My Personal Orientation to Career Planning & Resources

After choosing my courses for the fall semester along with the rest of the freshman class just under a month ago, I was directed to a table in Steele Hall to set up my very first meeting with the Career Planning & Resources office. With my freshly curated course schedule planned out, I set up an appointment for Monday, September 17th, and had absolutely no idea what to expect. After all, I have not even officially declared my major as of now. Much less do I know what I want “to be when I grow up,” even though it’s a question that’s been posed to me since kindergarten. The only thing I do know is that I like literature and that I want to read lots and lots during my career here at Scripps.

A few days before my appointment I received an email from Handshake, reminding me of my upcoming meeting. A newbie to the website, I was excited to feel like a professional and a member of an online platform that has, more and more each day here at Scripps, become a crucial element of professionalism in Claremont.

As I entered the doors to the CP&R office from Seal Court, I was nervous. I had finally gotten here, to Scripps College, from four rigorous years of high school all the way across the country where I had been constantly wondering where I would end up once I’d graduated. Yet, there I was once more, at the start of another four years, feeling like I had to worry all over again about life after graduation.

As I sat in the CP&R library waiting for my appointment, my legs couldn’t help but sway back and forth like a restless little kids. So, I reminded myself to be “professional.” I sat there considering what that word had meant to me for the past 18 years of my life. Well, at that moment it most obviously meant punctuality, hence why I was early for my meeting and fidgeting in my chair. Professionalism means a shared respect for one another and upholding the guidelines of a working community. Culturally, professionalism means a firm handshake.

Just as I was musing these ideas, I heard my name, followed by a question mark. I stood up to meet the career counselor I had been scheduled with to talk. I wanted to start off professionally, so I reached out my hand, hoping to make a good first impression with a confident handshake.

As I walked into the career counselor’s office I began to feel more at ease. The career counselor went over some basics of Handshake with me. But what was most helpful was simply seeing the extensive list of careers that Handshake had listed. There is more to do with a degree in the humanities than law school after all! Although, I do have to admit, I was a bit of a traditionalist and checked off an interest in law school following college.

As the meeting progressed I realized something that perhaps should’ve been obvious to me: my appointment at CP&R was with a career counselor. They are there to help me in my career planning, not to create stress at the idea of becoming a professional. I left my meeting feeling more prepared for not just life after Scripps, but the four years until then in which I’ll be applying for internships and jobs, and probably having freak-outs about entering an increasingly digital world as a prospective English major. Now I know who to look to for counsel not just about “what I want to be when I grow up,” but about connecting with alumnae in my field, studying abroad, applying for fellowships and internship grants, preparing for interviews, and so much more. All in all, the R in CP&R should not be underestimated.

Dear High School Self…

I distinctly remember pacing my dad’s home office one afternoon senior year of high school.  I was almost in tears, worried about the future.  At this point, I didn’t even know where I was going to college yet so in retrospect, it was way too early to be thinking about planning out a potential career.  It was probably the stress of applications and senior year talking but I was so potently distraught that it is almost hard to think of the memory now.

I wish I could go back to that panicking 17-year-old and tell her not to worry (not that she would have believed me).  I would tell her that things will work out how they’re supposed to.  The best piece of career advice I could give to myself then would be to take a deep breath because you can’t see what the future holds yet.

I hadn’t yet gotten to college where I would discover, through experiences and my majors, that I wanted to work in entertainment.  You can’t always plan and figure out the grand plan because you simply lack the experiences necessary to make the path clear.

It is so easy to get into a trap of worrying about what you’re going to do after graduation.  When were younger, the idea is impressed upon us that we need to “decide what we want to be when we grow up”.  After listening to many people’s stories, I have found that there really is no ultimate goal of something to be.  Your career path can be as fluid and as nuanced as you are.  People change over time, and their goals will change.  What sounds appealing now may not in a years’ time.  And that’s ok!  Work with the information you’ve got, give it your all, and things will come together like they’re supposed to.

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Networking Hacks: CP&R Resume Book

This week, I thought I would take a little time to highlight one of CP&R’s resources that I have found helpful in the never-ending search for internships.  As I have said before, I think networking is valuable no matter what field you are going into.  Not only do personal connections give you a leg up in the application process, but you have the chance to make real, meaningful connections with professionals in your field.  It’s hard to put yourself out there to “network”, in whatever form that may take, but I have found that people are inherently kind and genuinely want to help.  Without further ado, here is one of my favorite weapons in my (not so secret) networking arsenal!

The CP&R Resume Book

Every year, Scripps Career Planning & Resources invites members of the current graduating class (and alumnae 1 year out) to submit their resume for an online resource called the Resume Book. It serves multiple purposes:

First, it is a publicly available document that allows recruiters to see the accomplishments of the graduating class and contact them about job opportunities.

Second, for first years, sophomores and juniors who may be stressed out looking for jobs/internships, it provides some wonderful ideas of internships that our amazing seniors have landed, formatting examples and a way to build a list of companies you might be interested in.

The Resume Book is organized by career interests, so all you need to do is look up professions you’re interested in and BOOM! you can see where past Scrippsies interned, what their activities they were involved in on campus, and get good examples of what a resume in your field might look like.  While I’m not saying that you need to follow someone’s exact career trajectory, it gives you a good idea of how their budding careers have evolved from student activities to professional experience.

When we think of networking, we usually think of contacting real, professional adults.  But your peers are also a invaluable resource.  For example, last year I was panicking about internships and began digging through the resume book.  I found, and reached out to, a then current senior who had interned at companies I was interested in.  When I emailed her, she warmly agreed to meet me at the Motley, we had a delightful conversation, and she then connected me to a company she had interned with.  Through a personal introduction, and subsequent calls with employees at the company, I landed an internship!  Because I have had such success with and find the resume book a valuable resource, I thought I would share this insider tip.

A New Adventure!

Welcome back to the spring semester. I hope everyone had a restful break and is primed and ready to crush another round of classes.  I am sending my words to the Scripps community across time and space as I find myself across the pond.  I am studying in London, England this semester at Queen Mary University and I am excited to continue to share my professional and academic ups and downs from across the pond!  It has been a wild adventure in these first few weeks and while I imagined it would be a little more like this…

https://giphy.com/gifs/burberry-city-london-autumnwinter-2015-ytwDCscq3mEw63C52M

It been a little like this…

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Also very cold and rainy,  but from the comfort of my warm dorm room, I am happy to share some thoughts about moving away from home.  Even though many of us moved away from home to go to college, there was a system set up to welcome us with open arms at Scripps.  Moving to study at a large university in a major city was more of a challenge than I was expecting because of how much you must do independently.  And I’m very grateful to have this opportunity to live indecently for a while.  Because chances are that we will have to relocate at some point in our professional careers and it can be intimidating to start over in a new place.

I have two tips so far when starting afresh.  Firstly, put down the phone and go enjoy.  Because of social media, it’s easy to get caught up in what you’re missing back home.  But being present in the moment and enjoying the new place around you helps with those feelings of homesickness.  And secondly, it is ok to feel alone.  Adjustment takes time and it is important to learn how to be comfortable in your own company. 

Otherwise, here’s to a new semester and exciting adventures all over the world!

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Director?

I’ve recently become interested in the idea of becoming a director.  Either a film or theater director although I think I would be more interested in film.  It suits my skill sets.  I love working in teams of people and I love fostering people’s creative energies so they can reach their fullest potential.  I love working on and managing large projects.  But for some reason I’ve never actively perused the potential career path.  Why have I shied away from something that could potentially be so creatively wonderful and works to my skill sets?

I believe the thing that has held me back is my fear of the more technical side of the job.  I have little experience and no expertise in lighting, sound, ect for either film or theater.  And I always assumed that this was something the director had to know to realize the vision of the production.  But as I have been learning more and more about what a director’s job entails in both worlds, I’m finding that is less and less true.  Of course you need to be able to know how to work with those mediums but the director’s job doesn’t necessarily require expertize in those fields.  That’s what designers and cinematographers are there for.  Your job as a director is nebulous, to create and realize the vision for the project.  How are you going to convey the story you have been given?  A large part of the job is working with actors and having acted for most of my life I believe I could pick up on this skill quickly.  You mostly need to have a certain creative spark.  I’m not sure if I have it but want to know if I do.  In the future, I hope to direct more, either short films or small student shows, to see if I have what it takes.  Can’t hurt to try!

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