Part-time Job and Internship Survey
2007-2008
NYU Wasserman Center for Career Development
CONTENTS
Introduction
The Wasserman Center for Career Development at New York University is dedicated
to providing students with a strong connection to career opportunities outside
of the university. The Wasserman Career serves as a bridge between the academic
world and career opportunities with employers in a wide variety of fields. We
support students in the process of determining who they are and who they want
to be, both professionally and personally, and provide the resources necessary
to research, explore, and ultimately secure meaningful career opportunities.
Internships and part-time jobs continue to be an integral part of a student’s
academic experience at NYU. The typical NYU graduate holds an average
of three or more part-time jobs and/or internships during their tenure here. Increasingly,
prospective college students and their parents inquire about the types of internships
and part-time job opportunities available to NYU students during the admissions
process. Selecting a college has become a process no longer based solely
on academics, but on many factors, including a school’s success rate
at providing numerous career options that prepare their students and propel
them into the job market. Once enrolled at NYU, students are aggressively
seeking out internship and part-time job opportunities and are pursuing them
early in their academic career. Although not always the best course of
action, it is not unusual for first year students to seek out these opportunities.
Several factors, including finances, influence a student’s decision
to seek internships and part-time work during their undergraduate experience.
However, the most compelling is the interest that students have in gaining
knowledge and experience in a specific career field and establishing connections
that can impact their professional lives. As in last year’s survey, just
under 70% of the respondents to this survey indicated that
their internship or part-time job during the academic year was related to their
eventual career goal. The Wasserman Center for Career Development works hard
to develop job and internship opportunitiesin order to ensure that students
have a multitude of opportunities to choose from. These internship and part-time
jobs help enable NYU students to obtain quality positions that enhance their
already strong academic experiences, as well as make them some of the most
qualified and marketable candidates in the nation upon graduation.
Methodology and Findings
The following summary is based on the responses of NYU juniors collected during
the summer of 2008. The junior class was selected to survey because they
are deeper into their academic majors and more career-focused. The survey was
distributed via e-mail to juniors for NYU’s eight undergraduate colleges. Students
who had not returned the initial instrument were sent a second. If we
did not receive a response after these two queries, phone calls were made to
the students during several evenings in late July. First and last names
and Net ID’s were used to eliminate any duplicates, and the overall response
rate from this effort increased from last year’s survey to 43%.
The survey results indicate that in addition to their coursework, NYU students
continue to hold both part-time jobs and internships throughout the academic
year as well as in the summer. During the 2007-08 academic
year the number of NYU juniors indicating that they held either a part-time
job or internship rose to 89%. It is worth noting that this
is the highest percentage that has ever been reported since the inception of
the survey. This is indicative of two trends: 1. NYU students are very
interested in opportunities that provide experience and lead to future full-time
employment, 2. Students at NYU continue to seek part-time work to help with
escalating expenses, which seem to be more pronounced this year due to economic
factors.
The data confirms that respondents from every NYU undergraduate school held internships
and part-time jobs at similarly high rates. This year’s results by
school include: The Gallatin School of Individualized Studies (95%) The
Silver School of Social Work and The Tisch School of the Arts reported the next
highest rate (both 92%). This was followed by The Steinhardt
School of Culture, Education, and Human Development (91%), the
College of Nursing (89.5%), and the Stern School of Business
and respondents from the College of Arts and Science (both 88.5%). As
indicated in past years, students in the School of Continuing and Professional
Studies produced significantly lower rates of part-time employment (45%) because
of its large enrollment of non-traditional students who often work full-time,
but even this group of respondents are participating in internships that will
provide them with meaningful work experiences that are often necessary to pursue
a new career field that corresponds with their studies.
Table 1 - Students Holding Part-Time Jobs and Internships by
School
|
| Gallatin School of Individualized
Studies |
95% |
| Silver School of Social
Work |
92% |
| Tisch School Of The Arts
| 92% |
| Steinhardt School of Culture,
Education, and Human Development |
91% |
| School of Nursing |
89.5% |
| Stern School of Business |
88.5% |
| College of Arts and Science |
88.5% |
| School of Continuing and Professional
Studies |
45% |
These survey results also indicate that students pursing a degree in liberal
arts, education, business, and the arts were equally successful locating part-time
work and/or internships.
The number of students who indicated that they planned on working during their
senior year (93%) continues to rise each year. Though finances
are one component of a student’s motivation to work during their senior
year, most students indicated that securing career related part-time employment
would give them additional experience in their field of interest, as well as
additional employer contacts. In fact the number of students who secure
their full-time jobs directly from their internships continues to increase,
making these opportunities even more important to students.
As in last year’s findings, 46.5% of all NYU students
indicated that they found their part-time job and/or internship through the
Wasserman Center for Career Development, with most citing NYU CareerNet, Employer
Presentations, or NYU Career Fairs as the source of their employment. The next
largest group of respondents, 23%, reported that they found
their position through a personal referral, and 11% cited
their academic department or a faculty member as the source of their referral. 9% of
respondents indicated that they found their position through a fellow NYU student,
and another 9% indicated that they secured their opportunity
through another source such as web-based job boards or career sites. Students
continue to have great success in securing internships and part-time jobs in
a relatively short amount of time. For the fourth year in a row, over 85% of
students who participated in the survey responded that they found their academic
year part-time job or internship in less than two months. Of that number 64% of
respondents indicated they secured their job in less than one month.
The average salary for part-time jobs and internships during the academic
year remained fairly constant at $13.00 an hour. However,
many students reported that they earned well over this amount. The relative
stability of salaries was influenced by the fact that many students opted to
participate in non-paid internships and/or volunteer positions during the academic
year, which impacts the median earning statistics. Many students reported
holding both a part-time job and an internship during the academic year. This
was especially true in fields that do not traditionally pay interns. Of
the students holding non-paid internships, 45% reported also
needing to hold a part-time job to earn a salary so that they could gain experience
in their chosen career path.
During the 2006-2007 academic year, The Wasserman Center for Career Development
established its Internship Fund Project in order to support students wanting
to intern in a non-profit and/or arts-based organization, but who also need
to generate income. This program continued during the 2007-2008 academic
year, and we were able to award stipends to four NYU students. With additional
support we intend to expand the program during the 2008-2009 academic year.
For the most part, the career fields in which most respondents were employed
is consistent with last year’s findings with Financial Services, Arts
and Education topping the list. However, advertising, communications
and government all showed significant increases over last year’s numbers. The
top twelve fields that NYU student respondents were working or interning in
on a part- time basis during the academic year were:
Table 2 - Top Career Fields
|
| Financial
Services |
14% |
| Arts |
12.5% |
| Education |
12.2% |
| NYU Campus |
8.2% |
| Communications |
6.5% |
| Advertising |
5.5% |
| Government |
5% |
| Science |
4.3% |
| Computer |
3.4% |
| Fashion |
3.4% |
| Healthcare |
3.2% |
| Law |
2.9% |
These findings are indicative of a diverse, highly active, creative and community-based
student body, but also of increasingly successful job development efforts at
the Wasserman Center. Findings indicate that these internships and part-time
jobs transcended school lines with students from diverse undergraduate programs
seeking these opportunities.
Overall, 68% of students considered their part-time job or
internship related to their career goals. Again, this supports the findings
that the majority of students who actively participate in the job market during
their junior year are seeking and obtaining experiences that are relevant to
their career goals.
Almost all (93%) of the juniors responding to the survey
indicated that they planned on working during the summer of 2008. At
the time (June-July) the survey was administered, 85% of
respondents had already secured summer employment. 45% reported
securing their summer positions through The Wasserman Center for Career Development
with an average salary of $15.45 an hour, significantly higher
than the average salary earned by juniors during the academic year.
Conclusion
Undergraduate part-time jobs and internships continue to be a significant
component of students’ learning experiences. It is clear from the survey
that college students still consider part-time work and internships to be vital
parts of their academic experience. Students seek part-time work and internships
as a way to connect their academic training with the external world, to “test
out” a possible career direction, to earn money in order to stay in school,
to develop skills, and to gain experience and professional contacts. Employers
often need professional workers who can “hit the ground running” and,
therefore, seek out the brightest and most experienced new graduates. Internships
prior to senior year are also becoming increasingly attractive to employers,
who seek to convert these interns to full-time hires upon graduation. Part-time
jobs and internships play increasingly important roles in determining a student’s
career direction and full-time employment options after graduating. Students
with these experiences demonstrate greater career focus, and thus have more
full-time employment options after graduation, which is important both in times
of economic uncertainty and in robust fiscal conditions. The experience gained
through a part-time job or internship gives a student a decisive edge in securing
a meaningful and challenging position upon completion of their academic work
at NYU.
NYU students are ahead of their peers from other institutions in many important
ways including their career development and preparation. This notion
is supported by consistent employer commentary on NYU students’ level
of sophistication and professionalism. Thus, students from NYU have an edge
in finding and securing interesting, competitive and varied opportunities in
a relatively short amount of time. They earn excellent wages, and they have
a great deal of work and “real world” experience by the time they
graduate. Moreover, in addition to their academic, social, community
service and student life activities here at NYU, the experience of having a
part-time job or internship is an important component of their undergraduate
life.
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