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Internships
Anthropology 93, Internship in Anthropology, provides you as an anthropology
student with the opportunity to engage in internships within or beyond
the University which have a significant anthropological learning component.
An internship related to anthropology can be a very rewarding experience.
An internship with an anthropological component can be a rich and challenging
opportunity for you to engage in "hands-on" learning in anthropology,
allowing you to apply and extend your anthropological knowledge. Particularly
when such an internship is in an agency with a demonstrable anthropological
objective, e.g. the Smithsonian Institution, it may have direct bearing
on a future career in practicing or academic anthropology (see the section
Advice on Career Tracks). Internships in an agency without specific objectives
in anthropology may also be potentially valuable in learning more about
"practicing anthropology" -- indeed, it may help you to think
originally about how you might practice anthropology in a future career
(see the section Practicing Anthropology). In short, there are many good
intellectual reasons for doing an internship, and beside, a successful
one can be lots of fun!
Irrespective of the agency for whom you are planning to do an internship,
it is up to you to define the "anthropological component" of
the internship to the satisfaction of the Department faculty member sponsoring
your internship and of the Director of Undergraduate Studies. For advice,
see your advisor.
Variable credit may be obtained for this course, although usually you
register for 3 credit hours. Anthropology 93 is a "controlled enrollment"
course which you can't register for through CAROLINE. ANTH 93 requires
the permission in advance of (a) the Department faculty member sponsoring
the internship, (b) a responsible official of the agency in you intend
to do the internship, and (c) the Director of Undergraduate Studies, who
will register you for it.
It is essential that you make arrangements and secure permissions prior
to the semester of the internship!
OVERVIEW OF ANTHROPOLOGY 93 -- INTERNSHIP IN ANTHROPOLOGY
By its very nature, an internship involves a three-part arrangement between
you as a student, a faculty member with whom you will study for academic
credit, and some outside organization for which you agree to work for
several hours per week to further the goals of that organization. Thus,
you should think of yourself as a student forming one part of a three-part
contractual arrangement.
As such an internship arrangement must be both flexible and academically
rigorous. The following sections, "REQUIREMENTS FOR ANTHROPOLOGY
INTERNSHIP" and INTERNSHIP CONTRACT provide you with essential information
needed to initiate an internship arrangement, as well as required forms
that you will need to file with the Director of Undergraduate Studies
in order for your internship to be approved.
Please note the following important points:
You must secure approval in writing of an individual faculty member with
whom you wish to study, an official of the organization with which you
hope to serve, and the Director of Undergraduate Studies prior to the
beginning of your internship. Failure to do so can result in your being
denied academic credit for any work you carry out within an outside organization.
You must take independent initiative to set up your internship; this
will be your responsibility, not that of an individual faculty member,
nor of the Director of Undergraduate Studies of the Anthropology Department
-- although we may be able to provide guidance and advice in your quest.
If you need assistance finding an internship, you may begin by consulting
the resources that are available through University Career Services, 211
Hanes Hall. UCS has a full-time Internship Coordinator, Jacqui Cook (962-6507),
who is an excellent source of information and assistance. Information
on more than 2,000 internships in this country and abroad, including over
250 internships in the Triangle area, is available on the Internship Finder
database in the UCS Library and through the UCS homepage. Announcements
of internship opportunities are also circulated through the Anthropology
Major's email list to which all students can subscribe (to subscribe,
send email to vsprague@email.unc.edu). However, the Director of Undergraduate
Studies is available to provide assistance and information.
Generally, for academic credit you will need to keep a journal of work
done for the outside organization and your reflections on its anthropological
significance, and you will need to complete a course paper of the length
specified by your faculty supervisor.
Your faculty supervisor will set with you a deadline by which he or she
will need to receive both your journal and your course paper from you,
for grading purposes. It is your responsibility to honor this deadline.
REQUIREMENTS FOR ANTHROPOLOGY INTERNSHIP
1. Purpose of Anthropology 93 Internship The two purposes of the
internship are: a) to provide you as a UNC-CH student with the opportunity
to earn academic credit while obtaining appropriate, practical work experience,
demonstrably related to the study of anthropology; and b) to enable you
to develop the research basis necessary to write a high-quality research
or project paper on a topic related to your work as an intern at the agency
or organization. There are no prerequisites for the Anthropology 93 Internship,
and it is open to majors and non-majors alike.
2. Types of Internship Agencies or Organizations The work of the
sponsoring agency must be meaningfully connected to the study of anthropology.
It is your responsibility to find your own internship, and to make the
case that it has a significant anthropological component to your potential
faculty supervisor and to the Director of Undergraduate Studies.
3. Tasks of Interns at Agencies Although some routine administrative
tasks are required of any professional employee, we expect that the majority
of your work as an intern work will be directed towards the substantive
mission of the agency and that the tasks will be of a quality and nature
that will justify the award of academic credit to you. In an agency that
serves clients, for example, you asn an intern must have recurrent contacts
with the client population whose problems the agency is addressing. You
should make sure that your agency supervisor is informed explicitly of
these Departmental expectations.
4. Academic Credit and Limitations With respect to academic credit,
you are:
a) normally limited to a maximum of 3 hours of academic credit for an
Anthropology 93 Internship. Internships whose duration exceeds a single
semester or which involve an extended period of intensive work (e.g.,
international research or fieldwork) may count for up to a maximum of
6 hours of academic credit, depending upon the particular circumstances
of the experience.
b) limited to one Anthropology 93 Internship.
5. Your Faculty Supervisor Your faculty supervisor must be a member
of the Department of Anthropology. You are responsible for finding a faculty
supervisor who will work with you. (If you are at a complete loss, the
Director of Graduate Studies may be able to help.) Even if you find an
internship, you are not guaranteed a faculty sponsor. Therefore, you are
strongly advised to secure a faculty supervisor early.
6. Prior Approval of Internships Required You may not receive
credit for any Anthropology 93 Internship unless you obtain approval for
it before you begin the internship. Under no circumstances may you receive
credit for an internship in progress or completed before the internship
contract is signed.
7. Procedure for Prior Approval of Internships The procedure for
securing approval to undertake an internship for academic credit varies
slightly according to the time of year your internship is to occur:
a) Fall and Spring Semester Internships: If you will be working at an
internship during the fall or spring semester, you should arrange the
internship, obtain the faculty supervisor's approval, and sign the internship
contract during preregistration the semester prior to the internship.
However, in the event that this is not possible, you should complete and
return the internship contract to the Director of Undergraduate Studies
no later than the first week of classes. The internship contract must
be signed by all parties concenred and turned in to the Director of Undergraduate
Studies' Office before the first day of the internship.
b) Summer Internships: a summer internship will be considered for approval
only if you have obtained a faculty supervisor, completed arrangements
with the agency, and turned in the internship contract before your internship
starts. For summer internships, credit for Anthropology 93 is earned and
the research or project paper is completed during the fall semester following
the summer internship.
c) Summer School Credit Internships: A student may complete a summer
internship for summer session credit only if the student secures a faculty
sponsor who will be available to the student during that session. The
requirements for summer session internships are the same as for other
Anthropology 93 internships.
8. Internship Hours Requirement As an intern, you must work a
minimum of 8 hours per week at the internship placement, for a total minimum
of 100 hours per semester. This is the minimum number of hours. If you
miss hours one week, you are expected to make up these hours. These required
hours are roughly equivalent to the number of hours you would spend in
class and preparing for class during an ordinary course over a semester.
The same minimum number of hours are required for summer and summer school
session internships.
9. Research or Project Paper Requirement A high-quality research
paper or equivalent research task on a topic related to the internship
is generally expected of you as an intern. The length of the paper, the
date due, and the topic or project are to be determined by your faculty
supervisor and you in consultation.
10. Journal Requirement You are required to keep an internship
journal containing daily entries. These entries should set out your activities
at the internship that day; your impressions and perceptions of those
activities; reflections on how that day's work relates to your service
and learning objectives; and outline action that you plan to take at the
agency in the future based on what you learned that day. Bring your journal
with you when you meet with your faculty supervisor.
11. Internship Contract The internship contract sets out the Anthropology
93 requirements and the particular tasks and goals for your internship
as determined by you, the agency and your faculty supervisor. You must
obtain the contract forms from this Home Page (to download, go to INTERNSHIP
CONTRACT) or from the Undergraduate Secretary of the Department,
and you are responsible for taking the contract to the agency and faculty
supervisors for completion. You, your agency supervisor and your faculty
supervisor must all sign the contract. You must then return the contract
to the Director of Undergraduate Studies who approves and files it. You
must provide copies of the Contract to your faculty advisor and your agency
supervisor. The contract should be turned in no later than the end of
the first week of classes, and it must be signed and returned to all parties
before the first day of the internship.
12. Meetings with Your Faculty Supervisor You are required to
meet periodically with your faculty supervisor to discuss the research
or project paper, your progress in the internship, and any internship-related
problems. The number of meetings, times and dates are to be determined
by your faculty supervisor. If problems arise at the site of the internship,
you are required to contact the faculty supervisor immediately.
13. Review of Research Involving Human Subjects University policy
requires that research involving human subjects show due regard for the
protection of their individual privacy and welfare. When the learning
component of your internship entails research that might potentially infringe
upon the privacy, the rights, or the welfare of its participants (be they
agency clients or staff), you are required to file an Internal Processing
Form with the Department for review and submission to the Academic Affairs
Institutional Review Board. By way of example, such a procedure would
be necessary in the following situations:
a) when the topic of your internship research paper deals with information
which, if revealed, would potentially harm the agency or its clients;
b) when in the execution of internship duties related to your research,
you are exposed to information concerning particular instances of illegal
activity (e.g., domestic violence);
c) when, in the name of your research, you elicit information from agency
staff or clients which, because of the risk to their welfare that its
disclosure would entail, requires the obtention of informed consent and/or
the assurance of anonymity.
If there are any questions, you should speak with your faculty supervisor
immediately.
14. Evaluation The Director of Undergraduate Studies will provide
you with an evaluation sheet to give your agency supervisor. (The sheet
will specify the date by which it must be returned to the Director of
Undergraduate Studies.) The Director of Undergraduate Studies will give
the completed evaluation to your faculty supervisor to assist that person
in assigning a final grade to the student.
Your faculty supervisor is responsible for providing the grade to the
student and to the Department at the end of the semester. The faculty
supervisor determines what weight will be given to the student and agency
evaluations, the journal and the paper. These criteria and their relative
importance are to be made explicit to the student at the beginning of
the internship. The faculty supervisor's grade on the faculty grade form
will be your final grade.
STEPS FOR AN INTERNSHIP
1. Requirements: Before or during preregistration, obtain and
carefully read a copy of the Requirements for the Anthropology 93 Internship.
Copies of the previous section, "REQUIREMENTS FOR ANTHROPOLOGY INTERNSHIP"
can be downloaded, or are available from the Undergraduate Secretary,
Karen Dunn, in the Departmental office, Alumni Building, Room 301 (962-1243).
If you have questions or need assistance, see the Director of Undergraduate
Studies.
2. Find an Internship: Before or during preregistration, find
an internship and make tentative arrangements with that agency for you
to work there the following semester or summer.
3. Find a Faculty Supervisor: You need an anthropology faculty
supervisor for your internship. Set up an appointment with your potential
faculty supervisor to discuss the internship and the requirements. If
you need assistance in locating a faculty supervisor, contact the Director
of Undergraduate Studies.
4. Get the Right Forms: You need copies of the following: a)
an Anthropology 93 Internship Contract
b) the Agency Evaluation sheet, and c) the Release and Agreement
Statements. These forms can be downloaded from the INTERNSHIP
CONTRACT section of this Home Page, or obtained from the Undergraduate
Secretary in the Departmental office.
5. The Internship Contract: The completion of the internship contract
should be done in the following manner:
a) Take the Internship contract to the internship agency. Meet with the
agency supervisor and fill out the top section of the contract, including
the sections "Description of Agency" (Section I, B) and "Nature
of the Internship and Responsibilities" (Section III, A-F). Both
participants must sign the contract. At the same meeting, give the Agency
Evaluation Form to the agency supervisor.
b) Take the Internship Contract, signed by you and the agency supervisor,
to your faculty supervisor. Secure the faculty supervisor's final approval
of the internship as set out in the contract and obtain his/her signature.
c) Make three copies of the completed contract, to be distributed by
you as follows: original contract to the Director of Undergraduate Studies;
a copy for you; a copy to the agency supervisor; and a copy to the faculty
supervisor.
d) Take the completed original contract and the signed Release and Agreement
Statements to the Director of Undergraduate Studies. The originals, reviewed
and approved by the Director of Undergraduate Studies, remain in his/her
office.
6. Internal Processing Form for Research Involving Human Subjects:
When the learning component of the your internship entails research
that might potentially infringe upon the privacy, the rights or the welfare
of its participants (be they agency clients or staff), you are required
to file an Internal Processing Form with the Department for review and
submission to the Academic Affairs Institutional Review Board (AA-IRB).
The Form is available from the Director of Undergraduate Studies. If there
are any questions, you should speak with your faculty supervisor.
7. Permission to Add Form: Obtain a "Permission to Add"
form from the departmental office in order to register for Anthropology
93. You may not register for Anthropology 93 through CAROLINE; you can
only register through the department. Take the permission form to your
faculty supervisor for his or her signature. Take the signed form to the
Director of Undergraduate Studies, who will then register you for the
course.
8. Agency Evaluation: For internships completed during the fall
or spring semesters, a month before the internship is to end, remind the
agency supervisor of the Agency Evaluation Form. Ask your agency supervisor
to send the completed sheet to the Director of Undergraduate Studies before
the last week of class. For summer internships, the Agency Evaluation
Form should be completed and sent during the last week of the internship.
REMINDERS!
1. No credit is given for internships in progress or completed before
a contract is signed. The contract must be signed by all parties before
the first day of your internship.
2. Under normal circumstances, you can only get 3 hours of credit
for Anthropology 93, and you may only do one such internship.
3. Find an internship and faculty supervisor early - before or
during preregistration. If you wait longer than this, your chances of
getting either are greatly diminished. You are not guaranteed a faculty
supervisor just because you have located an acceptable internship.
4. Internships do not automatically qualify for academic credit; the
internship must have a hands-on work component and be meaningfully related
to the study of anthropology, as determined by your faculty advisor.
5. It is your responsibility to meet all of the deadlines and the
other Internship Contract provisions in order to receive credit.
6. If you have any problems at the internship, it is your responsibility
to speak with your faculty supervisor immediately. By way of example,
if you begin an internship and you find that the activities, duties or
supervision are not what you expected, contact your faculty supervisor
at once.
7. At the beginning of the internship, you should discuss with your
faculty supervisor the criteria which will determine your grade.
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