Looking for an Internship?
You will find that all sorts of internship opportunities exist already, with a listing maintained in Career Services. Or you can roll your own. All that it takes to create your own internship is effort. First, you need to identify a person who would be willing to have you as an intern. You would need to work out a plan for how you would spend your time with that person over the coming semester (or summer). Next, you need to find a faculty supervisor who would be willing to oversee the academic side of the internship experience. Once you've got everything lined up, you would need to complete a form (no surprise there, right?) available in the Registrar's Office. [Skidmore students only!]
If you are looking for a summer internship, be sure to check out the options available from National Science Foundation's REU program and from the National Institute for Mental Health. NSF supports to summer training program at the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition.
There are also internships available at NIH for alumni who are interested in research training.
If you have clinical interests, be sure to check out the highly selective internships at the Devereux Institute. These internships are intended for people with undergraduate degrees, so you would apply during your senior year.
The first place to stop in your search for a
job is the Career Services Office. Mike Profita and his staff
maintain a very useful web
page (including links specific to
psychology).
However, I would encourage you to visit that office early and often,
so don't rely solely on their web pages. You'll find the staff to be
uniformly informative and helpful. Don't wait until the spring
semester of your senior year and stroll into their office expecting
them to find you a job! If you are going to make the best use of
their services, you need to allow them to do their jobs properly.
That involves making their acquaintance much earlier. I encourage
students who contemplate looking for employment after graduation to
stop in and visit the Career Services Office early in their senior
year. (And it probably wouldn't hurt to stop in during your junior
year.) [Skidmore
students only!]
A good website developed by Scott Plous (Wesleyan) has a page devoted to careers in psychology. You might also check out Sally Kuhlenschmidt's (Western Kentucky) Career Decision Tree.
Here are some sites that provide general information about job
searches or job possibilities:
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