By Janice Phelan,
February 22, 2022
Paige Donahoe, design and drafting student, interviews for her internship placement.
The Missouri Innovation Campus program, a partnership of the University of Central
Missouri (UCM), Metropolitan Community College (MCC), the Lee’s Summit R-7 School
District and businesses, is recognized nationally for its focus on student outcomes
and workforce needs. A major component of the program’s unique success story is its
three-year paid internships where students apply what they are learning in the classroom
while working at industry-leading employers.
Students enter the four-year MIC program at the start of their junior year of high
school, taking classes at Lee’s Summit R-7’s Summit Technology Academy as well as
at MCC and UCM. Through the MIC program, students earn a UCM bachelor’s degree in
a high-demand field just two years after high-school graduation with little or no
student debt.
The internships, which begin during the summer after the students’ junior year of
high school, are designed with an emphasis on creating a real-life job experience
for each student.
To help students prepare for these internships, the MIC program offers a number of
activities including a resume writing workshop, interviewing skills workshop, parent
informational meeting, mock interview sessions and a job readiness/soft skills workshop.
“For the students, the prep gives them a look inside what our business partners are
looking for in the various skill sets that they will evaluate their talent pool candidates
on during the hiring process,” said Stan Elliott, MIC program director.
Gentry Scavuzzo, UCM’s MIC internship coordinator, works closely with the students
as they prepare for their interviews and placements as well as throughout their internships.
Clarinda Dir, UCM workforce program manager, leads workshops and reviews each student’s
first-draft resume, providing valuable feedback and recommendations.
The interview process is also an important component for the business partners.
“They get an early view of the professionalism of the intern candidate as well as
their technical skill set,” Elliott added. “It helps our partners to cut their training
time once they onboard a MIC program intern and the rigorous prep that our interns
go through thanks to Gentry and Clarinda keeps our intern talent pool at industry
standard for employment.”
The internship workshops begin in November with job placements announced during April.
By the time the students step into the interview room with the business partners during
late February and March, they have spent several months preparing for this important
moment. This spring, 23 students are participating in the interviews with internships
beginning in June, Scavuzzo said.
For more information about the Missouri Innovation Campus program, visit this webpage.