Monday, May 18, 2009

INTERNSHIP FAIR KEYNOTE PRESENTATION

Keynote Presentation
Unless you have the same kind of computer that the school has, you will not be able to work on the Keynote at home. That means you need to use every minute of the seven class periods you'll have to work on the keynote and the presentation board. BUT what you can do at home is write the words that are going to be put into those slides on a piece of paper and then when you get to the computers at school, type them into the appropriate slides. Another idea is to type the words into an email and send it to yourself to copy and paste from later. The bottom line is that you need to work efficiently and carefully so that by Wednesday, June 10, all you'll need to do is practice presenting your keynote and presentation board.

Below are the keynote slide requirements. You do not need to create a blog post for this. You will however need to create a presentation board to accompany your slide. Examples are all around the room.

-Cover slide – Title, name, date

Title examples
= My Internship, Sean's Internship, An Internship at ...(name of your site), My Internship Experience, Springtime, International Style, Springtime, Internship Style, 12 Weeks in the Life of High School Intern, etc. You have creative freedom here.


-Name of Site; Description of Internship site – refer to your blog post

Description should include what kind of business it is, where it is located

-Pictures of the site -- if you never managed to take pictures, find some on the internet if possible

-Description of duties -- make a bulleted list for this. Word -- description.

-Pictures of you working -- if you never took picture, find some on the internet of people doing the same kind of work you did

-Description of a typical day -- look at your daily post entries and use examples from that to create a generic work day.
Time arrived
What you did that was familiar
What you might have done that was new or different
Something else that may have happened
Time departed for home


-A challenge you faced, and how you over came it

-7 Vocabulary words and meanings related to your site -- make a bulleted list. word -- description

-Description of mentor (Picture would be great!) -- name, title, who they are, where from, what they do, what they are like, etc.

-Excerpts or highlights from your interview -- describe who you interviewed and why and pick two of their answers that were meaningful and include them in the slide

-Important Excerpts from Midpoint and Final reflections -- choose three questions and answers that you feel are significant from these two posts. You can include more questions and answers if you wish.

-Your Resume with new internship experience added and highlighted -- Make sure you know where your resume is (server, thumb drive) If you can not find your resume, start one asap

-Advice for a future intern -- What advice would you give to an intern who had this same internship site next year? Consider challenges you faced or difficulties you had that could have been avoided if someone had given you advice a year ago.

-Conclusion - Overall evaluation of the internship experience. Consider these questions: Did you like it? Why or why not? Did you get anything out of it? Should we have future classes do this? Why or why not?

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Vocabulary Vocabulary Vocabulary


Don't forget you are required to post 20 vocabulary words before internship is finished.

Catch up if you are falling behind. A good strategy is to talk with your mentor about the assignment and let him or her know that you are interested in learning more "work lingo".

Final Reflection

These questions are on the Final Site Visit form that the advisers are giving to the mentors as part of the final site visit at your internships. I thought I would give you an advance notice of this. Elements from this will be used in your presentation.

ASSIGNMENT: Post the questions and answers on your blog.

1. Look back to your earliest posts. What were you goals? Did you meet these goals?

2. What are the most important things you’ve learned?

3. In what ways have your grown as a student/young adult?

4. What were the highlights of your internship experience?

5. Describe a memorable moment or experience.

6. What challenges did you overcome?

7. What advice would you give a new intern at this site? Your answer to this question will be used next year with the upcoming juniors.

8. What will you miss about your internship?

Monday, May 11, 2009

WE'RE GETTING CLOSER TO THE END OF THE MARKING PERIOD ...

So you should know: IN ORDER TO EARN A HIGH GRADE IN INTERNSHIP SEMINAR...You need to complete every blog assignment, including your mid point reflection, all four vocabulary assignments, the floor plan, and the interview. If you have not done this work yet, get it done. It will hurt your final semester grade if the work is not completed.

Week 11 - The Floorplan


YOUR NEXT ASSIGNMENT: The Floor Plan

Your next assignment is to draw a floor plan of the physical space of your internship working area. Confused?

Think back to the Floor Plan project you completed in Math class earlier this year. Remember, a floor plan shows the size and location of the walls and doors in a space. Use google images to search for examples. Search keyword: floor plan. Also try office floor plan, house floor plan, hospital floor plan, etc.

In your floor plan assignment, you also need to create a separate "blow up" drawing of your personal space or area. For example, if you work in an office you probably have some chair that you sit in regularly. I want you to zoom in on that spot and see what is in the immediate vicinity of that chair or desk. In other words, what is around you? A desk, lamp, paper pile, phone, waste basket, picture, other chairs, your mentor's desk, books, and so on ....

If I gave this assignment to Mr. Carlos, for example, he would draw a diagram of the entire third floor of Lafayette High School: the rooms, walls, hallways, library, and doors. He would also draw another "zoomed in" picture of his desk and chair, the copier, Ms. Joan's desk, Mr. Lurick's desk, the front desk, etc.

Q: HOW DO I DO THIS IN MY BLOG?

A: I don't recommend it. In fact, you need to draw the total area floor plan on one regular sized sheet of paper. Draw the "blow up" floor plan on another. You will be able to display this for others to see without the aid of a computer. Make sure to use rulers and pencil on your first draft and pens or markers once you've done your first draft.

You need to get started on this ASAP.
I think you know how to do it. Don't wait until next week to start. You won't have enough time. Plus, you'll have a final reflection to write on your blog before you get started on the work of your Internship Presentations. Remember, I am here at 8:15 every Friday morning to help you. Your other teachers are also here in the mornings for tutoring as well. Just speak to them beforehand to get a pass.

Good Luck!

Monday, May 4, 2009

Mentor Interview - Week 10


Interview Questions


THE ASSIGNMENT:

Select someone at your internship to interview.
Arrange a time and place that you can conduct the interview.
It is a good idea to give the questions you are asking to the interviewee (the person you are going to interview) in advance.

Please use the list of questions below when interviewing your mentor. Select at least 12 or more of these questions to ask the interviewee. You may use all of them if you wish. Again, it would be good to give the interviewee the questions in advance.

Record the answers during the interview and then type the questions and answers into a post titled Mentor Interview.

Questions

1. What is your full name?

2. Where are you from (city, state, country)?

3. Where did you go to college? For how long? Do you plan to go back to school?

4. (If the interviewee went to college)… What was your major in college and what kind of degree did you earn? Did you attend graduate school for an advanced degree? If yes, what degree and where?

5. Why did you choose your professional field?

6. What got you involved in this field of work? What inspired you to do it?

7. Why did you choose this particular job at this particular company?

8. How long have you worked here?

9. What is your job title?

10. What do your duties include? Or What kinds of work does your job involve?

11. What are some of the challenges you have faced working here?

12. What is the best part of your job?

13. What is something you would like to change about your job?

14. Did you work somewhere else before this job? Where? For how long? How was that similar/different?

15. What do you see as your future with this company?

16. Do you enjoy the kind of work you do? Why or why not?

17. Do you plan to open your own business one day?

18. How has having an intern helped your company or organization advance or progress?

19. What advice would you give to high school-aged interns (such as myself) getting ready for college?

20. What advice would you give to high school-aged interns (such as myself) preparing to find a career in the real world?

*21. Feel free to create additional questions. Just make sure to be appropriate.

Before you conduct your interview, consider these ideas:

-Who do you want to interview?

-What do you already know about that person? (their name, where they are from, how old they are, what their job is...)

-What do you want to know about that person? (how they got their job, where they went to school, how long they were in school...)