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December, 2014:

How to find out whether a Graduate Scheme is right for you…

I always knew it was going to happen, but somehow it still surprised me when it did.  In my last year at university, talk turned to graduate jobs, and I realised that I was going to have to make some plans for my career.  Unlike some of my friends, who had spent their summers in internship jobs with a view to getting on a graduate scheme at a big company, I had chosen to travel to far flung corners of the world during my breaks from university, teaching English in Asia and South America.  This left me feeling rather like a blank canvas, which I tried to see as a positive thing, and so I set about trying to think about what kind of jobs might be appropriate for me.

The first thing I did was to go to my university careers service.  The problem with this, though, was that they had plenty of information about how to get a job in your chosen field, if you had decided what that was.   The staff there seemed a little fed up of vague students expecting them to provide answers to all the challenging questions in their lives. It was obvious that I was going to have to do a little more thinking by myself before I could enlist the help of somebody who didn’t know me.

I decided to start looking through all the job adverts printed in newspapers, to get a better idea of opportunities that were available.  Part of my job search involved broadening my outlook to get a better idea of potential career options, beyond the classic graduate scheme jobs and ‘professions’, which I didn’t think were for me.  From scanning a large number of these I managed to get a good idea of the kind of roles that interested me and their requirements.

I could see that the kind of jobs I was interested in were mainly in the charity sector, but most of the jobs advertised stated that applicants needed to have a demonstrable interest in the charity sector and some work experience.  I was concerned that this might be difficult for me to show, so I decided to apply for internship jobs and work experience in the charities that I was interested in.  I was offered a couple of placements at medium sized UK charities.  After working as an assistant at both of these for a few weeks, I was convinced that this was the kind of thing I wanted to be doing. After a few weeks, I had a phone call from somebody I had worked with at one of the charities, saying that there was a vacancy that they would like me to fill. I was pleased that I hadn’t gone for a graduate scheme like most of my friends, and the graduate jobs market had not been quite as much of a nightmare as I had expected!

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