UHV Seeks Employers for New Business Inernship Program
Monday, August 08, 2011
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Posted by: Administration
UHV
seeks local employers for new business internship program
Area business owners have the opportunity to participate
this fall in a new internship program that will match University of
Houston-Victoria business students with employers in their chosen major.
"An employer who uses the UHV School of Business Administration
Internship Program will get a dedicated, hard-working and cost-effective
employee to assist in accomplishing the business’s goals,” said Ron Salazar, a
UHV associate professor of business. "In addition, the internship will give the
student an opportunity to gain practical and valuable work experience, apply
skills and knowledge learned in school, and gain exposure to jobs and
industries.”
UHV junior and senior business majors, as well as graduate
business students, will be eligible for the program. The School of Business
Administration is partnering with the university’s Career Services Office to
administer the venture. Career Services has placed hundreds of UHV students in
local jobs, but this is the university’s first paid internship program.
The employee’s salary will be the only cost to the business,
Salazar said. UHV still is researching pay rates for similar internship
programs and will work with employers to determine internship salaries. Pay
factors include student experience and the size of the company. Stipends paid
to student interns can be made all at once or in equal installments throughout
the work period.
By partnering with UHV, an employer will have a low-risk
recruiting source and a low-cost method of training potential employees, Salazar
said.
"Hiring a UHV School of Business undergraduate or graduate
student can provide high-quality labor, help meet seasonal employment demands
and provide fresh ideas from emerging professionals,” he said. "Most of these
students are graduate-level, so they could be ready to go to work as a credit
analyst, for example. These are not all entry-level students.”
Salazar said businesses he hopes will take advantage of the
program include accounting firms, banks, manufacturers, health care
administration companies, consulting firms, construction businesses and
engineering firms, to name a few.
These types of businesses will benefit from the skills
students have acquired in the UHV School of Business Administration degree
offerings, which include a bachelor’s degree with concentrations in accounting,
finance, general business, health care administration, management and
marketing, as well as three graduate business programs: a Master of Business
Administration, a Global MBA and a Master of Science in Economic Development
& Entrepreneurship.
Internships may take place throughout the year, but most are
expected to last for one semester. There will be both full-time and part-time
internships available.
"These internships are opportunities for students to
test-drive a career field, giving them a chance to see what professionals do in
that industry,” Salazar said. "Since interns are often looking for a way to
showcase their talents in order to jumpstart their careers, they can prove to
be valuable assets to an organization.”
Eunice Mesa, UHV Career Services coordinator, said the pool
of School of Business Administration interns will help meet employer demands
for quality employees.
"We want there to be close relationship between students’
majors and what they will be doing in the workplace,” Mesa said. "But employers
will decide other criteria. An employer who needs an accountant may want at
least a 3.5 grade-point average, while others may look for different attributes
from the students.”
UHV students will have to apply for the internships through
the UHV School of Business Administration internship website at www.uhv.edu/SBAinterns. Employers
will review students’ submitted profiles and select potential candidates for
interviews.
"We want it to be a competitive pool,” Mesa said. "Employers
will know they are getting the best student for the job, and the students will
put their best foot forward since there will be a sense of competition.”
For now, students will not receive course credit for the
internships, although Mesa said one of the program’s future goals is to offer
credit.
Farhang Niroomand, dean of the UHV School of Business
Administration, said internships through business schools at other universities
are popular.
"Other universities that have offered a program like this
have been flooded with demand from employers because they know they will get
quality employees,” he said. "We’re excited to be creating a learning
opportunity for our students with such potential to benefit local employers and
the regional economy.”
UHV is accredited by AACSB International − The Association
to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, a premium accreditation held by fewer
than 5 percent of business schools worldwide.
"Our accreditation demonstrates that employers can expect
UHV interns to be exceptionally well prepared for success,” Niroomand said.
Interested employers may become involved or get more
information about the internship program by visiting www.uhv.edu/SBAinterns or calling
361-570-4369.
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