UCS hires student liaisons
UCS hires student liaisons
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Students seeking career advice will no longer have to make the long trek to Undergraduate Career Services.
Instead, a student liaison in each college will go over resumes, suggest internships and perform many of the same tasks that UCS counselors currently handle. Yale College Council Treasurer and YCC-UCS Committee chairman Brandon Levin ’13 devised the program, to be unveiled Wednesday, in an effort to bring UCS’s underutilized services closer to campus.
“Essentially what we’re doing is training students from each college to solve the biggest problem for UCS, which is one of accessibility, because few students make the time to go down to UCS,” Levin said.
UCS will train the 12 students hired for this position extensively, Levin said, and they will report to a new UCS Residential College Advisory Board, comprising top UCS employees, Levin and several college deans.
Dean of International and Professional Experience Jane Edwards agreed that students do not take advantage of her office’s programs because its Whitney Avenue location is inconvenient, and said she believes this program, which she designed with Levin this fall, could improve the situation. She added that the program represents an important change in UCS’s relationship with the student body.
“Obviously there is no point in running wonderful programs if no one is using them, so the question is how to fix this,” she said. “[This program] is certainly emblematic of a change in the way that UCS hopes to work with students.”
Five students interviewed said they have struggled to take advantage of UCS.
David Yu ’13 attributed the problem to the location.
“I haven’t had any trouble with it, besides it being located in, like, outer Mongolia,” he said.
But four other students said they had also encountered problems booking appointments because the office has a shortage of career counselors.
Former pre-med student Emmy Pickett ’12 said bringing advisers to the colleges could improve the UCS experience.
“It was way too overcrowded, the staff seemed sort of distant and the people didn’t really seem to get involved,” she said. “If they were involved in the residential colleges, it could be a little more personal.”
Although the structure of the program is laid out, the details are still in the works, UCS Assistant Director Melissa Berkey said. She said she expects more concrete specifics to be available closer to the end of the month.
For now, the program is recruiting student employees, who will be able to apply for the job when Levin and the YCC send out an e-mail Wednesday.
Deputy Director of UCS Elayne Mazzarella said she thinks this program has the potential to restructure relations between students and UCS in the long run.
“We feel that this initiative will be an excellent way to ensure that the services offered by UCS are more fully understood and utilized by students, and that we in UCS may develop a better understanding of how we can help students use our resources and engage in effective and independent planning for their careers and summer activities,” she said.
The application deadline for the job will be midnight on Feb. 6.
Correction: February 1, 2011
An earlier version of this story misspelled Elayne Mazzarella's name. Additionally, Dean Jane Edwards was incorrectly referred to as UCS director; she is the Dean of International and Professional Experience.


Comments
yaleretiree 1 year, 3 months ago
Dean Edwards's announcement of the pending appointment of UCS student liaison counselors in the residential colleges is hardly a new approach to the continuing underlying problems at UCS. Indeed, it is simply an enhancement of a pilot program that was instituted by Phil Jones, former UCS Director, in 2003 in which student liaisons were hired and spent several evenings each week in, if memory serves me correctly, three of the residential colleges. Unfortunately, students failed to use this service despite the fact that it was widely publicized, including an article that year in the YDN. Eventually, the student liaison program was phased out. Dean Edwards' approach is simply "more of the same old, same old" or what many would term "reinventing the wheel." Since UCS was moved to 55 Whitney from 1 Hillhouse in 2001, students have continued to complain that the office is located in "outer Mongolia" and that the number of professionally trained career counselors is inadequate for the size of the undergraduate population. This continues to cause two very basic problems: long waiting periods for appointments, especially at certain times of the year; and the inability to develop an on-going relationship with an individual advisor since the counselor-to-student ratio is unrealistic and thus unworkable. If Dean Edwards is truly serious about addressing student concerns, then she would seek to relocate UCS to a more central location on campus and to restructure her budget to hire additional full-time counselors who have the practical training and education required in master's level degree programs in career counseling. Training Yale students to work part-time as UCS career assistants when the stated need of the student body is for additional professional counselors does not address the basic problem of easy accessibility to appropriately trained full-time UCS counselors.
Jaymin Patel 1 year, 3 months ago
In all honesty, I'd feel more comfortable discussing my resume with a trained professional who's been doing it for years, rather than a peer.
y_07 1 year, 3 months ago
The real problem with UCS is that they know how to steer undergrads into law school, med school, investment banking and consulting. And that's it. If you don't want to do those things, good luck getting UCS to help you.
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