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Supervised Experience
Perhaps no one aspect of public relations education has
generated more discussion and diversity of implementation
than the recommended “supervised work experience.”
The models recommended were built applying
flexible time and content delivery designs that
permit students to access courses in other academic
disciplines. Too, in offering the course in
distance learning or weekend formats, management
faculty, for example, could teach business
courses to public relations students. This
section briefly describes the nature of the supervised
work experience (internship), presents
several issues surrounding differences in
the manner in which programs define this experience
and offers recommendations for such
experience.
Summary of Recommendations in
Previous Commission Reports
Two previous Commission reports (1987 and
1999) included “supervised experience” as one
of the core courses in their recommended undergraduate
curricula. A Port of Entry (1999)
asserted that it was “… imperative that public
relations students have the opportunity to
apply the skills and principles they learn to the
professional arena.”
Three qualities were included to describe the
experience:
- cooperatively supervised by a practitioner
and a faculty member;
- learning objectives guide the experience;
- consistent and continuous evaluation of
the performance of the student during the
experience.
Given those qualities, the report noted that
when public relations students undertake an
internship, they should (a) know the faculty
and practitioner supervisor, (b) create objectives
for the learning and professional performance
that are understood and agreed to by both
supervisors and (c) have the benefit of continuous
assessment of their work by their supervisors
throughout the internship.
Supervised work experience for graduate students
assumed lesser importance than for undergraduates
in the 1999 report. Specifically,
supervised instruction was a complement, or
an alternative, to a comprehensive examination.
If undertaken, however, the three qualities
guiding the undergraduate work experience
also were applicable to a graduate internship.
The flexibility permitted in the previous reports
has led to considerable variety in work experiences,
depending upon how institutions addressed
several issues. Some of those issues
have included:
- Is completion of an internship a condition for
graduation? Should an internship be required
of all public relations students?
- Should a supervised work experience be
counted as an internship only if credit is
given?
- Should credit be permitted for more than one
internship and should more than one internship
be counted toward graduation requirements?
- If the work experience is unpaid, should it
count as a for-credit internship?
- Is securing work experience the responsibility
of the student or the college/university?
- Should part-time work be counted as “supervised
work experience”?
- If the student is paid (i.e., receives an hourly
wage or stipend), is the student an employee
of the employing organization or a student of
the university?
- If a student is enrolled for credit, how should
the experience be graded? Who should determine
the grade? Is “pass-fail” an appropriate
grading policy?
- Should it be expected that the student will
produce a tangible product for the experience
to be given credit? Should the student produce/
create/design/write/conduct research
appropriate for a professional portfolio?
- Should the student write a report about the
experience in addition to supervisor evaluations
and the accumulation of evidence of
work completed?
- Should the faculty supervisor visit the workplace
of each student supervised, and how
often?
- Can an intern be “fired” by the practitioner? If
so, does the internship count as supervised
work experience?
- What is the appropriate title for supervised
work experience: internship, externship, cooperative
work, practical experience or some
other label?
- Should oncampus work assignments be
counted as a supervised work experience?
- How long (measured in hours, or weeks)
should work experience last?
- How much credit should be given for internships
of varying lengths: e.g., one credit hour
for a set number of hours of work completed?
A variety of answers to these and other questions
has led to a variety of methods used to provide
students with supervised work experience.
New Research Findings and Analysis
Research conducted by the Commission for this
report reaffirmed the central importance of supervised
work experience to public relations
students. Practitioners surveyed identified it as
the highest-scored essential ingredient of an undergraduate
education. Educators equally valued
supervised experience and credibility.
Practical experience also was one of the top five
considerations in entry-level hiring decisions.
In short, the attitude of educators and practitioners
alike remains unchanged since the 1999
report: supervised work experience is an essential
part of public relations education.
However, some discrepancy between faculty attitudes
and institutional performance was revealed
in the recent research. The broad,
quantitative research study conducted in preparation
for the Commission’s report showed that
while both educators and practitioners believe
internships or practicum experience are a
highly essential part of public relations education,
both groups judged the quality of internships
as only “okay” at about the midpoint on a
5-point scale.
Many educators and practitioners argue
that payment for work increases the
professionalism of the internship experience
and rightfully recognizes returned value to
the organization.
A survey of faculty advisers to Chapters of the
the Public Relations Student Society of
America (PRSSA) revealed that fewer than half
of the programs require public relations majors
to complete an internship for academic
credit. Yet internships for academic credit are
encouraged. About three-fourths of the public
relations majors at these colleges and universities
typically complete an internship for academic
credit. Furthermore, students in almost
all the programs (98 percent) complete an average
of one or more internships—for-credit
and/or noncredit—during their undergraduate
college careers.
Survey results showed that only 36 percent of
for-credit internships pay students a stipend or
salary, an issue of concern since students must
pay tuition and fees to receive academic credit
for an internship. Therefore, nonpaying internships
for credit actually cost the student
money. Furthermore, nonpaying internships—
for-credit or noncredit—discriminate against
students with financial need because they
often must work to attend college and cannot
afford to give up paying jobs to take on nonpaying
internships.
Discussion about paid internships inevitably
raises questions about nonprofit organizations,
which stereotypically are portrayed as poor and
unable to pay interns. Whereas volunteerstaffed
nonprofits with revenues of less than
$100,000 certainly would find it difficult to pay
a student intern, many nonprofits seeking public
relations interns have much higher revenues
and multiple paid employees. Museums, colleges,
hospitals and local chapters of large national
organizations usually are far from poor.
Reported annual revenue for some well-known
nonprofits, such as the American Red Cross,
American Cancer Society, Boys and Girls Clubs,
Goodwill, United Way and YMCA, is $1 billion
or more nationally. And, while staff salaries at
nonprofit organizations are below salaries in
the for-profit sector, they still are relatively
competitive. For example, a 2005 compensation
study by GuideStar found that top program officers
at charities with budgets between $1 million
and $2.5 million (classified as mid-size)
earned a median salary of $62,700 in 2003.1
The 2005 survey of top executives’ compensation
conducted by The Chronicle of
Philanthropy showed that the national presidents
of the well-known nonprofits listed above
earn more than $300,000 per year.2
Another study found that the annual median
salary of public relations directors for local nonprofits
was about $50,500 in 2004.3 It is therefore
difficult to understand why more
nonprofits cannot pay student interns at least
minimum wage.
A few additional points regarding public relations
internships at nonprofits should be made.
Nonprofits that are volunteer-staffed with revenues
of less than $100,000 are unlikely to have
an employee with expertise in public relations
or communication who would be a suitable intern
supervisor. Academic credit should not be
granted for such experiences.
A valuable resource for educators is the
GuideStar Web site (www.guidestar.org), which
provides annual revenue, number of employees
and other information about specific nonprofits.
The Chronicle of Philanthropy’s Web site
(www.philanthropy.com) also is useful for educators
and nonprofit practitioners desiring to
make a case for paying interns who want to
work at nonprofits.
Many educators and practitioners argue that
payment for work increases the professionalism
of the internship experience and rightfully recognizes
returned value to the organization.
Some educators who responded to the survey
believe that public relations firms using unpaid
interns to acquire and maintain clients are contributing
unethically to their bottom line.
A May 2006 Op-Ed piece in The New York
Times, titled “Take This Internship and Shove
It,” simply stated, “Unpaid internships are not
jobs, only simulations. And fake jobs are not
the best preparation for real jobs.” The author
cited several studies relevant to this discussion,
including a 1998 survey of employers by the
Institute on Education and the Economy at
Columbia University’s Teachers College, which
found that “compared to unpaid internships,
paid placements are strongest on all measures
of internship quality. The quality measures are
also higher for those firms who intend to hire
their interns.”4
Regardless of opinions and studies, one basic
principle of the marketplace should be kept in
mind: Students almost always select the organizations
to which they apply for internships, and
organizations offering pay will attract the best
candidates.
Results of the internship survey also indicate
that availability of public relations internships
is not a problem. Participants were asked to
rate the availability of public relations internships
for their students on a scale from 1 to 10,
with 1 representing “way too few” and 10 representing
“more than we can fill.” The resulting
mean score was 6.88, meaning that, on average,
internship opportunities meet and slightly
surpass the number needed.
Although more internships in general are not
needed, students would benefit from an increased
number of internships with certain
types of organizations. At the top of the list for
survey respondents were more internships with
companies and corporations, followed by public
relations firms and government agencies.
PRSSA faculty advisers reported that typically
only about two-thirds of the internships currently
available to their students are “high quality.”
When asked to name the one factor they
believe is most important to making an internship
high- quality, the overwhelming plurality
focused on the internship supervisor and his or
her availability, expertise and working relationship
with the student.
Ranking second as a quality factor was students
being given meaningful assignments and not
being treated primarily as clerical workers.
The importance of the faculty supervisor’s communicating
often and openly with internship
sponsors was underscored by the study’s finding
that internship coordinators generally have
limited contact with students during their internships.
The majority reported that the person
coordinating public relations internships
for academic credit in their programs has formal
contact with the student only about once a
month or even less frequently.
2006 Recommendations
- The Commission recommends that sponsoring
organizations of all types—companies,
firms, government agencies and nonprofits—
pay public relations students for internships.
- The Commission recommends that academic
credit for internships be reserved for workplace
experiences that include an on-site supervisor
knowledgeable in public relations.
- The Commission strongly recommends that
organizations, regardless of type, assign students
to supervisors who will routinely and
clearly instruct students and evaluate their
performance.
- The Commission recommends that educators make concerted efforts to communicate
with practitioners—in person, by phone
and/or by e-mail—to candidly discuss needs
and expectations of public relations interns.
- The Commission recommends that public relations
faculty have a high degree of quality
control in the administration of internships
for public relations students.
- The Commission recommends that, when
faculty hold primary responsibility for coordinating
internships, the work be credited as
part of the faculty member’s normal teaching
load.
- The Commission recommends that, when
faculty hold primary responsibility for coordinating
internships, one instructor be assigned
for every 30 students taking internships for
academic credit during a term.
- The Commission recommends that individual
public relations educators and associations
to which they belong conduct in-depth
research to determine best practices in public
relations internships.
It is hoped that research findings presented
here and recommendations by the Commission
will assist public relations educators and practitioners
in their efforts to offer high-quality internships
for their students. Doing so will
benefit the public relations profession now and
in the future.
Notes
1 [Blum, Debra E. (2005, October 13). Female charity executives win big increase in pay.
The Chronicle of Philanthropy. Retrieved September 12, 2006, from http://www.philanthropy.com/premium/articles/v18/i01/01003501.htm]
2 [Executive compensation survey. (2005, September 29). The Chronicle of Philanthropy.
Retrieved September 12, 2006, from http://www.philanthropy.com/premium/stats/salary/]
3 [Langer, Steven. (2004). Compensation in nonprofit organizations (17th ed.). Crete, IL: Abbott,
Langer & Associates.]
4 [Kamenetz, Anya. (2006, May 30). Take this internship and shove it. The New York Times,
p. A19.]
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