Four Year Plan

  • FIRST YEAR - Time to PREPAREplus or minus

    The best preparation for tomorrow is doing your best today.
    ~ H. Jackson Brown Jr.

    As a Freshman, you may have many questions about what profession you will pursue, or may not know for certain what career path you wish to follow. This is a time of exploration and discovery, a time to lay the foundation for what you will eventually build upon. Some important steps to take during this time include the following.

    Visit The Center for Career Development to speak with a counselor about finding your interests and to discuss any or all of the below listed suggestions:

    • Take a career test to assess yourself here
    • Explore Majors here
    • Apply for summer jobs
    • Connect with a Sophomore Ambassador to learn about what to expect in the coming year
    • Join student organizations that will allow you to grow personally
    • Maintain the interests you cultivated before attending The University of Scranton
    • Establish a good G.P.A.
  • SOPHOMORE Year - Show your PRIDEplus or minus

    Pride is a personal commitment. It is an attitude which separates excellence from mediocrity.
    ~ Unknown

    As a Sophomore, you are no longer as uncertain about the expectations of college life. Having been here for a full year, you are familiar with the workings of the day to day routine, and are better able to focus on the aspects of learning that will become unique to only you. During this year, you begin to show the pride you have not only in your school, but in yourself. Some suggestions for building upon this include:

    Remaining connected to The Center for Career Development through utilization of the following:

    • Attend career-related workshops and seminars
    • Connect with Alumni in your field of interest for information on job opportunities, internships, and overall career information
    • Declare your major
    • Become a Sophomore Ambassador to assist Freshmen in the preparatory phase of their experience
    • Begin to sharpen your own skills and refine your talents through extra-curricular activities and memberships
    • Join career-related organizations and clubs
    • Build upon the prior year’s experiences
    • Connect with a Junior Ambassador representing your area of study
    • Maintain a good G.P.A.
  • JUNIOR YEAR - Find Your PASSIONplus or minus

    If there is no passion in your life, then have you really lived? Find your passion, whatever it may be. Become it, and let it become you and you will find great things happen FOR you, TO you and BECAUSE of you.
    ~ T. Alan Armstrong

    During your Junior year, your focus may now become more centered on what your ultimate calling will be. Having completed two years and with only two more to go, you now need to start looking beyond your day to day experience and start looking at what the future will hold. Will it be graduate school or will you pursue a career immediately? Now is the time to focus on this. Some suggestions include:

    Remain connected to The Center for Career Development by utilizing the following services:
    • Assistance with writing a resume, cover letter, and perfecting interview skills
    • Make application to graduate school
    • Develop networking skills by attending luncheons, mixers, and other events sponsored by the University as well as other organizations
    • Participate in mock interviews through the Career Center
    • Speak to professionals in your field of interest for insight and guidance
    • Start a credential file and portfolio
    • Seek an internship or summer job more closely aligned with your field of study
    • Become a Junior Ambassador to mentor Sophomores in transitioning to the next year of their experience
    • Connect with a Senior Ambassador representing your area of study
    • Assume more responsibility in student leadership
    • Maintain a good G.P.A.
  • SENIOR YEAR - Fulfill the PROMISEplus or minus

    Dream lofty dreams, and as you dream, so you shall become. Your vision is the promise of what you shall one day be; your ideal is the prophecy of what you shall at last unveil.
    ~ James Allen

    In this final year of your college experience, much responsibility will fall to you. As you end one chapter of your life, you stand on the threshold of yet another exciting chapter, that which will fulfill the promise of your future. During this time, while it is important to look back on your prior three years, it is also a time to prepare for your next venture. Some suggestions for making this transition include:

    Remain connected to The Center for Career Development by utilizing the following services:
    • Assistance in seeking full time employment
    • Perfect your Interviewing and Communication Skills
    • Refine your resume
    • Attend on-campus as well as local career fairs
    • Remain in contact with Alumni and Internship personnel for advice and recommendations on starting your career
    • Become a Senior Ambassador to serve as mentor to Junior class members as they begin to focus on their future
    • Maintain your G.P.A.
  • ALUMNI - Entering Your PROFESSIONplus or minus

    Your profession is not what brings home your paycheck. Your profession is what you were put on earth to do. With such passion and such intensity that it becomes spiritual in calling.
    ~ Vincent VanGogh

    Although you may no longer walk the commons, or sit in the classrooms, or dine in the cafeteria, rest assured your connection to The University of Scranton is not over. As Alumni, you now have become part of a select group, a title that can never be taken from you, an honor that has been bestowed upon you for the rest of your days. What better way to commemorate that than with sharing your expertise and wisdom with those students who follow you? Some suggestions towards achieving this include:
    • Keeping The Center for Career Development informed of your achievements and success, as well as continuing to reach out for assistance if you should need it with anything in the future
    • Volunteer to serve as a mentor, panelist, guest speaker, or resource for possible future internships at your organization
    • Provide insight to upcoming graduates about the career you've entered