Category Archives: Students

Welcome back…Get Involved

Welcome back to Penn State!

As the Spring semester gets started, I wanted to focus on one of the four keys to student success that I emphasize for all of our new students in HHD: Activities.

Learning occurs everywhere and needs to be a lifelong pursuit. Penn State and the College of Health and Human Development provide you with ample opportunity to get involved and develop your learning outside of classes. Our departments and schools have outstanding student organizations, and those are just a few of the thousand of clubs and organizations here.

Over on the Events And Activities page, I’ve posted a few things happening. Clubs and organizations are, of course, only one way to get involved. Volunteering with local organizations or groups at home is another important part of getting involved. How important? Well, in a survey last year by Deloitte, over 80% of employers said they looked for it in job applications. While you are helping others, you can help yourself. It’s doubly important for students in our fields—employers see it as a sign of your commitment to customer service and helping others. It’s also a great way to see whether or not you like different types of work, to network with people working in the field, and to learn what aspects of future employment fit your talents.

I want to highlight the Day of Service on Monday, January 20 for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. You can still sign up to volunteer. Do good work–it pays off on the future, even if it’s volunteer work today.

Just a reminder–I have regular office hours to meet with students, usually on Thursdays from 3:30-5 PM. You can schedule a meeting by calling 865-1427. I am also available to meet with student clubs and organizations at their regular meetings, so feel free to call the same number and schedule a visit. My email is dshea@psu.edu and I’m @DennisG_Shea on twitter (look for #PSUHHD). I have a regular Twitter Office Hours (Tweet-OHs) Thursday night from 8-9 PM. Have a great semester!

                           

 

Networking 101: Relationship, not Transaction

One question I hear often from students is about networking–how to get started and how to do it. Over my 20+ years as a faculty member, department head and now an associate dean, I’ve put together some thoughts on this for students.

The most important thing I stress to students is networking is a relationship, not a transaction. Many students only engage in networking when they need something from someone else–an internship, a reference, a job. I’ve always encouraged students to think of networking in different terms–it’s about developing long-term, rewarding professional relationships.

Thinking about it this way leads to an important conclusion.  It’s never too soon to begin networking. While many students begin networking in their third or fourth year, there’s no reason you can’t start networking as a first year student, if it’s about building relationships (and not just to get an internship or a job).

So, how do you get started? I tell students to think about possible areas of future work, and list every person they know who works in that area–family friends, a guest speaker from a class, your relatives. Begin contacting these individuals and tell them you are beginning to explore your future. Ask them if you can come to their place of work for a 10-15 minute visit. During that visit, you just want to ask 3-4 questions about their work–what’s their favorite part of their job, what’s their typical day, what’s one thing they wished they knew before they started work (we call this an informational interview). At the conclusion, identify 1 or 2 things about their responses that sounded interesting and ask them the following: ‘I’d really like to learn more about what you said about X; can you recommend a few other people who could tell me more about that, and can I tell them you referred me?”

If you do this with 5 people, you’ll soon have 10 more people to interview. And then they’ll give you 20 more names…and they’ll give you 40 more names.  You can keep going as long as you want, but you’ll be building a network. Remember, however, it has to be a relationship.  Conclude each visit also with an offer to provide assistance–maybe they’d like a tour for a relative who will visiting Penn State later that year; maybe you can offer a cup of coffee when they next visit Happy Valley. Follow up, of course, with a thank you note, too.

And STAY IN TOUCH! Create a list of all those you visit and a schedule to contact them again in the future on some regular basis. That can be an email to update them on your academic progress and ask a question about a course you are considering.  It can be a call to let them know you are going to be in town during a break and would like to stop by and say hello. With time and attention, you’ll have dozens of strong, professional relationships by the time you graduate.