Career Guide

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SUN FLOWER

e d i u G r e e 2015 Car

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How do you land a job after graduation? Here’s your guide to help you get one step closer. Find the do’s and don’ts of job interview attire, details on employment overseas and features on graduates who now work for the NFL.

Ilustration by Jillian Clough

Putting skills to work: Students find success withMILLS internships CEDAR EVAN PFLUGRADT

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The Career Development Center recommends starting a career path early.

Building the perfect résumé, other steps to land the job SAVANNAH STEVENSON REPORTER

@sunflowernews

It is never too late for college students to start deciding and designing what career they want to pursue. The sooner the better. With help from the Career Development Center and other resources from Wichita State, every student on campus should be prepared to take on the real world after receiving their diploma. Kim Kufahl, assistant director of marketing and strategic communication at the center, encourages students to come into the office, located in Brennan III at 17th Street and Yale Avenue, when they begin their college careers. “As freshmen, we want to get them involved with the Career Development Office right from the start,” Kufahl said. “That way, they have a leg up when getting involved with a career.” Center representatives want students to sign up and attend its fairs, workshops and other informational sessions. “We’re going to have a majors and minors fair on Oct. 27 and that’s a great place to either look at majors or add a minor,” Kufahl said. “We also have a series of workshops such as co-operative education, internships and résumés, and ‘ace the interview,’ that will help ease you on the right path.” Sara Muzzy, director of student academic programs and service, stressed the importance of these workshops for first-year students. “We have 60 [workshops] offered

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this semester alone,” Muzzy said. “That’s more than ample opportunities for all students to take advantage of some of those workshops.” The fairs are geared toward all students, but Kufahl emphasized starting and attending early in your college career. “We want freshmen to attend the on-campus career fair,” Kufahl said. “Start going now. Start meeting employers now, that way you can make a good impression when you can meet with an employer every year and they can see you growing professionally.” Once students enter their second year, the center urges them to become more involved with a specific career plan and specifying what their major will be. “This is when we really want you to dive in and start looking for co-operative education or internship experience,” Kufahl said. “We also have employer symposiums and it’s also good for sophomores to attend those and start learning about the industry.” In order to be involved with a student internship or a co-operative education program, students need to activate their “handshake” account. “What they would do is sign up in handshake,” Muzzy said. “They’d activate their profile and they can sign up for one of our workshops right then when they activate it. And the actual workshop students need to complete to be a part of co-op’s and internships would be the résumé and co-operative internship workshop.”

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Senior Nathan Templon never believed he would be doing what he is doing. Templon decided to put his skills to work in preparation for his senior year. That’s when he turned to the Career Development Center and ultimately became a manager at Boeing. “I never thought I’d be doing anything like this,” he said. “You get into the coursework and you learn what you enjoy, and then you put forth those skills and start applying for positions.” Templon, an engineering student, started applying for positions hoping to find a summer internship. “I worked with the Career Development Center on my résumé and also attended sessions on developing my interview skills,” he said. In the spring, Templon met with Boeing hiring managers. Boeing selected Templon for an internship for their VC25 program as a systems engineer. It came with a surprise. “The office gave me the name of a manager,” Templon said. “The manager then assigned me to the VC25 Program, which is most famously used as Air Force One.” As a systems engineer, Templon was assigned to work with clients to discuss modifications and then work with designers to make it possible. The designers then turn the project back to Templon’s team, which measures quality and ensures it meets all regulations. Templon worked at the Boeing plant near Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma City. Over the summer, President Barack Obama visited Oklahoma City and Templon experienced the significance of the project. “It is majestic to watch Air Force One fly,” Templon said. Working on Air Force One posed exciting challenges for Templon. “Working on such a large ! system full of intricacies makes

Photo by Celeste Thompson

Abigale Martinez works with students at Jefferson Elementary School through a co-op with Communities in Schools.

you learn something new every day,” he said. Templon suggested that students who desire to follow a similar path turn to the Career Development Center for interviewing skills. “Being the best is no use if you can’t convince the hiring person that you are the best,” he said. Templon graduates in December. At the end of his internship Boeing extended a full-time position to Templon, and he is considering accepting it. “You feel like you’re working with a purpose and serious impact,” he said. “The country is being ran out of your plane. You’re building a mobile White House.” The Career Development Center not only works with various internships but also works closely with a variety of cooperative education programs. Co-ops are different in the case of internships. In Co-ops, the student forgoes classes to pursue working full-time, while still earning credit for the position. Abigale Martinez is in her fifth semester working for Communities in Schools, a local non-profit dropout prevention organization. Communities in Schools works with more than 10,000 individual students and their families in Sedgwick County each year. “Before I started with Communities in Schools I had never

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taught or really interacted with kids,” Martinez said. Now in her fifth semester at Jefferson Elementary, Martinez has several responsibilities. Martinez facilitates a lunch group with students once a week called Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs (ATOD). In addition, Martinez works with fourth grade students to educate them about financial literacy. “Communities in Schools is also present in middle schools and high schools, but I prefer the elementary-school level because we are the first contact,” Martinez said. “We want to get students on the right track as early as possible.” Martinez is also in charge of meeting people who recently arrived in the United States with limited English skills and are adapting to American culture. Martinez works to develop their skills so they can integrate themselves with the rest of the class. “Typically, newcomers have trouble getting involved,” she said. “I want to make them feel welcome to the environment.” Martinez facilitates a program called “Falcons Got Soul,” which is an after-school running program designed to increase student involvement and build self-confidence.

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