No more interns, please

Current internship culture needs to be replaced with a more structured one.


Ahmed Fuad October 15, 2012
No more interns, please

LAHORE:


“Wasted talent is almost a proverb”, they say; it holds true for Pakistani business students. This is so because Pakistani industry is quite unpredictable. Employers do not know who to hire, and employees do not know who to approach. In the confusion, both end up being prevented from achieving their true potential, discouraged by the firm belief that nepotism and incompetency are inherent in the system.


The problem lies with the irresponsible academia, the indifferent industry and the disconnected-from-all government. Business schools are supposed to teach what the industry requires, or at least trends in modern business; yet, they keep sticking to outdated techniques. Their teachers live in disconnect with actuality: they are not connected to successful entrepreneurs of the local industry, or flourishing multinational organisations.

Business schools need to take successful professionals, entrepreneurs and organisations on board. For business students, spending time under their supervision should form part of the coursework. Students should be sent for obligatory hands-on experience in a field of their interest. Teachers should make sure that students are given a structured plan in this regard, for which they submit a detailed report when they return.

On the other hand, organisations needlessly limit their personnel needs to experienced individuals and usually lack a structured system to groom fresh business graduates. They need to start regarding interns as potential employees, or at least individuals who can contribute to their respective organisations. They are new to the organisation, with fresh ideas and an ambition to improve the system. These ideas can be listened to, worked on, and executed – if needed, with necessary alterations. Interns should be encouraged to criticise the existing system, and speak for what they think is right. This practice will help interns become professionals, while improving products, systems and the internal culture of organisations.

The government also needs to step in and make sure that every business school has an understanding with business entities to hire a specific number of interns, provide them the opportunity to exercise their skills in their respective departments, and submit a report of their experience to the government, the organisation they work for, and their schools.

This should form an evaluation mechanism that can gauge the productivity of both business schools and organisations. Pakistan needs to move on this path if it wishes to tweak its human resource potential. The internship culture employed today only wastes time and efforts, and should be immediately done away with.

The writer is a training specialist at Mobilink Pakistan

Published in The Express Tribune, October 15th, 2012.

COMMENTS (14)

Sameen Zaki | 12 years ago | Reply

hmm... the topic of this article made me inquisitive to read it on the first priority but I am sad to know the views of the writer. I disagree with,not all, but much of it. Internships are important - yes very important. The point is, they should be well designed. I think the articles should be written on the content and JDs of the internships rather than what this article says. I agree with many of the comments as mentioned above. Internships do help students, we can and have to think more on what and how they should be launched or administered and how they an benefit students.

Amna | 12 years ago | Reply

With all the importance of Internships as course requirement of a programme, when a fresh student with internship experience goes for a job, his internship experience is denied and he is regarded as totally unaware. Not only at this stage but whenever in one's lifetime, he does internships, they don't benefit him at all. Why is this so?

VIEW MORE COMMENTS
Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ