<rant>
I am starting to seriously wonder how anyone can be expected to line up a Real Job™ while they're still in school. See, I've been making some good attempts, but have had little-to-no success so far. And interestingly, the few places that have given any explanation as to why I haven't been hired/interviewed have cited the fact that my hours are "limited".
The hell?? I only have three more months of school! I could even cut down my schedule to 8 credits, if they wanted me to! That'd be *maybe* 10 hours a week that I'd have to spend in the classroom! And I'm already accustomed to working 25-30 hours/week with a full courseload (read: closer to 20 hours in the classroom, + homework), so it's not as though I couldn't handle it.
I didn't think it'd be such a huge problem that I have a whole three months of school left. I've heard about many kids starting their job hunt, maybe 6-9 *months* before graduating college, but how often does it actually succeed? How can anyone be expected to have a job immediately out of college, when nobody will hire you until *after* you graduate?
And of course, now I'll have to keep looking while classes are in session. FANTASTIC. I think we have a good idea of how successful that's going to be. :p
Somebody, please make sense out of this "job" thing for me. It's starting to drive me completely batshit.
</rant>
I am starting to seriously wonder how anyone can be expected to line up a Real Job™ while they're still in school. See, I've been making some good attempts, but have had little-to-no success so far. And interestingly, the few places that have given any explanation as to why I haven't been hired/interviewed have cited the fact that my hours are "limited".
The hell?? I only have three more months of school! I could even cut down my schedule to 8 credits, if they wanted me to! That'd be *maybe* 10 hours a week that I'd have to spend in the classroom! And I'm already accustomed to working 25-30 hours/week with a full courseload (read: closer to 20 hours in the classroom, + homework), so it's not as though I couldn't handle it.
I didn't think it'd be such a huge problem that I have a whole three months of school left. I've heard about many kids starting their job hunt, maybe 6-9 *months* before graduating college, but how often does it actually succeed? How can anyone be expected to have a job immediately out of college, when nobody will hire you until *after* you graduate?
And of course, now I'll have to keep looking while classes are in session. FANTASTIC. I think we have a good idea of how successful that's going to be. :p
Somebody, please make sense out of this "job" thing for me. It's starting to drive me completely batshit.
</rant>
no subject
Date: 2003-09-28 06:34 pm (UTC)In other words, it would be disadventagious to the system for you to have good work while being in school.
no subject
Date: 2003-09-28 06:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-09-28 11:20 pm (UTC)So I would focus on large companies and keep looking because you never know when someone will want to hire you.
But with today economy (stupid freaking Bush who does not care!) realistically I think you should expect a 2-3 month looking time after you graduate before you find a job.
Hopefully this is helpful, and not too depressing...
no subject
Date: 2003-09-29 08:05 am (UTC)THANKS BUSH.
Sarah, you'll find something -the job market is starting to pick up a little. The most important thing to do is focus on who you know. Networking is the quickest way to find work. :)