Thank you for your interest in providing real-life work experience to our students in the School of Communications!
Internship Purpose
The primary purpose of an internship in the School of Communications (SOC) is to provide a student with real-life work experiences related to the student's major. An internship is part of the student's total academic experience and is not a job per se; it is a learning opportunity having direct relationships to the student's program of study and career interests. Students may complete an internship to enhance their education associated with any of the four major areas of study in the School of Communications at GVSU:
- Advertising and Public Relations
- Communication Studies
- Health Communication
- Multimedia Journalism
General information About internships
- They should provide meaningful work experience.
- Assignments should go beyond clerical work to include research, writing, creative, technical and other hands-on tasks related to the student's field of study.
- There should be one primary supervisor to whom the intern should report (ideally this person will be experienced in the field).
- 1 credit equals 50 hours of work in an internship. Students do internships for anywhere from 1- 6 credits, which can take place at any time of the year and for whatever schedule best suits the employer.
- Pay is not required, but paid internships do draw more students. Info on federal law and paying interns.
- Credit for the internship is assigned by Grand Valley faculty, not the employer. However, employers will be asked to fill out a short form evaluating the intern at the end of the internship period.
The Process of Getting an Intern
We believe the internship should simulate a real job as much as possible, including the interviewing and hiring experience. That's why we encourage employers to submit an internship opportunity announcement or job description, encouraging students to apply. We post these internally in the School of Communication and in Handshake, GVSU's Career Services database of jobs and internships. (See https://www.gvsu.edu/handshake/ to register and post your internship and job opportunities directly.)
Your internship opportunity announcement should include:
- Name of your organization
- Title/type of internship
- Qualifications expected of student and duties required
- Time frame, duration of internship
- Payment, if any
- To whom students should apply, with contact information
You may also email the opportunity announcement directly to The School of Communications via the appropriate internship coordinator:
- Advertising & Public Relations Yasmin Gopal
- Communication Studies Lin Tian
- Health Communication Lin Tian
- Multimedia Journalism James Ford
The GVSU Career Center has an Employer Internship Toolkit with helpful resources for employers hosting interns. You can contact them via phone at (616) 331-3311 or visit their website.