Connections, Victoria University
Transcription
Connections, Victoria University
CONNECTIONS ƒ-art 24 14/6/04 2:42 PM Page 24 > Industry training ~!@#$%^&*( WORK INTEGRATED LEARNING {}|ASDFGHJKL: 234”_ZBX!7890-= adhjkl;’zxcvbnm. ( )_ + Q W E R T Y U I FGHJKL:”ZXCVBNM =qw er tyu iop[ kl;’zxcvbnm, ./ *()_ +QWERTYUIO FGHJKL:”ZXCVBNM< adhjkl;’zxcvbnm. ( )_ + Q W E R T Y U I FGHJKL:”ZXCVBNM =qwerty uio p[ ’zxcvb nm,./~ !@ QWERTYUI OP{ }| VBNM<>? 12345678 ~!@#$%^&*( {}|ASDFGHJKL” 234567890-=qw adhjkl;’zxcvbnm. ( )_ + Q W E R T Y U I FGHJKL:”ZXCVBNM<>? OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS AND EMPLOYERS Business degree students are excelling in their various forms of work intergated learning, often gaining full-time work as a result. Why is the Work Integrated Learning program, which features what’s known as Co-operative Education, so successful? Connections spoke to students, their supervisors and their lecturers to find out. Interviews by Jane Levin DRIVE CONFIDENCE Nicole Aquilina Ayhan Demirovski TWENTY-three-year-old accounting graduate Nicole Aquilina completed her Co-op position (40 weeks of paid full-time work) at NSP Buck, a large employee benefits consultancy. The 2002 Co-operative Education Student of the Year is now with PricewaterhouseCoopers. “I credit everything to the Co-op year – it gave me a world of opportunities. I’m going up for a senior position in June, which usually takes two years for a graduate to get to. I finished my degree in four and a half years, but I’m still ahead. “I was working as a sales assistant when I started my degree, and if I had just stayed a sales assistant I wouldn’t have found a job in an organisation such as PricewaterhouseCoopers for at least three to four years.” “Nicole was a resounding success story,” says Sarsha McEntee, a former supervisor at NSP Buck who now works at Pricewaterhouse Coopers. “She was exceptionally quick to grasp things, but she is very thorough – she won’t put something down unless she has mastered it. She’s very driven!” “Nicole deserves everything that has come her way,” commented Dr Albie Brooks, senior lecturer in VU’s accounting program. “The Coop year rounded her off and showed her that she was able to match it in an accounting and business environment – sometimes it’s just a matter of recognising that you can.” IN 2002 Ayhan Demirovski spent valuable time with the major commercial law firm Allens Arthur Robinson. He completed his Bachelor of Business (Commercial Law) at the end of 2003 and is now working full time in the firm’s legal support unit. “I really enjoyed the work placement. This was my first professional job. It was great to put the theory into practice. When I first started, my confidence was pretty low, but once I started working here and getting to know everyone my confidence grew and my responsibility grew. “And to be honest, during the first two years of uni my marks were average, but while I was doing the work placement my results improved. It just helped me get more organised.” “Ayhan has been given responsibility for running small projects and given more autonomy,” says Ian Anderson, legal support site manager Melbourne, Allens Arthur Robinson. “All of our VU people have stayed on with us. It’s been good for me to find out a bit more about what is going on in tertiary education.” PHOTOS BY Sharon Jones CONNECTIONS ƒ-art 14/6/04 2:42 PM Page 25 25 ENERGY ()_+ Q>W ERTYUIOP L:”ZXCVBNM<>? 1 =qwertyuiop[]\ ~!@# $%^& * IOP{}|ASDM<>? 1234567890[ ]\as dfgh j /~ !@#$ %^& OP {}|ASD<> ? 1234567890~!@# $%^& * IOP{}|ASDM<>? 1234567890]\a sdfgh jkl; @#$%^&*()_+ |AS DFGHJ KL: ”ZXC 89 0-=qwer ()_+ Q W E R T Y U I O P L”ZXCVBNM<>? 1 wertyuiop[]\ ~!@# $%^& * IOP{}|ASD>? >1>2>34568>9-rr>> The Work Integrated Learning program offers business students invaluable experience and prospects in the workplace, and demonstrates to industry the value of a VU degree. “Students are able to blend their theoretical knowledge obtained in the classroom with ‘real life’ experiences,” says the program’s manager, Barry Broons. “I suspect that some of our students’ offices could be powered by the light bulbs that go off throughout their Co-op employment. Employers obtain earnest, enthusiastic and energetic young business students who infuse a breadth of skills into the workplace.” MATURITY KNOWLEDGE SKILLS Rob Hortle Jennifer Long Eva Bono ROB Hortle, 22, is studying human resource management. His Co-op placement was with the Federal Department of Employment and Workplace Relations, where he is now working full time in the Office of Workplace Services. “The Co-op year was definitely beneficial. You don’t have to worry about study for twelve months. You learn a bit more about what life is all about. It’s made me a lot more employable, and it helps with your own personal development. “It also gave me a new attitude to study. I can’t even count the number of times that I’ve sat in the classroom and thought ‘Why is that relevant?’, and yet now I know that it is.” “With Rob, his maturity really stood out, and he has a really great work ethic,” says Martin Dwelly, team leader, Office of Workplace Services. “I was very impressed with him and he wasn’t scared of speaking up, in a positive way. He also is willing to work and put himself forward. “VU students are just better prepared, certainly at the interview stage. Rob was one of the more outstanding we’ve had for sure. His life experiences have stood him in good stead in dealing with people.” JENNIFER Long, a multi-award winning graduate now working in computer systems support, completed her Co-op year at the end of 2000 at HPA, a national business process outsourcing company of around 1000 people. HPA recently promoted Jennifer from a full-time computer programming role to team leader. Jennifer, 23, also works in co-ordinating current VU Co-op placements at HPA. “I had an absolutely fantastic Co-op year. The program was about turning the theory into workplace actions, and I learnt so much more because it’s outside of the textbook. It really helped me with my studies because I could actually apply working knowledge. It helped me understand the theory better. “Before doing Co-op I was a bit unsure of what I wanted to get into. It definitely helped me to define my career path and set me on the way to it.” “Jennifer was the first Co-op student at HPA, so she was the person who was going to make or break the program,” commented Peter Coe, IT manager of HPA’s Victorian branch. “It’s great to get the input of the students and the new skills that they are learning. It’s good for the University, it’s great for the students and it’s great for HPA. “With the IT downturn since 2001 it’s really hard for students to get jobs, particularly as graduates,” notes VU’s John Bentley, a senior lecturer in information systems. “What we are finding is that students like Jennifer who have finished the Co-op year have been offered a position.” EVA Bono, 21, is completing her tourism management studies after travelling to the US for her Co-op placement with Swain Australia Tours. She has recently started her own small business and hopes to eventually work in tourism overseas. “Living overseas meant having independence and being in a different culture where everything is always exciting and new, and you just are a better person because you see everything in such a different light. “I now have my own business and I don’t think I would have ever been able to do it if I hadn’t done what I did during the Co-op year. I can talk to people easily and I have so many organisational skills. And having been in the tourism industry I feel that now I can go for any job.” Martin Fluker, tourism lecturer: “In last year’s field research project I got to see Eva interacting with other students her own age and saw how mature she was and how her social skills were honed from her experience. She knows a lot more about the industry in which she may work once she has finished her degree.” < > Victoria University connections