Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CS major from UMD
For summer after freshman year: 50 applications from December-February. Paid research through school and govt agency
For summer after sophmore year: 190 applications from August-December. 1 interview which resulted in a job with a small defense contractor
For summer after junior year: 70 applications from August-November. 3 job offers
Apply EARLY and OFTEN
Yes, but also don't get discouraged if it doesn't work out in the Fall. I've seen with my kids in different fields that some are heavy on summer hiring in the Fall but the other saw a ton of places just posting jobs in January (and beyond).
CS major invested a lot of time in applications during Fall semester and secured a good internship by winter break (which then turned into a post-grad job).
Environmental science major is heavily applying right now because a lot of jobs dropped recently with January-February closing dates.
Anonymous wrote:OP, is your kid maxing out with the career services office and asking each professor for help?
Anonymous wrote:CS major from UMD
For summer after freshman year: 50 applications from December-February. Paid research through school and govt agency
For summer after sophmore year: 190 applications from August-December. 1 interview which resulted in a job with a small defense contractor
For summer after junior year: 70 applications from August-November. 3 job offers
Apply EARLY and OFTEN
Anonymous wrote:All I know is, I hear you. My sophomore college kid is in the same boat and has not done nearly as much to apply
I don't think the typical apply online and wait to hear back approach works as well anymore. Not saying don't do it, but realize the ratio of return is low.
Instead, kids need to apply to summer retail or service jobs (waitstaff, clothing stores, etc.) and just get SOME work experience.
I also think they need to rely on networks with friends from high school, friends from college, and unfortunately, parents and friends of parents. I personally hate this nepo-baby era, but from what I saw of the 100 intern slots at my corporate Fortune 500 last summer, probably 1/2 were friends or relatives of employees. (It annoyed me to no end but that unfortunately is the way of the world.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC had to apply to ~150 companies to get his internship for this summer. That's just how it is nowadays
I’m OP. Back in the mid 90s when I was in college, I applied to 150 companies to get an internship, and I had a resume and basic cover letter for each not additional short answer Qs and essay requirement, at least not until I had made it past a first interview (sigh, I still remember feeding the resume paper into the printer 😊). DC will need to apply to so many more to get returns, and has to do more work on each application.
Probably a big part of the problem (like with college admissions), it is just too easy to apply online so the number of applicants greatly increases. I realize that is at odds with my complaint about these companies requiring students to spend time on essays before they even know if they get an interview, but I suspect a lot of kids just churn those through chat gpt while my kid labors each individually (which I know is an issue, that my kid needs to learn how to “work smarter,” but that doesn’t come naturally to them).
Anonymous wrote:Mine hasn’t started college yet but this really sucks.
Anonymous wrote:DC had to apply to ~150 companies to get his internship for this summer. That's just how it is nowadays