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The Role of Social Network Ties and Relationships During the Internship Assignment Phil Gardner Michigan State University Portions previously presented.

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Presentation on theme: "The Role of Social Network Ties and Relationships During the Internship Assignment Phil Gardner Michigan State University Portions previously presented."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Role of Social Network Ties and Relationships During the Internship Assignment Phil Gardner Michigan State University Portions previously presented at WACE’s 10 th International Symposium University West Trollhattan, Sweden

2 Overview Experience --- the gatekeeper to labor market More is better --- in larger chunks Focus on boundary spanning skills & competencies

3 Challenge The “First Job” New Demographics: – Passing Time – Pedigree – Entrepreneurers Employability: Teichler – University of Kassel – Do not know what fosters employability skills – Lag effects are likely New Professional: Expand Inquiry – Refocus on emerging domains – Experienced required but how much

4 The Real Question of Inquiry How does the growth of social capital during the internship or co-op: – Contribute to successful transition to workplace – Foundation for early career success First step: – Focus on the role of social capital during the internship assignment

5 Task Mastery Social Integration Team Integration Learning (broad) Social Capital – Weak Ties: Career network – Strong Ties: Supervisor, Mentor, Known in organization Starting Points: Newcomer and Early Socialization Theories

6 Basic Model SI TI LI CN KO SPI M SPE Mastery Satisfaction

7 Study Parameters Sample Large Convenience sample drawn from over 200 US schools – current college students Administration One time solicitation through Career Services Partner – so question space limited

8 Study Parameters Sample Characteristics 8,900 with 80% in internships 65% Women 73% Caucasian 20% Business 62% GPA 3.35 or higher 62% Family Income $80,000 or less

9 Basic Measures Social Networks Career Network: 14 average Composed of – Peers on campus (5), Faculty/Advisor (2.5), Family (2.6), Relatives/Acquaint. (2.6) Know in organization: 1/3 knew someone with 90% only knowing one person Tended to be someone with 7 to 20 years with the organization

10 Basic Measures Mentor More likely to be a young professional Supervisor Experienced professional or management Interpersonal Interactions External Interactions Scale Metrics

11 FIRST MODEL (WITH MASTERY)

12 First Step: Supervisor/Mentor Influences SE SI M TI LI + + + + + + + + +

13 2nd Step: Weak Network SE SI M TI IL + + + + + + + + + CN KO + + +

14 3rd: Mastery SI TI IL TASK MASTERY Et Sr

15 Final: Satisfaction SITIIL TASK MASTERY Et GP A Satisfaction - SEMSI G CN KO -

16 Gender – What’s with it with men? – Women seek out faculty more in career advice – Women less likely to have management as supervisor – Women more likely to have less experienced mentor Ethnicity – Non-whites have fewer classmates in their network; also fewer family are involved – Non-whites less likely to have managers as supervisors – Advantages – are they permanent GPA – Tim Judge’s work – Family Income – No statistical impact (yet) Additional Variables

17 Characteristics of the Internship Credit vs no-credit – No statistical differences (at this time) Paid vs unpaid – Paid are more satisfied with experience Length – Longer experience more satisfied Part or Full time – Part-time (20 hrs or less) more satisfied

18 Alternative Model Control variables that are used in all models. – Paid versus unpaid – Credit versus no-credit – Internship length – Internship Status – Gender – Race

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20 Serial mediation models: Supervisory support  learning  satisfaction  accept offer Indirect effects.0032 (significant) Supervisory support  team integration  satisfaction  accept offer Indirect effects.0005 (not significant) Supervisory support  social integration  satisfaction  accept offer Indirect effects -.0002 (not significant) Supervisory support  satisfaction  accept offer Indirect effects.021 (significant)

21 Mentor Moderation

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23 Control variables that are used in all models. – Paid versus unpaid – Credit versus no-credit – Internship length – Internship Status

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25 Main effects of social capital on outcomes: Social capital  satisfaction =.000 (not significant) Social capital  job offer =.010 (not significant) Social capital  supervisory support =.014 (significant) Social capital  mentorship status =.026 (significant) Main effects of race/ethnicity and gender on outcomes Race/Ethnicity  satisfaction = -.018 (not significant)  job offer = -.337 (significant)  supervisory support = -.106 (significant)  mentorship status =.03 (not significant)

26 Gender  satisfaction =.006 (not significant)  job offer =.501 (significant)  supervisory support = -.011 (not significant)  mentorship status = -.126 (not significant)

27 Implications Ethnicity: Passing Time Gender: Do men gain more simply doing it and ignoring all the breadth stuff – or does it catch up with them Supervisor – always the key Mentors – should not be forgotten Social capital – both strong and weak – play key roles

28 Shift Gears: Future Administrative Clarity: rise of “big data” Boundary Spanning & Length Story Telling: need for integration New frontiers (i.e.) – Teams – Reverse education and experiential education (the context more important than the content)

29 Questions


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