MURFREESBORO — The action was fast and furious recently
for the 23 dressed-for-success MTSU Concrete Industry Management program
students.
They utilized a speed interview process with industry
companies seeking summer internship candidates Friday (March 21) in the James
Union Building’s Tennessee Room.
Representatives from one local and nine out-of-state
companies seeking interns interviewed the CIM students in eight-minute
increments for two, two-hour rounds throughout the morning.
Louisiana
native Marna Shipp, a junior in the CIM program, called it “a phenomenal
experience.”
“I met a lot of
great people,” the Murfreesboro resident said. “I’ve been waiting for a
blessing.”
A
nontraditional student who is both a mother of two sons and grandmother, Shipp
said she loves everything about the concrete program … “the professors, the way
they conduct classes and help us grow to reach our full potential has been a
phenomenal experience. I wouldn’t take it for anything.”
Brook Simon, a
sophomore CIM major from Pleasant View, Tenn., said his was a good interview experience.
“I like the
companies here. They are giving us good information,” he said before quickly
moving to another round of interviews.
Alumnus Tim Ketavongsa
said it was a great event for him to be involved with as safety director for
Delaware Valley Concrete of Hatboro, Pa., outside of Philadelphia.
“It takes me
back 10 years to when I was sitting in their shoes, looking for an internship
myself,” Ketavongsa said.
With his decade
in the industry himself, the 2004 MTSU graduate said he “can give them a lot of
advice for whatever direction they want to go. I would tell them to get the
internship experience and pick what you want to do.”
At a table and
seated in front of the internship candidates, Ketavongsa said he “could be more
of a mentor to students as an alumnus. I would like to see them take the right
path.”
Dezaree
Rodriquez of Orlando, Fla.-based Prestige Concrete said she and commercial sales
and marketing manager Kelly Stanton “found a few really good prospects who have
the background and interest.”
Rodriquez said
the speed interviewing process was new for their company, but one that was both
a good and enjoyable screening process.
Nicole Green,
CIM marketing and recruiting coordinator, said the internship event went very
well.
“It’s a new
format. I think it’s something that’ll stick,” she said.
Green added
that internship candidates could have lunch with the prospective summer
employers and also schedule further interviews in the afternoon.
“It’s a quick
way to screen many candidates at once,” Green said.
On March 20,
Atlanta-based Oldcastle Precast made offers for full-time employment to two CIM
students, Green said.
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