Anonymous wrote:Real internships require networking, career fairs, cover letters and resume, certain GPA, certain skill set, interview prep, letters of recommendation, references, rounds of interviewing, facing rejection. If you get an offer, you have to find a place to live, plan all the logistics, get outside your comfort zone.
The same hometown lazy gig summer after summer requires nothing besides showing up in a bathing suit. This girl is going to be a university upperclassman with no skills and zero real world experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Comments here about OP are pretty harsh. Yes, having any job is better than sitting at home for 3 months. But lifeguarding (again) at this stage in college will put this student at a disadvantage when she graduates and enters the job market, absent family connections. Internships are an important stepping stone to future employment.
Forgot to add, I am pretty sure the niece already knows her lifeguarding job is not ideal. I hope OP is not pointing that out to the mom or the niece.
But there aren’t enough internships to go around. So many have been cut. So glad the niece has a summer job. There are many college students out there still looking for regular service-type summer jobs.
Again, no. Her lifeguarding job is ideal. It shows that she's relied upon every year at a job that was created to save lives. Much better than a summer "doing social media" for a no name company.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of people who prefer to see resumes with experiences like lifeguard, waitstaff, construction and painting, etc. over internships which can be hit or miss on giving any actual experience. And, a student who is a good worker and liked enough to be able to return to a prior job can tell you a lot about work ethic and ability to get along with people.
That’s all true - for a high school student. College kids need to show more initiative and experience in the job market today. Not having an internship by junior year (while enrolled in a selective college) is a red flag.
Hi OP!
Since you seem to have all the answers, why are you asking others? You disregard all who disagree with you...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of people who prefer to see resumes with experiences like lifeguard, waitstaff, construction and painting, etc. over internships which can be hit or miss on giving any actual experience. And, a student who is a good worker and liked enough to be able to return to a prior job can tell you a lot about work ethic and ability to get along with people.
That’s all true - for a high school student. College kids need to show more initiative and experience in the job market today. Not having an internship by junior year (while enrolled in a selective college) is a red flag.
Anonymous wrote:My niece goes to an expensive and selective college. Her mother just me told she’s back home and lifeguarding again this summer, the same summer job she’s had since high school. Am I wrong that this is a bad look? At her college career fair this fall, the only work experience on her resume is going to the same summer job 3 or 4 summers in a row, which is a gig any high school swimmer can get when they're 15 or 16.
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of people who prefer to see resumes with experiences like lifeguard, waitstaff, construction and painting, etc. over internships which can be hit or miss on giving any actual experience. And, a student who is a good worker and liked enough to be able to return to a prior job can tell you a lot about work ethic and ability to get along with people.
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of people who prefer to see resumes with experiences like lifeguard, waitstaff, construction and painting, etc. over internships which can be hit or miss on giving any actual experience. And, a student who is a good worker and liked enough to be able to return to a prior job can tell you a lot about work ethic and ability to get along with people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Comments here about OP are pretty harsh. Yes, having any job is better than sitting at home for 3 months. But lifeguarding (again) at this stage in college will put this student at a disadvantage when she graduates and enters the job market, absent family connections. Internships are an important stepping stone to future employment.
Disagree. Employers know their “internship” is some degree of being hand held at a company and given very basic tasks. They are going to treat the kid with an internship, exactly the same as any other- a new hire with zero experience.