Internship program wins national award
The Political Science Department's internship coordinator, Paul Plavcan, each year sends 20 to 25 interns to Washington, D.C. to work for government agencies, congressional offices, the executive branch, and nonprofit organizations.
That level of support for experiential education and the careful screening and monitoring of interns by the University has earned UConn the 2006 Public University of the Year Award from The Washington Center for Internships and Academic Seminars, a nonprofit educational organization serving hundreds of colleges around the world.
Many of UConn's Washington placements are made through the Center, which cited Plavcan's "wholehearted commitment to ensure access of qualified students to this significant life-changing opportunity."
Plavcan said he looks for internship opportunities where the work is substantive, allowing students to work on such things as policy issues or court casework. Sixty to seventy percent of the Washington interns are offered future employment or are asked to contact their internship provider when they look for work, he said.
The political science internship program places 150 to 175 interns a year, including the Washington program. This semester, 35 interns are working for the General Assembly in Hartford. Others work in the Connecticut judiciary and the criminal justice system.
Plavcan, a Ph.D. student in American politics and political theory, said the interns themselves are the ones who make the program work.
"I can help them get there. Once they get there, it's up to them to take advantage of the opportunities," he said.
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