Conducting a job search without professional guidance can be both intimidating and stressful. Students and graduates who establish a relationship with career service offices have deeper and more meaningful conversations about their professional goals and how to achieve them. These conversations are core to the full student experience and equally important to graduate success and career readiness as the curriculum. Comprehensive services offered by these offices can enable students to plan and navigate their career path, make self-assessments, identify sought-after attributes, and take inventory of their relevant skillset and background experience.
Landing a good job and having a meaningful career are critical factors in any decision a student makes to enroll in college. While most career advisors may not have positions at the ready to put graduates into, they do have the ability to help graduates identify skills and contacts necessary to get hired. Too often, I find that graduates misunderstand the relationship. A career services office should not be seen as an entity exclusively responsible for a positive employment outcome, but it can provide numerous resources to ensure graduate success.
Here is why you should take advantage of your college career center:
Career service offices offer many resources to aid with professional development. Become involved, and actively participate. Be proactive in reaching out, and then stay in touch! Education is the first step to finding professional success. The steps that follow are equally important.
Personalized career services at Center for Advanced Legal Studies are available to assist student alumni in their pursuit of a paralegal position. We can help you advance in the profession! Contact us today at paralegal.edu to learn more about our resources, accredited paralegal programs, and class start dates.
Tami Riggs Director of Outreach and Career Services Tami has an extensive and varied professional background that spans criminal justice, paralegal education, and international school marketing and communication. Her career has been guided by a focus on developing strategic partnerships that facilitate school growth and student opportunity. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Criminal Justice from Texas State University. |