Brittany’s Life Changing Winter Break: Brain Injury Rehabilitation Externship

This is a guest post from Brittany Jaso who is a student at Cornell University majoring in psychology. Writing this two line bio was the most stressful thing she’s done in a long time.

There are a lot of wonderful things about winter break — sleeping a ridiculous amount of hours, eating wonderful home cooked meals, and participating in the holiday traditions to name a few. However, at some point you can only watch so much TV and with three long weeks looming after the holidays it’s easy to get a little stir crazy or even just bored.

At least, that’s how I felt. This is the exact reason I decided to take advantage of our alumni network and participate in something we refer to at school as an “externship.” An externship is a mini-internship that can last anywhere from a 1 hour interview with a professional in a potential field of interest, to a 5-day shadowing. I opted for the latter, and found myself shadowing all sorts of doctors at the St. Lawrence Rehabilitation Center in New Jersey. It was probably the most beneficial experience I have had so far in my life. It’s one thing to dream of being a doctor; it’s a whole other thing to witness the hardships and emotional drain that the profession demands.

Being a psychology major, I spent a large majority of my time in a lockdown wing of the hospital called the BIR- Brain Injury Rehabilitation. These people had experienced strokes, car crashes, and other life changing accidents that left them mentally and physically disabled. They had to learn a new way of living. I can say, I’ve never met such happy and optimistic people. Simple tasks we take for granted such as using a toaster became an accomplishment some patients had to work on for weeks. It gives you a new perspective on life and makes you appreciate the things we can do independently.

I spent three days working with, discussing, and observing speech therapists, physical therapists, occupational therapists (they work on helping the patients be able to function in a household setting), pediatricians, physicians, and clinical psychologists. I learned so much in that short period of time. I never understood the complexity and flexibility that was required from all of the different doctors. No two patients had the same needs. The speech therapist worked with one patient on memory; 30 minutes later she was helping another man deal with his inability to read because his entire left field of vision was destroyed due to a stroke. It demanded a lot of collaboration between all of the doctors to make sure the patient was being treated for every aspect of their life. They all had one goal, make sure the patient could eventually leave the hospital and be confident in their ability to live on their own.

Even though I only spent three days in my externship, I learned so much and had such a better understanding of the hospital environment. It gave me a new perspective and helped me to understand that yes, I think I can work in that profession!

Not every school may have such a formal set-up like organizing an externship program every year but that does not mean you can’t set it up on your own! Here are a few tips to help you stave off winter break boredom and find a great externship.
Look up alumni living near you in a profession you may be interested in; odds are they’d love to help!
• Keep it short. A lot of scheduling and planning goes into this on the host’s end; make it easier for them.
• Come prepared with questions. There is nothing more gratifying for your host than being able to answer questions and see your excitement about what they do.
• Be polite! Thank you notes for everyone you worked with are mandatory!
• Lastly, ENJOY! Have fun, share the experience with others, and get off the couch for a few days during winter break!

Intern With NBA Stars: Blake Griffin & Andre Iguodala

Wouldn’t it be great to intern side-by-side with a star athlete or have a star athlete interning for your company? How about one of the top NBA players like Blake Griffin, former NBA rookie of the year and reigning NBA slam-dunk champion, or how about the 76ers guard Andre Iguodala? Well, due to the NBA lockout, this is YOUR chance.

With the NBA lockout still in full effect and no glimpse of a 2011-2012 season, more and more NBA players are quickly finding interesting work, and it happens to be as interns. Last week, Iguodala told Yahoo Sports that he held a week long externship (an internship consisting of job shadowing for a short period of time) with Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Always having an interest in finance, Iguodala spent his week visiting the New York Stock Exchange while shadowing one of the company’s venture capitalists. Think he’s trying to uncover the top investment strategies in case the NBA locked out forever? I wouldn’t blame him…

On the less serious side, Blake Griffin recently held an internship with FunnyOrDie.com and had an intern salary of $0.00… rough huh? Check out this video of his first day on the team as a star intern.

The Power of a Summer Internship: From Bio to Radio

Summer internships tend to be used as a resume builder, a stepping stone, and something to do for extra cash while waiting for the fall semester to roll around. Rarely do we think of them as able to change someone’s entire career path, and maybe this is causing us to miss out.

Adam O’Neal is a biology major at University of California, Irvine and was trying to decide which facet of biology interested him most to further his education, neuro or genetic, when he stumbled upon an internship program in radio. Thinking this internship would make him stand out amongst the vast sea of medical school applicants; he applied. 12 weeks later he had not only completed the program but found his career path had taken a 180 with his sights now focused on radio.

Wait, bio to radio? How could a summer internship have the power to alter a career path so drastically? It’s biologically impossible!

The cultural norm of viewing an internship as a resume builder, or stepping stone, limits a student in their search for an internship and solidifies their predetermined career path. On top of experience and skills gained, constantly stepping out of a comfort zone and into an entirely new industry is the essence of what an internship is supposed to do: open a student’s eyes to what could be, a.k.a. career exploration. In this case, the first time Adam heard his work broadcasted on the most popular local radio talk show in the United States, he knew, radio is where he belongs.

Interning with some of the top on-air radio talent has led to Adam pursuing his passion within the industry and now hosts his own radio show at University of California Irvine’s local campus station, KUCI. He calls his show the 2012 Update which airs on Tuesdays at 8 am in Irvine where Adam talks about the upcoming 2012 presidential election and any updates or developments that relate.

The internship program Adam completed is with The Bill Handle Show and consists of working in 12 different facets of radio over a 12 week time frame, giving the intern an elusive and thorough look into the industry.

• Week 1: Getting acquainted with the basics of radio
• Week 2 & 3: Research and Development
• Week 4: The ins and outs of Screening
• Week 5 & 6: Website Development, Editing, Social Media
• Week 7 & 8: Station Imaging
• Week 9: Production, Traffic & Continuity
• Week 10: KFI News Reporting
• Week 11: Sales & Promotions
• Week 12: AM versus FM & Overall Review

The power of a summer internship or any internship for that matter should not be dismissed, but instead embraced as an opportunity to diversify your skill set, add to your experience, and expand your career exploration. You never know, the right internship just might flip your career path on its head, helping to open your eyes to see yourself like never before. And, career path clarity, is bliss.

Special thanks to Adam O’Neal, Michelle Kube, and @billhandelshow we wish you all the best.

The Game of Games, Robert Scoble on the Future of Facebook and Google via Our Mentorship Lunch Series

Robert Scoble is calling the future of technology the Game of Games. What he describes though is more like a war, with two of the world’s largest tech juggernauts — Google and Facebook, competing for data and ultimate control of the information that makes up our online identity. He sees the next couple years as one in which these two companies use new tools such as social plugins and smart phones, in conjunction with old tools like search and email to understand not only who our friends are, but also the food we eat, music we listen to, politicians we vote for, and even the Gods we worship, and ultimately using this data to earn billions of dollars off the transactions we make online.

This conversation on the future of technology is a result of our mentorship lunch series, in which we flew winner Dimitry Lukashov from NYC to San Francisco after answering the question on Quora, what technology trends will most dramatically change the world in 2015.

While we filmed this conversation just over a week ago, the recent F8 conference lends a sense immediacy to this new direction. Facebook announced more advanced APIs that will further integrate our social graph into the web and help build a more robust “identity platform” based on not only the explicit actions we take on Facebook, but the implicit actions we do on all Facebook connected sites.

The video below is 30 minutes long but entirely worth a watch from start to finish. In the first segment (minutes 0 – 16) Robert shares his thoughts on what the web of 2015 will look like. In the second segment (minutes 16-30) Dimitry and Robert, spitball on topics ranging from education to health and privacy. The implications aren’t relevant just for these two companies, but for business and students across the country. Robert predicted an increased demand for students who are able to understand this new world, which means an increasing value in computer science and statistics grads who can  mold all this data into new products and sales/marketing/business opportunities. He predicted a decline and ultimate failure for twitter (the site has too much noise and not enough data control) and a future where more companies are using the social graph to cater our web and purchasing experiences to the identities we hardly even know we’re sharing — for better or for worse.

Hope you enjoy the session, and feel free to leave comments below!

Summer Internship Photo Contest Winners Announced!

“ You don’t take a photograph, you make it.” Ansel Adams

An exceptional photo not only captures great imagery, but tells a story that transcends the pixels on the screen. While we had tons of unbelievable photo contest entries, the two photos we selected as our grand and first prize winners, shared the story of how their internships were larger than life and directed their professional future.

Grand Prize Winner, Kunal Ajmera!

Congratulations to Kunal Ajmera of Johns Hopkins University, the winner of tis summer’s Ultimate Internship Photo Contest!  Kunal became interested in medical field and cloning well before going to college. He wrote about Dolly in his personal statement when applying to Johns Hopkins, and spent the early years of his academic career studying the underlying theories and concepts of cloning. His internship at the Center for Sensory Biology provided the opportunity of a lifetime — a chance to complete research that would impact the future of the field and after months of painstaking lab work, he got to see the fruits of his labor and understand the roller coaster of emotions experienced by professional researchers.

My happiness knows no Bounds. By Kunal Ajmera “Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine – Center for Sensory Biology”

Sure it’s not a classic-fun-happy-faces internship photo. Sure it looks like a bicolored sad-makes-no-sense-to-me picture. But it’s actually a picture which pretty much sums up my WHOLE summer internship. I had read all the cool – Dolly, Ian Wilmut, second creation, cloning stuff as far back as when I was in the eighth grade. I mentioned that in my SOP to get into college – that’s the kind of stuff that drew me into pursuing a career in Biotechnology. And it did get pretty boring until I landed this pretty exciting internship. The picture is the result of three whole months of hardcore wet lab. Cloning, animal tissue culture, ligation – all the contents of a today’s sci-fi movie – only real! All the things that I did, I only assumed they were happening, I could never see them actually happening. But taking that picture besotted me with internal calm. The culmination of three months of hard work. The work that I did is part of a bigger project that the lab was undertaking – the role of Fat3 cadherins and Amacrine cells in neuron development. What I was to develop was a transgenic vector containing the gene of interest and then construct a TAG reporter – if it worked, it turns green in the nucleus and red in the cytoplasm and membrane. The picture explains it all, it works ! What I experienced and am even now, is sheer joy knowing no bounds!

First Prize Winner!

At WayUp, we are believers that internships are vehicles not only for professional development, but career exploration.  Taylor our First Prize winner, interned for her school athletics department, a position that allowed her to not only explore new career skills, like creating creative ad campaigns, but also to transition from being a spectator at University of Washington sports events, to being a participant in all that goes on to make the events a success.  Not to mention getting to hang out with “Dubs” the school’s Husky mascot, as well as current and former athletes on the team.  Like all good internships, it provided challenge, excitement, and plenty of educational opportunities.

From the Sidelines to the Headlines, Taylor Raquer, “University of Washington Athletics Design Intern”

The BEST part of my internship is getting to be a part of all things athletic. I recently was asked to design a Go Green ad to be placed in our college football game day book. We didn’t have a good photo, so my boss decided to stage an awesome shot where I even got to meet the famous Harry the Husky Mascot! I could hardly contain my excitement throughout the shot.

Later, helping out at a football kick-off celebration I got to strut it on the Husky field, which I had spent 3 years watching from the sideline.

Finally, my dreams really came true when I got to take a picture with the REAL-LIFE Mascot named “Dubs.” He was the sweetest little fellow. The smile didn’t leave my face for the rest of the night.

Notable Mentions: Hootsuite & Dreamworks

 

Finding Internship Housing In A New City

This is a guest post by Sadie Meaher from Tulane University and Uloop, a college housing and classifieds site.

Congratulations, you have just been offered an internship with a great company. The only problem is that you do not live or go to school in that city, so you have no idea what you are going to do about housing. This might seem like a challenge, but you can overcome it! Don’t let this scare you away from an internship experience.

Here are three ways to find internship housing in a new city:

1. Check out dorms at a local university:

This might be a good option, especially if you are doing a summer internship. For example, NYU offers housing to summer interns. Or,if you find a school in the city where you are going to be that only offers their dorms to students, then maybe you should think about doing a summer class. It would be a great way to get some extra hours and you can live in the dorms. However, if you decide to take a class while interning always check with your university to see if you will get credit for that summer class.

2. The internet can be your friend: There are sites out there that help university students find housing. 

Uloop is one such site that allows students to look for apartments, houses, and roommates with other college students as well as sublets from other students. Uloop can be a great tool if you are tired of living in a dorm or want to live with another student. Also, Uloop is a great source for student housing information if you are looking to do an internship during a semester and not just the summer.

3. Reach out to family and friends:

It might be helpful to see if that distant relative would let you stay with them. If not, they might have friends who have rental property that you could rent out during your internship. You never know when your family or friends might be able to help you out, so it is always worth asking. These are just a few ideas to help you start thinking about finding internship housing. And, if you decide you want to apply for an internship in another city, but you are a little unsure as to what cities to target, be sure to check out the most popular cities for internships.

Finding internship housing is not as daunting as you might think. Hopefully these ideas will help take the stress out of finding housing, so you can focus on your internship experience.

Give Recruiters a Glimpse of Who You Are with About.me!

This is a guest post by Laura Gluhanich Community Manager for about.me.

We are really excited to highlight about.me as a resource for students.  Their profile system is perfect for young people — it is quick to setup, looks beautiful, and helps you create a digital footprint that is both professional and fun.  Laura’s post shares tips and tricks on how to use the site.

Give recruiters a glimpse into who you are with a page at about.me

We’ve seen a lot of great student profiles at about.me. But, what are they for and how can they help you get hired?

First, about.me is your corner of the web – it’s a one stop shop for your various networks and websites online as well as providing a visual representation of you. It can be used as a cover letter to your online resume. You have control over the image as well as the content that displays.

This differs from a lot of your other profiles online, where your image is small or non-existent or you are forced to display content unrelated to where you want to be or how you want to present yourself.

Add your about.me url to your resume, your email signature and personal cards, rather than linking to a half dozen social networks, some of which have no connection to your potential job.

Then, focus on making your profile professional and targeting the industries and roles where you are most interested.

  • Be succinct – explain your background and what you want to do next. Make it easy to read and quickly get to where you want to be.
  • Be yourself – add a background and bio that reflects who you are, where you’re from and what motivates you.
  • Be creative – if you have skills, show them off! In design, photography, writing or more. Link to places the display the best of what you do.
  • 
Be careful – get a few friends or advisors to take a look at your page and provide constructive, honest feedback. And update based on what they say!

We have a few offers to help you put your most professional foot forward. First, set up an about.me email address. It presents a more professional address than sk8tr02@example.com. It gives you the opportunity to separate your job-related contacts and messages, preventing any mix-ups.

In addition, get a free set of about.me/Moo cards. These are great to distribute at networking events, ensuring your introductions are memorable. Having business cards to give means you get them in return, providing you with valuable contact information with potential employers.

So, what are you waiting for? Head over to about.me and get started!

Building Your Entrepreneurial Education

By Andrew Grauer, CEO and Co-Founder of Course Hero. Andrew was recently listed as one of America’s Best Young Entrepreneurs by BusinessWeek.

Fall semester is starting up in no time, and that means it’s time to start picking courses. A lot of students ask me how I founded Course Hero while I was still in college at Cornell, and the truth is that I took advantage of the resources around me to get my company off the ground.

Not every school offers a separate program, but if you’re interested in expanding your entrepreneurship experience or just building a solid foundation for pursuing your own business down the line, I’ve shared some advice from my experience as an undergraduate entrepreneur.

No Brainer: Check out your school’s entrepreneurship program

First and foremost, the best, if not simplest, way to kick off your entrepreneurship education is to enroll in an Intro to Entrepreneurship course at your school. Cornell actually had a full entrepreneurship program, and I made sure to not only take the courses, but to also talk to key faculty in the program to learn more. I got great advice and mentorship from John Jaquette, and I’ve carried that relationship with me after I graduated and as I continue to move forward with Course Hero.

Attend a Lecture Series

Take advantage of the lecture series offered by your school. These events are great opportunities to hear from a breadth of influential people who, whether entrepreneurs themselves or successful in other areas of their lives, have had to strategize and surmount tremendous obstacles to get where they are. You can learn a tremendous amount by exposing yourself to their stories. Cornell actually offered an entrepreneurship-specific lecture series as a 1-credit class that I found really inspiring. Speakers like Bill Trenchard did a great job of demystifying the process of building a company from scratch. The key take-way was, “just do it.” Clearly, I haven’t forgotten that.

Research, Research, Research

Have questions, like how do I incorporate? How do I value my startup? We all do. Don’t worry, it’s normal. Take the initiative to read a book, read online, and find a mentor. You can always find a solution to problems and questions that arise throughout the process, and what really distinguishes an entrepreneur is his or her dedication to tracking down the answer. One of the most important lessons I’ve learned is that if you hit a point where you feel like you can’t find the answer on your own, go find someone who can help you. Entrepreneurship is constant problem solving.

Participate in a Competition

Many schools offer entrepreneurship competitions, and if one is not available at your school, there is likely one in the area. Admittedly, I didn’t participate in the Big Idea Competition at Cornell, but these competitions are great opportunities to build out your idea. Many have a forced timeline that entrants have to adhere to (eg, present your idea on X date, present research on X date, full fledged business plan on X date etc). Competitions force you to examine your idea thoroughly and judges give you valuable feedback on your progress and presentation. Even if you don’t win, just being a part of the experience will help you better formulate your idea.

Reach Out to a Professor

See if there is a professor expert (e.g. doing research) in your potential startup’s field. Reach out. I talked to some Entrepreneurs in Residence at the Johnson Business School at Cornell, like Zach Shulman, in addition to several professors doing research on social media in Cornell’s department of IT. Professors really appreciate you showing interest in their field and will more often than not be willing to help you out or at least sit down with you to talk through your ideas.

Connect With Fellow Students

Initiate a conversation with a student who may have skills you need to accomplish your startup’s goals or may just know someone he/she could introduce you to. When I was starting Course Hero, I went to the engineering quad at Cornell’s College of Engineering and talked to the registrar to see if I could send out an email to Computer Scientist students. I actually met my first programmer and team outside a room in Duffield Hall (a main building in the college of engineering). Albert Ho, Course Hero’s first programmer, was a complete stranger before that initial conversation. I showed him mockups of what I wanted to build and gave him the pitch. We started working the next day. And then he helped recruit more student programmers: we were up to 6 of us within 2 months. The ripple effect of each new relationship never ceases to amaze me.

Look For A Near By Tech Incubator

Go beyond campus and see if there is a tech incubator near your university (hell, there may actually even be one within your school). If there is a startup incubator on your campus, like Cornell’s EStartupLab, or near your campus, learn more there. In the Bay Area, check out Y Combinator, Plug And Play Tech Center, 500 Startups (though this by no means is an exhaustive list, especially here in Silicon Valley).

In the end, being an entrepreneur is not just about having an idea—it’s about having the initiative to go out and make that idea happen. Take advantage of the abundant resources available in college to expand your entrepreneurial education, and when you have a great idea, as Bill Trenchard said, “Just do it.”

Competition Winner To Meet Scobleizer on Wednesday

For those who have been following the WayUp blog, this summer has been all about competitions — from our best photo to shadowing Dave McClure, we have been doing our best to make-up for a summer without Olympics. One of the most heated competitions was to win a mentorship lunch with tech icon Robert Scoble, who has a penchant for helping visionary entrepreneurs share their product ideas and goals with the world.

Today we are excited to announce Dimitry Lukashov as the winner of the Robert Scoble mentorship lunch!

Dimitry is a recent CS grad from the University of Tulane, an active user on Quora, and Twitter, and during his undergraduate career published a paper on reducing technical redundancy at large institutions. He stood out for his thoughtfulness on personal growth and a desire to do something big in the tech industry.

Tomorrow we are flying Dimitry from New York City to Silicon Valley and on Wednesday he will be meeting Robert Scoble at his home for lunch.  He will be getting the opportunity to ask him burning questions about his future, the tech world, and what he has learned from speaking to industry leaders like Mark Zuckerberg.

If you want to get involved, Dimitry knows he is not the only one with questions for Robert, and has decided to crowd source some answers, so if there are questions you would like him to ask Robert, feel free to tweet your questions to @shpiel and @wayup!

“Searching for World Changing Technologies”

There are a lot of reasons why we knew Robert Scoble would be the perfect candidate for this mentorship lunch, but perhaps the strongest is the parallel we see in Scoble’s self proclaimed quest to surface world-changing technologies, and the quest we see students going through in trying to make the right career decisions before leaping into the professional world.

Across the country students are asking big questions about their future and pondering trade-offs like: big salary vs. company culture? Work life balance vs. intense professional growth? Working on a small team vs. a large established company?

These are massive life decisions that require a great deal of research and reflection and we know that Robert, having spoken to thousands of entrepreneurs and executives and having traveled the world, can offer a great deal of feedback.

Thanks to everyone who took the time to get involved in the competition, there were more phenomenal entrants than I could count.  We are excited to share more about the experience on our blog next week and for those interested in seeing the footage of the interview, or who want to be part of any  competitions in the future feel free to join our non-spammy (we promise) newsletter updates on the top right of this page.

The Ultimate Internship Photo Contest: Album 4 — Sir Mix-A-Lot and Having Fun

The office world offers abrupt differences from college life.  Longer hours, new and challenging assignments, and interacting with co-workers who come from a range of different ages, backgrounds and life interests (just to name a few).  Dealing with these differences can make work difficult and stressful, but interns also discover that these differences are a big part of what makes the professional world rich, exciting, and incredibly fun. Whether meeting Sir Mix-A-Lot to help launch a new marketing campaign, dressing up as an owl mascot to bring your company brand to your community, or going bowling to bond with your co-workers — a number of photo contest entrants found these fun diversions to be some of the most long lasting memories of their internship experiences.

Check out more Ultimate Photo Contest entries in Albums 1, 2 and 3!

What I Never Learned in Marketing 101
By Mikey Tom,”Giant Thinkwell”
Sirmixalot

This picture is from my first internship with local Seattle gaming startup Giant Thinkwell. I worked with them for 3 weeks helping them set up for the launch of their newest game. The product was a facebook game featuring a certain music celebrity. Here’s a hint, he’s a really big fan of women with large gluteus maximus’s. Yes it was Sir Mix-a-Lot himself. And yes he’s still just as big of a fan of big butts as he was in the 90’s. Fun and games aside, the internship was an amazing experience where I was able to learn a lot about marketing and startups in general. I utilized both guerilla marketing tactics along with mainstream ones. It also led to my next and current internship at Lighter Capital, a new investment firm here in Seattle started by Andy Sack that focuses on revenue based financing.

A Check-Off My Bucket List!
By Huy Lam, “HootSuite”

Photo 1   Initiation At Hoot Suite