Executive Director of Student Transitions and Family Engagement, Tamusa

The new adviser for Career Services will be located at Brooks Campus and the Director of Career Services volition be located at Master Campus in Room 362. Students interested in receiving advising for current resumes and cover letters can contact Jo Anna Benavides-Franke, assistant vice president for student engagement and success, by email Jabenavi@tamusa.tamus.edu or phone, (210) 784-1371. Photo past Rossi Ramirez

By Rebecca Salinas

Career Services will add ii new employees in the coming weeks. The director of career services will oversee the 24-hour interval-to-day operations of Career Services, maintain the academy'south on-campus job portal "Jaguar Jobs" and communicate with employers. An adviser will as well join the team to host workshops and assist the director.

The director will have office Dec. ii, but the academy has not hired the adviser, said Joanna Benavidez-Franke, assistant vice president for student engagement and success.

Both the adviser and the director'south job responsibilities volition include reviewing students' resumes and cover letters. The director volition be located in Room 362 of the Principal Campus Building and the adviser will be located at Brooks City-Base Campus.

In the interim, Benavidez-Franke is fulfilling the duties of both positions by reviewing student resumes on a weekly basis. Resumes are routed to Franke past electronic mail or through Jaguar Jobs applications.

Student engagement oversees Career Services, which is all nether Student Affairs.

Student Affairs employed one full-fourth dimension staff fellow member in Career Services, who split time betwixt Main Campus and Brooks Campus, until the post was vacated.

Career Services has been vacant since career adviser Bennett Greyness left the university near two months ago.

Meanwhile, until the managing director takes office, students have a number of off-campus resources to provide boosted support.

Some students interviewed said they did not know the university had career services, or they complete their resumes themselves without help.

Business junior Katrina Reyna said, "I don't even know where to go (for career services) here."

She said she used the resume workshops at San Antonio College or ¡Adelante! U.S. Education Leadership Fund.

¡Adelante! is a programme established past Miller Brewing Visitor and the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities. The program was made to "address the epidemic of Hispanic drop-outs," according to its website.

¡Adelante!'s National Leadership Constitute is located in San Antonio, but they host regional workshops in Chicago, Denver, Miami and El Paso.

Jay Zambrano, executive manager of ¡Adelante!, said students tin can receive career guidance and resume reviews, but students must make an date due to restricted space.

In add-on, he suggested students should ask either family members or professionals to see what life course they took that led to getting a job.

Don't overlook family members and professionals equally potential sources who can aid review resumes and cover messages, he added.

Students, Zambrano recommended, should non only ask what process they went through to get a job, merely also inquire what they did right or wrong.

"Those answers are worth a lot of money," he said.

He said although students may feel nervous and overwhelmed, discussion well-nigh future goals helps shape a program.

Rodney Lewis, counseling and guidance senior, said he does not think enough students employ the services provided past the academy.

"I don't know why students wouldn't apply it," he said.

He said he did apply Greyness's services, only he too went to Workforce Solutions Alamo, a company that helps students and others with career services.

Lewis said to build his resumes, he goes online and looks at free templates as examples.

Benavidez-Franke as well suggested students become to Workforce Solutions.

According to workforcesolutionsalamo.org, Workforce Solutions has Career Centers that provide career counseling, job matching and referral, resume writing workshops, and task application workshops.

Services are complimentary, open to the public with no appointment needed.

Workforce Solutions has five local career centers. The closest center available to students enrolled at Texas A&M-San Antonio is  located at 6723 Southward. Flores St., Suite 100., approximately 7 miles from the Brooks Campus and 10 miles from Principal Campus.

Eleven full service centers are also located in cities exterior San Antonio, including Pearsall, New Braunfels, Seguin, Floresville and Hondo.

A list of centers is available at http://workforcesolutionsalamo.org/center/all.asp.

For students who take classes at one of the Alamo Colleges, each has their own Career Services department.

Students who attend Palo Alto College tin can become to their Center for Academic Transition, Room 101 of the college student centre, to receive ane-on-1 services.

Arianna Lay, director of the center for bookish transition, said the department offers resume and cover letter reviews, career matching and interview preparation.

Lay said students tin walk-in without an appointment, only if a student expects to spend more thirty minutes with an adviser, they should consider making an appointment.

She added students need to bring their Banner ID.

Cafécollege, which is funded by the city of San Antonio, also offers career assessments and career exploration. Its services are managed and directed by the San Antonio Instruction Partnership.

Located at 131 El Paso St., Cafécollege is about 9 miles from Brooks Campus and 10 miles from Principal Campus.

Career Adviser Jennifer McDaniels said advisers tin can give feedback on resumes and cover letters.

Students tin also go to the center to use an online programme called Choices Planner, which is a resume builder, she said.

She said appointments are not required, and the services are free.

About the Author

Rebecca Salinas

Rebecca Salinas is a Comunidad/Cultura Editor for The Mesquite. Rebecca attended San Antonio College, where she received her A.A. in Journalism. At SAC, she served equally Managing Editor and Editor at The Ranger, the laurels winning newspaper founded in 1926. Rebecca graduated from Somerset High School in Somerset in 2010, where she took journalism courses. She has a passion for rural bug, such as Eagle Ford Shale, which she hopes to study on after graduation.

rofewhemere.blogspot.com

Source: https://mesquite-news.com/career-services-expand-following-staff-vacancy/

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