Building Global Skills
By Stewart Ikeda, Editor,
black-collegian.com
International Internships, Coops and Study in
Rising Demand as Employers Seek Workers with Foreign Experience
As an Emory University student majoring in
international studies/Spanish and minoring in journalism, Monique Ramgoolie had
a basic career goal: to “have a job at a place where things stayed interesting
and where I was able to affect change.”
By commencement, she had already charted a
course toward that goal. In addition to undertaking study-abroad stints in China
and Spain, she interned at the Carter Presidential Center in Atlanta, and with
the Cape Times newspaper in Cape Town, South Africa, where she attended
and covered events by such global leaders as Nelson Mandela and Archbishop
Desmond Tutu.
Providing early and lasting lessons about the
excitement and rewards of working overseas with diverse populations, these
impressive stepping stones in her resume helped her progress further down a
fulfilling career path. She went on to successfully apply to Princeton
University’s Woodrow Wilson School, where a graduate concentration in
international relations combined her interests in policy, government and foreign
affairs. She took every advantage of the school’s career resources, programming
and funding. For example, she landed an internship with the U.S. State
Department doing practical, substantive work at the U.S. Embassy in Buenos
Aires, Argentina. Later, through a career panel, she also discovered the
Presidential Management Internship (now Fellowship), for which she was selected.
This flexible program allowed Ramgoolie to explore a variety of work options
within the U.S. State Department. She serves there today as a Program Officer
covering migration discussions at the United Nations, in the Bureau of
Population, Refugees and Migration’s Office of Population and International
Migration – an influential role that meets her early career goal, and then some.
Strong international experience and specialized
graduate study certainly give a student an edge in pursuing prestigious,
globe-trotting jobs at the State Department or in intelligence work, but these
aren’t just advantageous for diplomats or “superspies”. Demand for workers with
foreign language and cultural fluencies has jumped throughout the government
sector since 9/11. Ramgoolie sees “opportunities to use one’s knowledge base in
foreign relations or political science” in a host of federal departments
including the U.S. Agency for International Development, and the Departments of
Health and Human Services and Agriculture, as well as in many non-governmental
service organizations, nonprofits, and the private sector
Experience of a Lifetime
As a technology major with a design background,
Solomon Graham’s pursuit of a network systems analyst career at first may
not seem to have much to do with foreign relations, cultures and travel. But for
this graduate of the University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee School of Information
Studies, a few courses in Spanish and growing up near one of the city’s large
Hispanic neighborhoods led him to apply for a life-changing opportunity in San
Luis Potosi, Mexico.
Through the university’s noted Center for
International Education, he combined study abroad with a social service
internship. The Center’s North American Conflict Resolution Program set Graham
up with work experience at the State Department of Human Rights while attending
the University of Autonoma.
Immersion in all-Spanish-language classes
filled with unfamiliar accents challenged and dramatically improved his language
skills, which he applied along with his tech background to translation work on
the State Department’s website.
Far from his technology work but equally
significant was the challenging field work. Graham undertook intensive study of
“the structure of Mexican law, the various government offices in the city and
how the departments functioned overall within the system.”
The preparation was “a great way to get a feel
for the socioeconomics of the region,” he says. Graham was able to interact
directly with lawyers, counselors and often highly distressed plaintiffs in
“bizarre and sometimes disturbing cases,” providing an unanticipated and
uniquely rewarding opportunity to “help others through some of the most
difficult moments of their lives.”
Having worked hard to find, apply for and
succeed in “the experience of a lifetime,” Graham appreciates that his was in
many ways an uncommon and lucky experience.
“It was very unusual…to undertake this exchange
program, as a tech major,” says Graham, now a Network Administrator Specialist
with Marshall & Ilsley Bank. “But it helped me stand out among my peers in the
same major.”
Global Sharing for New Solutions
Indeed, tech and science majors who are
bilingual or have international experience are in particularly high demand and
short supply for employers in all sectors. The International Association for the
Exchange of Students for Technical Experience (IAESTE) is one organization
trying to bridge this gap. With a mission to “develop global skills in
tomorrow’s technical leaders,” IAESTE annually facilitates some 130
international exchanges for students in disciplines ranging from engineering to
mathematics to architecture, across a network of more than 70 countries. IAESTE
works with the nonprofit Association for International Practical Training (AIPT),
which provides both work-abroad opportunities for U.S. students and J-1 visa
sponsorships allowing foreign students to work as trainees for U.S. employers.
For NASA radiation engineering specialist
Anthony Sanders, his experience in Zaragoza, Spain, arranged through IAESTE,
provided a lifelong lesson in the importance of sharing new technology findings
with international peers. Working with fellow interns from around the world, he
found that “many of them had computer programming techniques superior to mine,
but were struggling with hardware design and troubleshooting, where I excelled.
Working together and sharing our knowledge made us improve our problem-solving
skills and demonstrated that a network of engineers were better as a team than
working alone.”
Taking the lesson to heart, Sanders has gone on
to engage in cutting-edge radiation research at NASA, publishing and presenting
it in global forums, and continuing to participate in international workshops
such one in Leuven, Belgium, focusing on advancements in predicting radiation
hazards related to space travel.
Stressing that any student can benefit from
early work experience through internships and co-ops, whether domestic or
abroad, Sanders agrees with Graham that “international experience and being
multilingual do set you apart from the pack when applying for jobs.”
Underrepresented or Out-Standing
During his time in Mexico, Solomon Graham also
stood apart as the only African American and the only male in the program, an
experience that reflects national trends. According to “Open Doors,” a study by
the Institute of International Education, females outnumber males among
U.S. study-abroad students nearly 2-to-1. Further analysis by NAFSA:
Association of International Educators shows that African Americans are
proportionally and actually among the least likely to study abroad out of U.S.
demographic groups, despite comprising 11.9 percent of U.S. higher education
enrollment (fall 2002 figures) – the second largest subgroup after Caucasians.
African Americans represented only 3.4 percent of U.S. students abroad in the
2003-2004 school year, compared to Caucasians (83.7 percent), Asian Americans
(6.0 percent) and Hispanic/Latino Americans (5.1 percent).
Possible explanations for the disparity are
varied. Students may be wary of encountering discrimination abroad – as
Americans and as minorities. In the post-9/11 world, being an American abroad is
to be as conspicuous as ever. While it can be “a challenging and rewarding
experience,” as Monique Ramgoolie observes, “it may not be for everyone.”
Indeed, since the late ’90s, the percentage of study-abroad students for nearly
all groups except Asian Americans and multiracials has generally been declining,
and a notable dip occurred after 9/11.
Some African-American students may also feel
self-conscious about being doubly noticeable abroad. Solomon Graham enjoyed
“standing out” in Mexico; he felt warmly welcomed while traveling to areas where
locals were unaccustomed to meeting African-American men, “especially those so
eager to learn about their country and culture.”
However, while studying in Dubai, University of
Cincinnati junior Brittney L. Huntley initially found it hard to confront the
assumptions and stereotypes locals held about African Americans; she describes
her experiences in “My Global Study Experience in Dubai” (in this issue).
It’s also possible that some recruiters do not
routinely or effectively target their global recruitment efforts to HBCUs, or
media or organizations that serve African- American students. Whatever the
reasons, it’s clear that too many Black collegians are still not “getting
global” in ways that are increasingly important to their career prospects,
whatever their field.
With this understanding, Anthony Sanders is now
giving back. In addition to representing Code 500, Applied Engineering and
Technology Directorate, on the NASA Goddard African American Advisory Committee,
he serves as the International Rep for the Goddard chapter of the National
Society of Black Engineers (NSBE). In this role, he has been working to promote
collaboration among NSBE, NASA and IAESTE to provide increased opportunity for
other Black science and engineering students to explore careers in an exciting
field that badly needs them.
Better Get Global
All things being equal, “having foreign
experience is absolutely a plus” on an entry-level resume, says Francois de
Wazieres, VP of Corporate Strategic Recruitment for L’Oreal USA. But for
multinational corporations like L’Oreal, building a workforce with global skills
and “international mobility” is a high priority that extends well beyond just
recruitment; like diversity, it is a strategic imperative infusing all business
units.
Because L’Oreal markets its products worldwide,
and with considerable interchange among its headquarters in different countries,
someone without any international experience has virtually zero prospects for
reaching a high-level position in the organization, de Wazieres says. That
doesn’t mean the company excludes talented applicants who have not had an
opportunity to go abroad, but successful candidates should be ready – and eager
– to do so if they land the job.
Observing that more than ten percent of the
company’s employees work in a location other than their country of origin, he
advises, “If you’re going to shoot for the top, you’d better get global.”
Fortunately, the company is aggressive and
progressive about weaving global skills-building into its professional
development programs. For early-career employees who do well and are headed for
advancement, “it’s a must that they should go abroad at some point with us” as a
function of leadership training, says de Wazieres. (He had done stints in
Europe, Israel, Turkey and Mexico.) Thus, interviewing managers look for a
quality that he describes as “an openness, a curiosity,” indicating their
potential for international mobility. This could be signaled by having study
abroad credits or speaking more than one language, for example. But, more
importantly, they seek an indication that an interviewee would be an employee
who “will go into another country with an open mind, accepting and expecting
cultural differences, listening to other cultures,” and learning from the best
practices their foreign colleagues have to offer.
Hurdles and Helpers
It is an optimistic sign for such companies
that more and more “Millennials” they encounter at college job fairs “eagerly
ask about travel and work abroad opportunities,” says de Wazieres.
Peter Franks, Executive Director of
Drexel University’s Steinbright Career Development Center and past CEO of the
World Association for Cooperative Education, also sees student interest
increasing, and diversifying. In the Internet era, when nearly any mom-and-pop
shop can conduct “multinational business,” Franks also sees a need for
global-skills students rising among smaller-sized employers, not just big
multinational corporations like L’Oreal. He also says demand is “broad based,”
cutting across all majors, including all kinds of social and humanities
endeavors. Some 4,000 Drexel students participate in co-ops each year, many of
them abroad through the Center’s Co-op Abroad Program. This spring, Drexel
launched the Vidalakis Cretan Scholars Program, the product of a top-level
fundraising initiative by the administration to support work-abroad
opportunities in Crete for eight students a year, each provided with stipends of
up to $5,000.
While there are “not yet a tremendous number of
programs” like Drexel’s, Franks finds that more institutions are developing
comprehensive work-abroad resources to meet demand, and support more diverse
students’ interests.
However, another reality of the post- 9/11
world is that international exchanges of any kind are becoming more complicated
precisely when they are as necessary as ever. As a result, universities are
exploring a variety of new models to facilitate exchanges and meet demand.
Terence Miller, Director of the Overseas
Programs and Partnerships office that sent Solomon Graham to Mexico, says many
institutions like UW-Milwaukee are reorganizing once separate campus functions
into more comprehensive, centralized or all-in-one resources that encompass
study abroad, foreign internships, international student admissions, and
international/ global degree programs. It can be helpful for students like
Graham to have one application process to arrange his foreign travel and visas,
host college admission, and internship. Some centers help with “re-entry” as
well, to aid the transition back to regular campus life and pursuit of future
opportunities.
Nonprofits such as IAESTE, by making
visa processes run more smoothly, are also helping to fill in the gaps, as are a
bumper-crop of commercial businesses and websites, including Goinglobal.com
and InternAbroad.com, among others.
Waiting World
What all the former interns agree on is this:
By setting early goals, maximizing resources like those described here, and
putting in the hard work and planning to make it happen, students who work
abroad may not only gain skills and credentials to help throughout their
careers, but other life rewards they would never expect.
“Go out, explore what the world has to offer,
and enjoy an experience of a lifetime,” Solomon Graham urges. “The world is
waiting for you!”
Source:
http://www.black-collegian.com/issues/1stsem06/global_interns.htm
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