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This article appeared in the Irving Rambler
ONLINE Edition
Article in PDF format
Academy student interns create
success
Now in its third year, the Academy
program for interns continues to grow. The Academy High School prepares
student interns with 300 hours of classroom study in their field of
interest, then grades them on professional qualities such as timeliness,
the ethical use of technology, ability to work as a team member, the
ability to set and meet goals, and as an individual. Participating seniors
must keep an A/B average.
Interns work about 15-20 hours a
week. Paid internships are preferred because of the time investment, and
having an income allows the students to purchase appropriate work clothing
and cover transportation costs, but the program may accept non-paid
internships based on a student’s preference.
Thelma Cantu, the coordinator for
the Partnerships in Education, explained the details of the program.
“As interns they are interviewed by
prospective employers and the owners select them; the student interns are
not placed,” Ms. Cantu said. “At each business, we have an intern
coordinator who helps us ensure that the student is meeting expectations,
or gets additional training as needed. Last year, nearly 100 businesses
participated in the program in eight career areas: cosmetology,
medical/dental, legal/ criminal justice, advanced/applied technology,
marketing, education, and visual arts/communication.”
Rick Stokes who works in the
marketing department at Your Federal Credit Union, supports the interns.
“We took on three interns last year in the
marketing, administration and lending departments, and budget allowed for
two of them to continue with us through the summer. They have performed
well in their capacities, and we will look at the program again this
year,” Mr. Stokes said.
Mr. Chris Harvey of Aquire, a
company whose flagship product is organizational charting software, will
begin a second round of interviews in a couple of weeks.
“We tried the internship program
for the first time last year. My first selection was a very sharp guy. He
did very well under intense and demanding conditions. I can’t
believe he made it. I wanted him to stay on, but he moved on to college
classes,” Mr. Harvey said.
Another business wanted to hire
their intern permanently too. Tim Landers of Beep-a-Geek has already
selected an intern for the current year.
“Our first intern did succeed in his
capacities—we worked him like any other technician. I did keep him over
the summer and would have kept him on, but, unfortunately, he moved out of
the area. Our new intern started today,” Mr. Landers said. “I would
definitely recommend this program to other businesses; it’s a win-winsituation.
The intern sees what the ‘real world’ is like and the employer can
use this time to train a potential regular worker. I take
allinterviewees
(intern or regular employees) to a central restaurant since we have a
homebased
business. Every intern I interviewed or inquired about was qualified. This
time around, it was a toss up between two candidates and I even thought
about hiring both. My first intern learned a lot while he was with us. Our
current intern told me today he’s already learned a lot - after one day,”
Mr.
Landers said.
Mayra Rodriguez, office manager
for Dr. Anthony Henegar, DDS, raved about how well her intern did last
year.
“Our intern performed very, very well. She
was responsible for a variety of tasks, from sterilizing instruments and
room set-ups to having patient contact and filing insurance claims. This
year we are requesting two interns. I highly recommend the intern program
to other businesses. Also, Dr. Henegar graduated from MacArthur and
this is one way we continue to participate with the school system,” Ms.
Rodriguez said.
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