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HOW DO I FILL OUT MY APPLICATION MATERIALS TO SHOWCASE MY SKILLS?

In the pre-decision stage of your FIE Study and Internship Program application on MyStudyAbroad@FIE, you will be provided with links to our online MyInternship portal. It is important to thoroughly read our Realities of Working in London  section before completing your internship materials, and you must complete your internship materials before the FIE application deadline.

 

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ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS


Step 1: Read the Materials Carefully

Proper preparation is key to your success in your internship. Make sure you have carefully read about the Realities of Working in London and FIE Internship Areas so that you know what internships are typically available to students and so you can follow instructions closely. Your materials are your first opportunity to demonstrate your attitude and commitment to your Internship Mentor, who will be organizing your placement on your behalf. Make a good first impression! Your care and attention to detail will help your Mentor present you as a strong candidate for potential internships in London.


Step 2: Select your Three Internship Placement Choices

Special Note ArrowTake a look through all of the available Industry Areas and select three areas of interest with which you have had significant experience or that relate to your academic studies. Potential internship placements are looking for students with professional or academic experience in the given area, or at a minimum, a demonstrated passion and desire to learn. Make sure you can justify each of your choices.

 

      An example of an internship choice selection:

  1. Business & Entrepreneurship 
  2. Finance & Accountancy
  3. Communications & Journalism

 

        Here are two additional examples:

  1. Fashion, Beaty & Lifestyle – Beauty & Cosmetics
  2. Communications & Journalism 
  3. Business and Entrepreneurship – Start-ups & Entrepreneurial Companies
  1. Social Welfare & Non-Profit Organizations – Children's & Youth Initiatives
  2. Education – Educational Programs
  3. Public Health & Wellbeing

 

        The following would not be accepted:

First Second Third Industry Choices

  1. Entertainment & Performing Arts - Film, TV & Production
  2. Entertainment & Performing Arts - Theatre, Dance & Performing Arts
  3. Entertainment & Performing Arts - Promotion

 

  1. Entertainment & Performing Arts – Film, TV & Production
  2. Historical & Cultural Organizations – Community Arts Organizations
  3. Communications & Journalism – Marketing, Advertising & Public Relations

 


Step 3: Complete your online MyInternship Form

All students seeking internships must complete the online MyInternship Form. These questions ask you to define your objectives, career goals and expectations for your internship.

You should take the time to craft thoughtful responses to each question. You won’t have the opportunity to meet your Internship Mentor in person until you arrive in London, so this is your chance to really communicate who you are and what you hope to achieve to the person who will be working to translate your goals into the reality of your placement.

Your answers can also provide cues about your ability to follow instructions, your writing skills, and your attitude and commitment to the international internship experience. It is important for you to demonstrate you have carefully read and considered the Realities of Working in London guide – this will show your Mentor you are a strong candidate for a London internship.


Step 4: Write your CV (résumé)

 Special Note Arrow  You will upload your CV to the MyInternship online form. Your CV must be in Word Document format.

A Curriculum Vitae, or CV, (known in America as a résumé) is Latin and literally means “the course of one’s life or career.” Your CV is your all-important first impression on potential employers and should persuade an organization to interview you. You may think that because this is an unpaid experience that organizations are not concerned about who you are but are just looking for “an extra pair of hands.” This could not be further from the truth. Placement organizations are looking for hard-working, motivated young people to actively participate in their work. It costs valuable time to provide a placement for a student and most organizations receive many inquiries so they carefully select the students who they invite to join their team.

The information contained in your CV must be presented in a clear, concise manner. Take into consideration:

It is important that your CV is targeted to your intended reader – in this instance, a prospective employer and the FIE Internship Team. It must be accurate, up-to-date and interesting. The reader is looking for relevant information. It is always tempting to compose a chronological account of your life to date but this is not necessary; organizations appreciate you are a full-time student and so do not expect you to have an extensive work background. The content of your CV will consist of your education, relevant work experience, interests, skills, and placement objective. We recommend using the following sections to organize your CV.

It may take some time to create your CV, but this is the document that is going to secure your internship interview, so take the time to get it right. Ensure that someone proofreads your CV to check for any mistakes or typos before you submit it to FIE. Your campus Career Center may provide a service to help you develop your CV.

Take a look at these two samples of well-done CVs:

If you are struggling to craft your CV, why not use one of our templates (Kenneth, Corinne) – just type over with your own information! (Note that students are not required to use our template.)


Step 5: Write your Personal Statement

 Special Note Arrow  You will upload your Personal Statement to the MyInternship online form. Your Personal Statement must be in Word Document format.

A Personal Statement will accompany your CV and is designed to give the reader an insight into you, the type of person you are and your motivations and aspirations. It will introduce you and your CV to the reader long before they have the opportunity to meet you in person. Your personal statement is not an essay on why you want to come to London but rather has a specific focus on the international internship, your goals, and your flexible approach to all three of your industry choices.

Your statement should be one page in length with single spacing or maximum 1.5 spacing. Though you should not feel constrained, we recommend the following structure:

    1. You should start by focusing on your professional goals and how work experience in London will supplement them.
    2. Then, you should talk about your previous voluntary and professional experience and your academic studies, emphasizing what skills you could offer a professional employer.
    3. Your final paragraph should outline the industries you would like to work in as part of your placement in London, pertaining to your three industry choices.

Take a look at these two samples of well-done personal statements, crafted to match to previous CV examples:


Step 6: Additional Requirements for Certain Industry Choices

Additional Requirements for Certain Industries UPDATEDFor certain industry choices, you will need to provide additional documents.

The UK government requires that all people working with an ‘at risk’ population have a background check, and this includes interns. All Service Internship students and Internship students requesting education, public health, not-for-profit or legal and justice organizations as any of their three choices are required to bring a Police Check with them to London. Please click here for more information about getting a police check . It may take several weeks to get the checks, so make sure you start the process well in advance of your arrival as you will need to bring it physically with you to London.

If you listed politics as any of your three choices, you must write a short political paragraph stating with which party in British politics you identify most closely and why.  Please also indicate what political issues or policy areas you have a particular interest in. This should be typed into the relevant box on the MyInternship online application form.

If you listed communications & journalism as any of your three choices, you need to upload a writing sample(s) on your MyInternship online form. You don’t need to write something new, it can be something you have already written which best represents your writing skills and style. This document should demonstrate your ability to write clear, engaging text. For example, links to a blog, an article for a school newspaper, or a collection of social media postings for a specific campaign.

For those of you wishing to intern within applied creative arts, fashion design or graphic design, please include examples of your work to us that we can send on to potential placement sites. You can either provide a link to your online portfolio or upload digital photos or other electronic files.


 Can I organize my own internship?

In our experience, the typical foreign undergraduate student will not be successful at organizing an internship on their own which is compatible with the specific requirements of the academic program. Even where opportunities are advertised, the company may be unable or unwilling to comply with, for example, the specific dates you are available to work. This is one of the great benefits of studying with FIE – we will organize the internship for you!

However, if you already have a strong personal network of contacts, it may be possible to organize your own internship instead of having FIE arrange the placement for you. If you would like to organize your own internship, you’ll need to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. before you submit your application. We’ll be able to advise you if your university permits students to organize their own internships and what the requirements are. 

If your home university permits this option, you will be given further information about the requirements (for example, if the placement were to fall through, you’d be responsible for organizing an alternative for yourself) and a specific deadline for confirming the placement. The deadline will be well before your departure date as we must vet the placement, including a visit to the offices where you will be working, a process which can take several months to complete. Please note it is never possible for a student to arrive in London and then start trying to organize their own internship.


What happens next?

Take a look at our After you Arrive  section.