Students Explore Wide Range of Career Paths
11/03/2017
By Ed Brennen
The Fall Career Fair was less than 24 hours away, and over on South Campus, a dozen juniors and seniors from the College of Fine Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences were huddled around tables at Coburn Hall, mapping out job search strategies for a pair of fictional characters.
鈥淕ary鈥 was a junior political science major looking to land a summer internship. 鈥淢ary鈥 was a senior psychology major seeking a full-time job as an elementary school teacher. Using what they鈥檇 learned so far in their Career Planning Seminar, a one-credit course that prepares FAHSS majors for internships and jobs, the students collaborated on detailed game plans for each character.
In the process, they also reinforced their own game plans for the Career Fair.
鈥淚t will be good to use all the resources that I鈥檝e learned here and get out in the job field,鈥 said Crisayda Belen, a senior Bachelor of Liberal Arts major with concentrations in political science and legal studies who was preparing for her first Career Fair.
The Methuen native said her advisor suggested she take the seminar, which guides students through self-assessments and career explorations before covering concrete aspects of the job search process such as r茅sum茅 and cover letter writing, online job searching, professional networking and interviewing.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really helped me with my r茅sum茅, which I needed,鈥 said Belen, a transfer student from Northern Essex Community College who is on track to complete her degree in December. 鈥淚 also feel like I鈥檓 very introverted and socially awkward, so this has helped me focus and refine my networking skills.鈥
Now in its third semester, the popular Career Planning Seminar is the brainchild of Susan Thomson Tripathy, a sociology lecturer and director of the Bachelor of Liberal Arts program.
Tripathy noticed that many liberal arts students seemed uncertain about their career paths after graduation and also struggled with r茅sum茅 writing and job search strategies. She learned about a career prep course for engineering students and worked with Career Services Associate Director Dana Norton and Vice Provost for Student Success Julie Nash (then the FAHSS associate dean) to develop a similar class for liberal arts students.
鈥淭he course is extremely helpful because it offers concrete skills and ways to see more clearly how a liberal arts degree can open the door to a vast number of exciting career opportunities,鈥 said Tripathy, who decided to expand the seminar to all FAHSS majors.
The seminar is just one way FAHSS majors are supported the Career & Co-op Center, which has an office at O鈥橪eary Library. The center hosts a Liberal Arts Career Fair on South Campus each winter, as well as an employer-in-residence program.
Career Counselor Emily Brown, who is co-teaching this semester鈥檚 seminar with Norton, said the course gives students a convenient framework to help them successfully enter the job market.
鈥淚n the past, they would have to be more proactive about making appointments with Career Services to work on their r茅sum茅s or do practice interviews,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淚n this class, those are all built-in requirements. We help walk them through the steps.鈥
Fair Thee Well
Since Career Fairs can be an overwhelming experience even for seasoned job-hunters, Brown said the seminar devotes an entire class on helping FAHSS majors know what to expect when they enter the Tsongas Center.
More than 1,500 students and alumni attended this fall鈥檚 Career Fair, where 189 companies were seeking interns, co-ops and full-time employees. While many of those companies were looking for engineering and business majors, there were also plenty of opportunities for FAHSS majors.
In fact, the first booth students saw when entering the arena was The Autumn Group, an IT staffing and solutions company that was seeking majors of every stripe, from English to economics, fine arts to social sciences, for internships and full-time recruiter and sales rep positions.
One of the people manning The Autumn Group booth, technical recruiter Melissa Simone, was living proof that FAHSS majors are in demand. Simone earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in psychology from the university in 2015, with a minor in business administration.
鈥淚t鈥檚 all about people skills, interpersonal relationships and networking,鈥 said Simone, a Methuen native who鈥檚 been with the company for almost a year. 鈥淲e have a lot of sociology and liberal arts majors look into the staffing world. There鈥檚 a high need out there for very large clients.鈥
51视频 30 feet down the concourse, Benchmark Office Systems founder and president Michelle McManus echoed those thoughts.
鈥淚n our realm, it doesn鈥檛 matter what kind of background you come from, whether it be liberal arts, English, psychology, criminal justice,鈥 said McManus, whose technology company has been attending UML Career Fairs for the past eight years. 鈥淲e try to give our interns a well-rounded background, which is good for students. They鈥檒l tell me years later that they never thought of doing whatever they did for the internship, and then all of a sudden they got a good job doing that full-time. And it鈥檚 because they had the opportunity to try it and do it.鈥
One alum attending the Career Fair was Melissa Harris, who earned her psychology degree (with a business administration minor) in 2016. Harris landed her current job as a client advocate at the Advocator Group, a national organization dedicated to helping individuals obtain Social Security Disability Insurance, through a previous Career Fair. She was back this fall to explore future career steps.
While the Career Planning Seminar wasn鈥檛 available when she was a student, Harris appreciates the connections she made on South Campus while earning her FAHSS degree.
鈥淥ne thing I鈥檝e found is that you鈥檙e able to build very strong relationships with professors,鈥 Harris said. 鈥淓ven to this day, I feel confident I could go back and ask them for advice on what to do next with my degree. That is such a useful resource.鈥