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Internship 355:395
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The Academic Component

The following pages detail your assignments for the Academic Component of the Internship. This portion of the course will be conducted mostly online, though you must meet with the Internship Director periodically during the semester to discuss your work. Specific assignments for the current semester can be found at the Class Syllabus page.

Requirements of the Academic Component
Below are the complete requirements for the Academic Component of the internship. These must be completed according to the Class Syllabus calendar.

  • Readings
    Readings for the semester will be available from Murray Hall 108 (The Writing Program office) by the second week of classes at the latest.

  • Forum Postings and Responses
    Your chief participation in the academic portion of the internship will be through forum postings and responses. You are required to complete all of the postings in a timely manner, and you must complete all postings by the end of the semester to receive full credit for the course. Postings and responses will help you to reflect critically upon your experience, to apply the course readings to your experiences, and to examine the broader range of workplace writing (as represented by your peers). These postings will also help you to develop your ideas for the final paper. Please use the navigation bar to the left to visit the class forum.

  • Portfolio of Written Work
    You must keep a portfolio of written work completed for your employer. This portfolio will be reviewed at the Midterm and Semester Meetings.

  • Journal (recommended but not required)
    In order to complete the written work for the Academic Component, you are strongly urged to keep a journal of your work experiences -- especially if you are completing the work component of the internship in the summer and you are therefore likely to forget specific things about what you did. A journal will help you to remember names, dates and assignments; to keep track of your hours; and to begin reflecting critically about your experiences in preparation for the Forum Postings and Final Paper. The journal will not be collected or reviewed, but you are urged to bring it with you to the Midterm and Semester Meetings to help you remember specific details.

  • Draft of Final Paper
    You are required to complete a draft of your Final Paper before the Semester Meeting. This should be at least 5 pages in length and should at least make reference to one of the readings for the term.

  • Semester Meeting
    You must arrange a second hour-long meeting with the Internship Director by at least one week before the end of the semester to review your work for the term. Bring the Draft of the Final Paper, your Portfolio of Written Work, your Journal, and any forms you have completed.

  • Final Paper
    The final paper should be 8-12 pages in length and must offer a critical reflection on the writing you did in the workplace. You are encouraged to adapt ideas from your journal and your forum postings in writing this paper. Papers may include narrative elements but must focus on analytic and expository writing. Purely narrative papers will not be accepted. The strongest papers will use readings or research to help understand and interpret experience.

    Final Paper Assignment:

    Remember that the final paper is a chance to reflect critically upon your internship experience and to make it meaningful for yourself and others. Though you have probably been learning a lot about workplace writing during this semester, the final paper asks you to return to the "liberal arts" essay format that you learned in school and to reflect on what you have learned in a critical and focused way. Think of it, though, as a chance to make some sense of your experience, so that when you go on the job market and someone asks you "What did you learn from that internship?" you will have a very cogent and intelligent answer.

    What have you learned? What have you learned about writing at work? Or what have you learned about the specific industry in which you worked? Or what have you learned about yourself and about the skills you will need to develop in order to succeed in future jobs?

    Since every internship experience is different, every final paper will have its own unique focus. What issue stood out most prominently for you? Or what insight seemed most important? We will talk individually about your topic, but use this forum posting to think through your basic idea as you begin to write your draft. Try most of all to find a focus that you can sustain for the whole essay.

    Papers must be from 8 to 10 pages (double spaced), they should make reference to at least one of the readings (to help you establish a frame for discussion), and they should discuss at least one specific case of workplace writing that you either participated in or observed (to help illustrate your theme). Be as specific as possible in your examples, and be sure to analyze and not just narrate your experience.

    All interns should be assured that your paper will never be read by anyone other than your teacher without your specific permission. In order to help future interns in crafting their final papers, I may ask if I can share your final paper with them. You have every right to decline or to put restrictions (such as anonymity) on the way the paper is presented.

  • Student's Internship Evaluation (available online)
    Upon completion of the Work Component of your internship (or before the end of the semester, whichever comes first), you must complete the Student's Internship Evaluation.


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