to provide these same
opportunities for those entering the field.
As a volunteer and intern, on occasion, I was unpaid. In others I was paid.
When I was a manager, I tried to find money for those that worked for me.
If I couldn't and the person filling the position still wanted to work, I
trained
them as I would a professional and treated them as a professional. Employer
and employee both benefited from the arrangement. (In the museum field
[working for the state] we had little money. Volunteers and unpaid interns
enabled us to stretch our budget. One year, their total hours added the
equivalent of two professional staff positions.)
So, I am pro-experiential learning, whether it is paid or unpaid. Both
employer and employee benefit.
Now, I am aware of instances in the software industry where
co-ops are substitutes for professional staff. (I am also aware of
instances of managers letting professionals go and rehiring
them as contractors to save money.)
Yes, I find this appalling, and I don't condone this type of management.
And I do cringe to think that management might think that someone with
so little experience (as a volunteer, intern, or co-op) can take
the place of someone with so many years of experience.
When this thread arose in fall 1994, someone critical of my position (yes, I
have repeated it here) indicated offline that newbies working for free
or at lower salaries than professionals in the field were brought in by
management as union-busting scabs.
I and most other volunteers, co-ops, and interns more than likely never
intended to be scabs or intended to be perceived as scabs or as replacements
for professionals; I and they remain only interested in gaining experience.
Students coming out of school need job experience to compete.
Experiential learning (whether paid or unpaid) is like an apprenticeship: it
benefits both parties.
*******************************************************
These are my views only and are not those of my employer.