Ben Yagoda commentary on unpaid internships from The Chronicle Review
Professor Yagoda's thoughts, here reprinted from The Chronicle Review, are indeed timely. ELW
By BEN YAGODA
Thanks to a skewed reading of a well-meaning but misguided federal
statute, a dozen students of mine will have to needlessly cough up
$2,300 each this summer for the privilege of working without pay.
Everyone knows that internships are important for college students'
eventual success in the job market. It is also the case that in certain
areas — politics, entertainment, broadcast, nonprofit institutions, and
my field, journalism — unpaid internships are the rule. (The Chronicle, at which some of my students have had the good fortune to work as interns, is one of the laudable exceptions.)
That's all well and good, except that it reinforces the divide
between "haves" and "have-nots" among undergraduates. The rich kids
take the internships and improve their prospects. Their less-well-off
peers, who simply can't afford to, end up busing tables for the summer
and graduate with significantly skimpier résumés.
In an effort to bridge the divide, a flurry of elite colleges, including Harvard, Yale, Penn,
Dartmouth, and Swarthmore, have in recent months announced sharp
increases in need-based financial aid, replacing loans with grants and
making aid available to students whose families are solidly in the
middle class. In addition, a number of colleges have started making
some stipend or fellowship money available to students who take unpaid
internships.
But those who are helped by any of these measures amount to a small
minority of the college population. At my university, the University of
Delaware, which if anything is better endowed than most, there is no
new influx of money for financial aid and none at all for unpaid
internships. The journalism program, on its own, has started
accumulating some dollars to help out interns, and last year, for the
first time, offered a fairly pitiful $1,500 to one of them. That left
about 20 journalism students who worked at internships with zero
compensation.
It gets worse. In the past half-dozen years or so, more and more
employers have insisted that students receive academic credit for
unpaid internships. At this point, it's almost universally required. So
the intern not only has to give up a paycheck, but also pay tuition for
a three-credit summer-session class. On my campus, that amounts to
$2,325, as of this summer, for most students. (In-state residents, who
make up about 40 percent of the student body, will pay $918 starting
this summer.) Needless to say, such a price tag is a deal-breaker for
some students and their families. As a result, the divide is widened.
A few years ago, when the credit requirement started to get popular,
I — as a faculty member who had to approve, supervise, and grade the
internship-for-credit course — asked a few employers the reason for the
requirement. I never got a detailed answer, only vague mentions of
lawyers and liability, and, once in a while, a suggestion that students
would be "exploited" if they worked without any kind of return on their
labor. I would always stifle my snort. After all, I depended on these
people to take on my kids.
Instead, my colleagues and I tried to game the system. For example,
if students lived in an area where a public or community college
offered an internship or "life experience" course and cheaper tuition,
we told them to enroll there and transfer the credits back to Delaware.
We also gave them the option of signing up for their credits in the
fall semester, even though the internship was in the summer. That way
it would be covered under their regular tuition bill, with no need to
spring for an extra big-ticket item.
That particular game is now officially up. Recently word came down
from administrators at my university that henceforth, students seeking
credit for internships must enroll in the same semester when they do
the work.
That depressing news led me to undertake some actual journalism and
look for the real cause of the credit-requirement trend. I got an
answer courtesy of an outfit called University of Dreams, which will
place you in a summer internship in a glamorous industry of your choice
in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, London, or one of a half-dozen
other cities; put you up in a local college dorm; give you breakfast
and dinner; and, if you attend four 90-minute seminars with your fellow
interns and write a three-page, double-spaced paper on your experience,
arrange for you to get one unit of credit from California's Menlo
College. The price for these services ranges from $5,000 to $9,000, and
thus the divide becomes a gorge.
On its Web site, University of Dreams explains why the Menlo College
credit is important: "The Minimum Wage Law requires all college
students to receive academic credit if they are going to work in a
nonpaid internship."
As I found when I did some additional checking, the real origin of
employers' credit requirement is an opinion letter that the Department
of Labor sends to employers who inquire about the issue. Interestingly,
the letter mentions no requirement of any official academic connection
with the internship. (The State of California, by contrast, does
require that internships "be an essential part of an established course
of an accredited school.") The labor department's letter casts
internships as "training" and says that to be excused from the normal
labor laws, including paying workers for their work, a program must
satisfy six conditions, notably: "The training is similar to what would
be given in a vocational school or academic educational instruction";
"The training is for the benefit of the trainees or students"; and "The
employer that provides the training derives no immediate advantage from
the activities of the trainees or students."
Pretty much every unpaid internship I'm aware of has violated one,
two, or all three of those conditions, especially the first (what's the
point of an internship if it's similar to what you'd do in class?) and
third (an intern writing two front-page stories a week would seem
pretty advantageous from a newspaper's point of view). But my research
turned up only one company that's ever been busted. In 1995 the
government fined A. Brown-Olmstead Associates, an Atlanta-based
public-relations firm, $31,520 because it had billed clients for work
done by unpaid interns.
That, of course, had nothing to do with academic credit or lack of
it. Rather, it was a clear instance of gaining "immediate advantage,"
along the lines of having a beach-club intern hawk Fudgsicles in the
sand and hand over the proceeds at the end of the day. But I can
imagine how lawyers for intern-hiring businesses responded to the
Brown-Olmstead judgment. Internships are almost never "similar" to what
students would learn in school — nor should they be — but lawyers
figured out that tying them to an actual college course would help make
that argument if the feds ever complained. Managers usually do what
lawyers recommend, if only to get them out of the office, and thus
their suggestions became policy.
That still leaves me with the question of how to proceed. One option
would be to follow the lead of another college, a staff member of which
I spoke to on condition of anonymity. This person said that when a
company demands a statement that a student will receive credit for an
internship, the college simply sends such a letter, but doesn't give
the credit. No one has complained yet.
But mendacity in the name of education doesn't seem ideal. How about
a modest amendment to U.S. law, so that it's clear that college
students can choose to accept unpaid internships of any stripe? Some of
them will be fooled into signing on for valueless scut work, no doubt.
But most of the students I know are savvy enough to tell the winners
from the clinkers. And all of them would welcome a slightly smaller
tuition bill.
Ben Yagoda is a professor of English at the University of Delaware and author, most recently, of When You Catch an Adjective, Kill It: The Parts of Speech, for Better and/or Worse (Broadway Books, 2007).