| Published June 17, 2003 |
Volume 11, Number 6 |
Tri-Valley Connections Internships Program
Puts Students to Work
Many high school and college students think of a summer job as simply a way
to pass the time and make a little spending money during the break between
semesters. However, it’s also a great time to learn career skills by working
in a real-world professional environment. If the latter is what a student
is looking for, the Tri-Valley Connections Internships Program is an excellent
place to start.
TVCIP is a student internship program founded by the Tri-Valley Educational
Collaborative (TEC) in partnership with the local business community. TEC
is a collaborative of the Dublin, Livermore, Sunol, and Pleasanton school
districts, the Chabot/Las Positas Community College District, and the Tri-Valley
Regional Occupational Program. TVCIP connects Tri-Valley businesses with
high school students from the Dublin, Livermore, and Pleasanton unified school
districts as well as students who are attending Las Positas College. The
TVCIP coordinates internships year-round and is currently focusing on establishing
internships for Summer 2003.
“Our organization started approximately two years ago, and we’ve been running
for the past year and a half in concert with the Tri-Valley Business Council
and the local education entities,” says Keith Mattox, coordinator for the
TVCIP. “We work to place local high-school students, aged sixteen and up
and tenth grade and up, in summer and after school jobs.” TVCIP takes care
of the screening, student preparation, and oversight of the program. The
students must either take a "readiness" course at Las Positas Community College
(resume writing, interviewing, and other "soft" workplace skills) to prepare
them for the work experience, or demonstrate skill equivalence. TVCIP students
apply for specific assignments offered by businesses and the businesses interview
and select the best candidates.
“From the businesses, we essentially request that the positions be meaningful
to give the students an idea of what a professional experience is like,”
Mattox says. “We want to offer positions that are productive and mean something
to the participating business so that the student can learn from direct exposure
to the business environment.” TVCIP has placed students in positions at Lawrence
Livermore Nuclear Lab, Tanner and Associates Insurance Brokers, ProSoft Engineering,
Sybase, UMAC Bank, Inanami, Sun Microsystems, Contra Costa Newspapers, CTV30,
Bank of America, the Tri-Valley Business Council, IBM, and other companies
and organizations. Typically, summer internships run 4-6 weeks, with the
interns working about six to eight hours per day, with schedules accommodating
the needs of the project, the supervisor, and the intern.
Businesses interested in working with the TVCIP in providing internships
for students should contact Keith Mattox, TVCIP coordinator at info@trivalleyconnections.com
or at (925) 485-5267.
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