Unpaid Internships Lead To Lower-Paying Jobs, Study Finds (theguardian.com)
The Guardian reports:
Almost every graduate taking an unpaid internship can expect to be worse off three years later than if they had gone straight into work. That is the shock finding of the first survey of its kind of the career trajectories of tens of thousands of students over a six-year period. The study, conducted by the Institute for Social and Economic Research at the University of Essex, reveals that, three-and-a-half years after graduating, former interns face a salary penalty of approximately £3,500, compared with those who went straight into paid work, and £1,500 compared with those who went into further study... The study also found that those who took internships were less likely to go on to professional or managerial roles or be satisfied with their career compared with those who had gone straight into work.
Slashdot reader BarbaraHudson warns unpaid internships are also "a possible indicator of a large oversupply of workers to jobs available and downward pressure on pay." Anyone else want to share thoughts about the current job market for professionals -- or your own horror stories about your first job after college?
Slashdot reader BarbaraHudson warns unpaid internships are also "a possible indicator of a large oversupply of workers to jobs available and downward pressure on pay." Anyone else want to share thoughts about the current job market for professionals -- or your own horror stories about your first job after college?
Not sure about the UK, but in the States you use unpaid internships to help get into your 300 level courses. After 30 years of budget cuts schools don't have enough space for all the applicants in most majors (especially medical, and not just full medical doctor, think Nursing, pharmacist, physical therapist, etc, etc). Even a perfect GPA won't guarantee you a spot anymore. So you volunteer, do extracurricular stuff and finally internships. My kid got lucky and got what's more or less a paid one. But it's like winning the lottery what with the number of applicants.
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..and you shouldn't squander it away by demonstrating that you're willing to provide it for free.
See also:
-Programming contests where the hosting corp gives $100K as a Grand Prize but retains rights to all of the contestants code (and doesn't even pay any FICA tax)
-The NCAA making billions off of 'student-athletes' with lucrative television contracts
Exactly. In a high-demand field, a paid internship is a cheap way of hiring: you get to spend three months finding out if your prospective employee is competent and they get to spend three months deciding if they want to work for you (and, if they are competent, you get to spend three months persuading them that they do). In comparison with pretty much any other hiring mechanism, a paid internship is very cheap, in a field where there's a skills shortage. If companies in a field can easily hire competent people without this, then that's a good indication that there's a glut of talent.
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A local college has offered my company students who must complete an internship to get their degrees (in software engineering). There is no requirement for payment as this is a requirement to graduate and we were told by the college the best the students could hope for was a letter of recommendation. We are unusual in that we are paying the students and are working through a contract with the college to take on paid interns - this is in line with our B-Corp certification and general company philosophy.
So, for the majority of students from this college (and others), who have unpaid internships in order to get the piece of paper saying that they graduated from the program, what does this mean for their future salary prospects?
Mimetics Inc. Twitter
(Interviewer): Oh, I see on your Resume` that you are willing to work for free?
(Job Seeker): Well.. I Interned for free while in college..
(Interviewer): Indeed. I believe we have the perfect position for you at our company, how soon can you start?
There is a great danger in inferring causation here, as this was a survey and not an experiment (with people randomly assigned to either group). The article wrongly states there is causation at play- that going into an internship caused them to be paid less later, rather than a real possibility that those that couldn't get jobs (or well paying jobs) decided to go the intern route instead. And those that got accepted into well paying jobs took them. So the cause might well be that the lesser paid or non-existent jobs caused the internship rather than the reverse.
People are being told that an unpaid internship will improve your chances on the job market, and they obviously believe it or they wouldn't do them. And yet, 3 years later they're still behind in earnings, and they're less likely to be working in their field of choice. Probably would have been better off taking a job in something else just to pay the bills while looking for an opening.
Students are being ripped off twice - once by the university, which charges for the time they're working for free, and the second time by the business they're working for free at. So you're not working for free - you're paying to work. At least slaves got fed on their master's dime.
Employers aren't allowed to use unpaid interns to do the jobs of regular employees, so the internship doesn't even give you experience actually doing the job - and employers know this.
You also don't get the same protections as regular employees. For example, don't get hurt on the job - since your wage is $0.00, workmen's compensation will be a percentage of $0.00, which is $0.00. Your only recourse would be a civil suit, and you can expect both the school and the company to say the other party is responsible for any loss.
The only internships worth anything in the eyes of future employers are paid internships. That's also how you should evaluate them - same as any other job. If you want to work for free, do it for a charity. Better yet, arrange for your internship to be at a charity - at least this way you haven't devalued yourself by working for free at a for-profit business.
"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
In the UK, they were charging interns £1000/month to get "work experience" for six months.
Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
The problem with that, and it's pointed out in the article, is that people who take unpaid internships end up not just with lower future earnings, but also are more likely to end up in a field other than their chosen one.
A little experience at ANY paid job is probably better than unpaid experience. Unlike the unpaid interns, who aren't allowed to replace regular workers (and as a result don't gain real experience anyway), the person who works at a paid job outside the field has probably had more responsibility on the job, and that, combined with your transcripts, should count for more than a "not-really-relevant-experience" internship.
Employers know the whole unpaid internship thing is a scam. They take them because, what the hell, maybe they'll come across someone halfway-decent, and if they don't it hasn't cost them anything and they have someone to order around doing menial jobs for free. After all, even if it were allowed, just how much responsibility would you hand over to an unpaid intern? They have far less skin in the game compared to someone working for $$$. You don't give them a good recommendation, there's always someone else looking for free labour.
"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
Colleges don't "rake it in." America's public university system used to be just that--an education system paid for by the public through taxes. 30 years ago a state university typically got 80% of their budget through the state. Today a state university is lucky to get 25% of their budget through the state. That shortfall has to come from somewhere so tuition has skyrocketed.
unless their for profit. My kid's going to a public university. The only admin folks making good money are the dean the football coach and the basketball coach. Everybody else makes jack. The professors make low six figures, but they're also tops in their fields. Most are there so they can get money to do the kinds of basic research that corporations won't fund because while both interesting & beneficial it doesn't pay off for decades.
College is just really, really expensive. It always has been, but we funded it with tax dollars taken mostly from the upper class. We did that because post WWII folks felt they were owed a good life with an education. People seem to have lost sight of that. Or if they think they're owed something they think it's just them that's owed it and that everybody else should just pay for it themselves.
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Correlation is not causation. The people accepting unpaid internships are those at the bottom, not very bright, not very hard working, and with no other easy alternative. These people would likely end up in low paying jobs no matter what. TFA describes a survey, not a controlled study, so there is no actual evidence that the unpaid internship caused the poor outcomes.
Oh, one other thing: TFA is about the UK, but in the USA unpaid internships are generally illegal. If an intern is doing any actual work, the employer is required to pay at least the legal minimum wage. If you did an unpaid internship in the past few years, it is very likely you can demand back pay by threatening to report your employer to the DOL.
An unpaid internship is not necessarily exploitation.
If the company actually takes time teaching you how to work, it can cost them more than any output you produce. And as an intern, you are not expected to be as productive as an experienced worker, and someone is likely to come after you, fixing your mistakes. It results in you taking valuable time from full-payed employees while not offering much in return. The reason these company take interns at all is that by the end of the internship, you may turn out to be a great potential hire.
At least it is the idea behind internships. However some companies abuse the system to get slave labor. And honest companies are more likely to pay interns anyways.
or being lied to. Not sure which. See here. Took me a few seconds on google to find that. The sad thing is you managed to get modded up.
Cutting student loan funding isn't to solution. All that does is force poor kids completely out of college. Like it was before we started funding higher education with tax dollars post WWII.
If you're just being lied to please educate yourself on google. If you're actively lying then, well, fuck off you right wing revisionist. Right back at you.
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Department of Labor Rules to determine if an intern needs to be paid.
"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
Clearly you have never worked a day in your life.
Well, not outside an office anyhow. I see this from slashdotters all the time. They have no practical experience outside an office, and so *vastly* overestimate the capabilities of robots and automation, largely because they don't understand industrial or light industrial work sites. There are a LOT of types of work where automation can only go so far, or in bits and pieces, and requires the dexterity and flexibility of human workers to put these products together.
My father ran a light manufacturing operation for many years, and most of his products were one-offs. His business used a lot of high-tech tools, but skilled people were still required to put it all together - certified welders included. Until a robotic welder has both the dexterity of a human AND the intellectual capacity to cope with changing projects and requirements, we're still going to need humans to do the job.
Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
they come from private for profit schools that rose up as blue collar work disappeared due to outsourcing and people who couldn't hack college found themselves without opportunities and desperately trying to get ahead. They did indeed take advantage of cheap, guaranteed government loans. The public universities are non-profit. They have no revenues per se.
You know all this. You know exactly what the problem is, which is that we abandoned the working class so the rich could have tax cuts. Are you one of their lackeys or do you just enjoy trolling? You've got the talking points down too well to just be some random yahoo. Either way you should be ashamed of yourself. You and your ilk bring down all of civilization out of fear, anger and hatred. Does it feel good? Is it worth it?
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