By: Sean Wells
“My Internship: Learning What Can’t Be Taught”
Internship: PA Office of the Attorney General: Bureau of Consumer Protection
Sometimes we are forced to choose between something right and wrong. It may be as simple as choosing chocolate or vanilla ice cream at the creamery. It may be as difficult as switching into a new major. These life challenges aren’t going to end after college. Since graduating I learned that decisions in life only get harder. Yet, what about when we make a wrong decision? I don’t know about you but I hate the feeling of self-pity. I hate dwelling or thinking I made a mistake. I’m referring to internship or co-op you really aren’t interested in. Maybe you just don’t think it’s for you. For those of you in the same bandwagon as me, I challenge you to learn from this experience or “so-called mistake”. You may even find you enjoy it or perhaps what hopefully will happen is you learn something that can’t be taught.
Senior year, I chose to find an internship where I could apply what I learned in school out in the field. I was determined to make the right decision in finding a suitable internship that would open up prospective jobs after graduation. As a criminology student in the College of the Liberal Arts I had every resource available to find this perfectly laid out internship. I must’ve applied to two-dozen organizations only to be turned down one by one. Today I like to argue they just received way too many applicants and my name was shuffled off the list. Let’s be honest, it was because I didn’t have what everyone else had. The one key thing I was missing was a little thing called “experience”. My major heavily relies on field-work in the human service industry. They aren’t just going to let any hotshot walk into a correctional facility or government office and arrest someone. It required more than what I could afford as a full-time student working two jobs at sixty hours a week since freshman year. Yet, let’s not start the self-pity trail again. I was still determined my internship was out there and I wasn’t going to screw this up. It wasn’t until a month before Fall classes I received a call from the AG’s office for an interview. For those who don’t know, the Attorney General’s office aids in investigative and consumer related issues for the State of PA and beyond. Next came the interview process where they referred to me as a “shoe-in”. I had two roads to chose from. The first and most obvious was to take the job and just run with it. The second, was to move onto the next internship that appeared in the Simplicity Internship Networks website. A month later I found myself walking into a government office that would change me forever. While this is a dramatic way of putting it I truly was way to naïve before accepting this internship. I had no idea what the internship would entail or how it would re-shape me as a future Penn State Grad. As an intern I mediated business and consumer complaints day after day until someone either hung up on me or agreed to come to a resolution. I worked with contractors, credit card companies, cable operators, police departments, landlords, and of course the beloved consumers who wrote a complaint. And yet, while most of the time I was just helping people with their daily problems, hearing my rational on issues deemed to be remarkable to them. I became an expert on getting people to come to terms with the opposing parties issue. I found out how to communicate with the most difficult people. But it wasn’t until after this experience that I realized I would’ve never been capable of working with my degree if I wasn’t granted this experience.
My argument is this; Penn State taught me so much inside and outside of the classroom. But, in order to truly make a difference in the world, or to learn what can’t be taught out of a textbook you have to do one thing…experience something outside of your comfort level. Seriously. Take a chance to explore something new. You may just love it or ultimately figure it’s not for you. But you won’t know unless you try it and that’s what I gained through this so-called mistake.

I did it! Graduation came so fast and I would have never expected to be where I am today. My internship played a huge role in helping me on my path to self identity. The strengths and abilities I possess truly showed as I interned for a wonderful organization that helps so many people every day.